Application Integration EAI B2B BPM and SOA

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Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2008-09-22
Publisher(s): Wiley-ISTE
List Price: $189.81

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Summary

Application integration assembles methods and tools for organizing exchanges between applications, and intra- and inter-enterprise business processes. A strategic tool for enterprises, it introduces genuine reactivity into information systems facing business changes, and as a result, provides a significant edge in optimizing costs.This book analyzes various aspects of application integration, providing a guide to the alphabet soup behind EAI, A2A, B2B, BAM, BPM, ESB and SOA. It addresses the problems of choosing between the application integration solutions and deploying them successfully. It supplies guidelines for avoiding common errors, exploring the differences between received wisdom and the facts on the ground. The overview of IT urbanization will help introduce English-speaking audiences to a powerful approach to information system flexibility developed in France. A key chapter approaches the analysis and interoperation of service levels in integration projects, while the discussion on deployment methodologies and ROI calculation anchors the theory in the real world.Application Integration: EAI, B2B, BPM and SOA relies on concrete examples and genuine experiences to demonstrate what works - and what doesn't - in this challenging, topical and important IT domain.

Author Biography

Bernard Manouvrier is Chief Architect for a software publisher specializing in application integration and has a background in client services management at a number of businesses.

Laurent Ménard pilots consulting missions, implementing large-scale application integration projects. He has also managed the design and development of application integration software for an international corporation where he is currently serving as Vice-President in charge of advanced programs.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
What is Application Integration?
The economy: the "engine" of integration
The history and the issues of application integration
Consequences for IT
Integration typologies
Classifying the integration problem types
Classifying the applications
EAI: Integrating enterprise applications (A2A)
Accounting interpretation: EAI precursor
EAI today
Integrating inter-enterprise exchanges (B2B)
Coupling A2A and B2B: A2B (or Business Collaboration)
Managing business processes (BPM)
Service-oriented architectures (SOA)
Levels in Integration Services
Transport and connectivity
Defining partners
Data transport
Connectivity
Supervising transport
Adapting the information
Transformation
Routing
Storage
Defining the rules
Supervising exchanges
Automating business processes
Modeling business processes
Executing business processes
Supervising business processes
Business process and integration: mediation and exchange
Business process level and integration level
Mediation process sub-level
Exchange process sub-level
Interaction between the sub-levels
Interaction between integration and business process (BPM)
Choosing the exchange architecture
Synchronous/asynchronous communication
Architecture: centralized or distributed?
Types of Integration Projects
Integrating a single application
Exchange cartography
The integration platform
IT infrastructure projects
Urbanization of information systems
IT exchange infrastructure
Integrating inter-enterprise exchanges
Exchanging electronic documents (EDI)
XML standards
Inter-enterprise "spaghetti" system
Inter-enterprise exchange platforms
"Single Window" initiatives
Managing business processes
Points of departure
BPM project opportunity: choosing the processes
The "top-down" approach
Expected results
Implementing a service architecture
Characteristics of an SOA
Elements of an SOA infrastructure
Applicable norms and standards
Application Integration Tools
Brokers
Application servers
Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
BPM tools
Understanding Integration Failures
High failure rates
The technological approach
New technology or new packaging?
Technology confronts reality
Integration Myths
The mirage of the single tool
A conservative choice: example and consequences
"Modern" architectural choice: example and consequences
XML: miracle format
Business adapters: simplifying the implementation
Business adapter: implementation - maintenance - problem
By way of a conclusion on business adapters
Java: the proof of a modern solution
The real reason for Java
Limitations of an all-Java integration solution
Files: the "poor cousins" of application integration
Process and services are everything
BPM and SOA: top-down approach - from business to IT
EAI and B2B: bottom-up approach - from IT to business
Complementary approaches
Integration and IT Urbanization
IT urbanization review
Limits of urbanization without an integration solution
How do integration solutions support IT urbanization?
Limits of integration solutions without IT urbanization
How does IT urbanization support integration solutions?
The need to correlate integration solutions and urbanization
Choosing an Application Integration Solution
General approach
Methodology for calculating return on investment (ROI)
Introduction to the method
Equations: maintaining the language of integration
Operational workload gains through centralized supervision
Quality of service improvements
Opportunity study
Analyzing the real needs of the enterprise
Real needs and the "state of the art"
Identifying possible business benefits
Go/NoGo from General Management
The search for a candidate: Request for Information (RFI)
Why issue an RFI?
Key points in an integration RFI
Request for Proposal (RFP) or specifications document
Interest and spirit of an RFP
Myths: standard questionnaire + one-stop supplier
Key points in an RFP for application integration
Presentations from the candidates
Deployment Methodology
Introduction to the method
Deployment methodology: general principles
Special case: deploying BPM and SOA
Economic models of cost allocation
Cost allocation linked to usage
Cost allocation linked to usage and services (developed model)
Operational Examples of Implementation
Rationalizing bonds purchase order management (banking)
The context
The choices
The solution
The results
An EAI hub (telecommunications)
The context
The choice
Implementing the pilot: first difficulties
Integration tests: disturbing results
How did we end up here? Consequences of architectural choices
Performance tests: catastrophic results
Report card: final decision
The lesson: what we could have done
A2A and B2B (retail)
The context
The choice
The solution
The results
BPM and SOA in service delivery
The context
The choice
The solutions
The results
Points to watch for this type of solution
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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