Overview
This course will provide each participant with an in-depth and comprehensive understanding of the BEA Service-Oriented Architecture and event-driven environment. This course will focus on the integration of SOA components, defining external SOA components (Databases, Web services, EJBs, AquaLogic Service Bus, etc), development of Web services, using messaging-enabled services, utilization of JMS, depict the role of the AquaLogic Service Bus, using the message brokers, SOA security integration, building publisher and subscriber applications, durable and non-durable event processing, using adapter components, depict usage of BAM, BAM monitoring, development of SOA components using ALBPM Studio IDE and the deployment of client proxies.
All aspects of this class will incorporate the specific architecture of the BEA ALBPM SOA Suite to illustrate the implementation of these techniques.
Prerequisites
Each student should have a basic understanding of application development and design methodologies.
Class Format
Lecture and Lab
Audience
Targeted towards Business Process Developers, Programmers and Architects that need to understand how to develop and implement SOA and event-driven architectures in ALBPM.
Learning Objectives
After completing this course, the student should be able to:
- Understand the development and integration
of external services (Java, .NET, Web Services,
etc).
- Depict the integration of services in an
event-driven environment
- Illustrate the integration of enterprise
business processes
- Understand the deployment to AquaLogic Service
Bus and accessing services deployed to the ALSB
- Demonstrate both the Publisher and Subscriber
model types
- Illustrate the implementation of an ALSB
Bus and a Message Broker
- Understand the role of sensors and notification
services
- Incorporate human task functionality in a
business process
- Demonstrate the incorporation of external
resources (SQL, ALSB, Java, COM, .NET, SAP,
etc)
- Depict security issues related to Web Services
(SAML, SSO, encryption and digital signatures)
- Use of client specific adapters for accessing
legacy components
- Demonstrate the usage of XSLT transformations
between Web services
- Depict the integration of BAM into an SOA
event architecture
- Demonstrate the client proxy components and
their implementation
Course Duration
2 Days
Course outline
Enterprise
Service Bus Overview
- Role of an ESB
- Illustrate message oriented, event
driven and service oriented processes
- Optimize delivery of information and
services
- Discuss deployed components
- Routing rules
- Business rules
- Transformation
- Mediation
- Adapters
- Interoperability with messaging platforms
AquaLogic Service Bus
- Deployed Component overview
- ESB Administration
- Web Server
- BPEL Container
- BAM
- Installation and configuration
- ESB evolution
- ESB Capabilities
- Content-based routing
- Rich set of Adapters
- Transformation
- URL virtualization
- Publish/Subscribe
- ESB Patterns
- Point-to-Point
- Canonical
- Routing Service
- Overview of BAM
SOA
Development Steps
- Development steps
- Build SOA portfolio
- Configure Enterprise Service Bus
- Create Business Processes
- Define User Interface
- Implement application dashboards
- Configure system scalability
- Mapping business objects
- Business object extraction via
adapters
Partner
Interactions
- Managing Partner services
- Role and use of Adapters
- Creation
- Types of Adapters
- Inbound vs Outbound
- SOAP Interaction
- Create SOAP Services
- Locating Partner services
- Routing Rules
- Using Target Services
- Filter Expression Builder
- Message Transformation
- Synchronous vs. Asynchronous
XSLT
Mapping
- Transformation roles
- Use of XPath
- Map Testing tool
- Report Generation
- Domain Value Mapping
- Usage
- Creation
- Import and Export
- Transformations
BAM
Overview
- BAM Architecture
- Reporting
- Creation
- Viewing
- Monitoring abilities
- Using Prompts and Parameters
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