Overview
This course will provide each participant with a thorough understanding of the role of Business Process Execution Language and its role for modeling corporate workflows and SOA processing using Oracle BPEL Process Manager and their SOA Suite. This course will focus on the usage of business process models, the role of BPEL and BPEL4WS, JDeveloper integration, use of BPEL Designer, role of BPEL Console, product support, integration of WSDL and other XML standards, using synchronous and asynchronous flows, BPELWS partner concepts, stateful interactions, BPEL extensions, role of sensors and notifcations, insertion of human tasks, debugging through the BPEL Console, mapping elements in BPEL4WS, migration of MQ Workflows to BPEL4WS, role of SOAP faults and fault handling, use of file and database adapters.
All aspects of this class will incorporate the specific architecture of Oracle’s 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
Designed for programmers, managers, project leaders, enterprise architects and other technical individuals that need to understand the modeling of business workflows.
Learning Objectives
Upon conclusion, each participant will have acquired these skills:
- Understand the role of business process modeling
- Utilizing JDeveloper BPEL Designer to create
workflows
- Learn the syntax and semantics of BPEL and
BPEL4WS
- Understand the relationship between BPEL
and other Web services standards such as WSDL
(Web services Description Language)
- Gain experience using BPEL by building a
progressively complex, process-centric application
- Understand which BPEL constructs are most
appropriate for different application scenarios
- Understand the role of sensors and notifications
- Utilizing human tasks and workflows
- Illustrate the role of different adapters
(File, database, etc)
- Understand the role of transformation logic
- Using modeling tools to develop BPEL and
BPEL4WS processes
- Depict the key concepts of BPEL4WS: partners,
endpoints, activities, correlation, data handling
and scope
- Illustrate element BPEL4WS mapping for files,
I/O, control nodes, processes, decisions and
while loops
- Understand the generated files and the role
of the different files generated from our BPEL
models
- Depict the role of BPEL console for executing
and tracking workflows
Course Topics
The following list represents the sections and topics discussed in this onsite instructor-led course offering:
Course Duration
4 Days
Course outline
Introduction
to SOA
- SOA business challenges
- Service Oriented Architecture
- UDDI Registry
- Service Requestor
- Web Service
- B2C vs B2B
- Defining XML
- Defining SOAP
- Web Services Descriptive Language (WSDL)
- Application Server
- Enterprise Service Bus
- Process Server
- Message Broker
- Business process modeling
Business Integration
- Need for application integration
- How SOA addresses integration
- Using integration and IDE tools
- Integration Components
- Application Server
- Process Server
- Enterprise Service Bus
- Role of adapters
- Use of business objects
- Topology
- Point-to-Point
- Hub-to-Bus
Modeling
Integration Patterns
- Defining eBusiness Integration Patterns
- Business
- Integration
- Application
- Runtime
- Business patterns
- Self Service
- Collaboration
- Information aggregation
- Extended Enterprise
- Integration Patterns
- Process
- Application
Business
Process Modeling
- Defining BPM
- Benefits of BPM
- BPM Workflow analysis
- Process re-engineering
- Integrating SOA into BPM
- Notation specification
- Behavior modeling
- Process activity sequencing
- BPM lifecycle
- Roles in BPM
Defining
BPEL
- History, heritage and direction
- Integration with business process management
- Business process standards
- BPEL syntax
- Choreography vs Orchestration
- Key concepts
- Partners
- Endpoints
- Activities
- Data handling
- Correlation
- Scope
- Role of partners
- Message correlation
- Fault handling
- Vendor extensions
Modeling
with BPEL
- Using Modeling tools
- Create BPEL model
- Workspaces
- Projects
- Catalogs
- Process Monitoring
- Exported elements (XSD and WSDL)
- Element mapping
- Files
- I/O
- Subprocesses
- Control nodes
- Decision
- While loop
- Services
- BPEL Modeling mode
- Generated files
- Import/Export
- Generate deployment code
JDeveloper
BPEL Modeler
- Modeling overview
- Eclipse GUI
- Business Process Execution Language
- Import business process models
- Shared workspace
- Validation
- Simulation and testing
- Exporting
Modeling
Integration Patterns
- Defining eBusiness Integration Patterns
- Business
- Integration
- Application
- Runtime
- Business patterns
- Self Service
- Collaboration
- Information aggregation
- Extended Enterprise
- Integration Patterns
Oracle
Application Server
- Create internal/external business processes
- Deployment issues
- Business event synchronization
- Applications integration
- Role-based Access
- Business Object optimization
- JMS usage
- Database connections
- Use of EJB session beans
- J2EE Connector architecture
- Interaction with EIS systems
Oracle
SOA Suite and Process Modeling<
- Development platform
- Enterprise Service Bus
- Automated Services
- Partner services
- Application services
- Data access services
- BPEL Modeler
- Integration Developer
- Integration Server
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