Description

Book Synopsis
This book focuses on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), the basis of sustainable and more agile IT systems that are able to adapt themselves to new trends and manage processes involving a third party. The discussion is based on the public Praxeme method and features a number of examples taken from large SOA projects which were used to rewrite the information systems of an insurance company; as such, decision-makers, creators of IT systems, programmers and computer scientists, as well as those who will use these new developments, will find this a useful resource.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements xiii

Foreword xv

Preface xxi

Guide for the Reader xxvii

Introduction to the SOA Project at SMABTP xxxi

Chapter 1. Initial Perspectives 1

1.1. 50 years of computing – an overview 1

1.2. What remains today? 5

Part I. Why a Sustainable Information System? 7

Chapter 2. Company-oriented Services 9

2.1. Consequences of the Internet revolution 9

2.2. What do the leading market players say? 12

2.3. What do the chief information officers think? 14

2.4. The issues faced at general management level 14

2.5. Levels of maturity 16

Chapter 3. SOA Maturity Levels 21

3.1. Towards the creation of a more agile information system 21

3.2. Cosmetic SOA 23

3.3. Extended SOA 24

3.4. Overhaul SOA 26

3.5. The matrices of SOA maturity 28

3.5.1. The matrix showing the definitions of SOA 28

3.5.2. The matrix showing the quality criteria of SOA 29

3.5.3. The matrix showing the strengths and weaknesses of SOA 29

Chapter 4. Economic and Social Aspects 31

4.1. Removal of obstacles that may slow down the progressive overhaul of an information system 32

4.2. The future of IT specialists 33

4.3. Off-shoring 33

4.4. The generation mix 34

4.5. The role of software infrastructure editors 35

Part II. The Principles of SOA 37

Chapter 5. The Properties of SOA 39

5.1. The definition of service for users 41

5.1.1. The user of the service 42

5.1.2. A business ambiguity 42

5.1.3. An example of a business service 43

5.2. The definition of service for IT specialists 44

5.2.1. The granularity of service 44

5.2.2. The separation of concerns 46

5.2.3. The service categories 47

5.2.4. Batch services 49

5.3. The properties of basic SOA 50

5.3.1. Loose coupling 50

5.3.2. Communication by messages 51

5.3.3. Design by contract 52

5.3.4. The limits of the basic properties 56

5.4. The properties of agility 56

5.4.1. The difference between the version and the variant of a service 58

5.4.2. Agility of the data 60

5.4.3. Agility of the rules 65

5.4.4. Agility of the processes 66

5.4.5. Agility of the human–computer interface 67

Chapter 6. Orchestration (BPM and SOA) 69

6.1. Multiple requirements in orchestration 71

6.1.1. Orchestration and SOA maturity levels 71

6.1.2. Functional requirements 73

6.1.3. Technical requirements 75

6.1.4. Enterprise architecture requirements 77

6.2. The levels of orchestration 78

6.2.1. Orchestration at the process level 79

6.2.2. Orchestration at screen level 80

6.2.3. Orchestration at the micro-process level (use cases) 81

6.2.4. Orchestration at the business service level 82

6.2.5. Orchestration between domains through the use of ESB 83

6.2.6. The orchestration of batches 83

6.3. The techniques of orchestration 85

6.3.1. The BPM engine 85

6.3.2. The business rules engine 86

6.3.3. Specific programming 86

6.4. Towards the homogenization of orchestration 87

6.4.1. Unified modeling 87

6.4.2. Unified standard 89

6.5. The benefits of orchestration 91

6.5.1. Advantages 91

6.5.2. Disadvantages 91

Part III. The Need for an Enterprise Method 93

Chapter 7. The Discovery of Services (Reference Framework and Urbanization) 95

7.1. New needs for the information system 96

7.1.1. Expansiveness and progressiveness 97

7.1.2. Mobilizing the many different competences 98

7.2. Why are different methods seldom used within companies? 98

7.3. Reference frameworks 101

7.3.1. Zachman’s framework 101

7.3.2. TOGAF 102

7.3.3. Peter Herzum’s framework 103

7.3.4. Important information to be taken from the reference frameworks 104

7.4. Essential tools 105

7.4.1. UML (Unified Modeling Language) 105

7.4.2. MDA (Model Driven Architecture) 106

7.4.3. Urbanization of the information system 107

Chapter 8. The Praxeme Enterprise Method 111

8.1. Praxeme: the initiative behind a public method 112

8.2. The Praxeme method 112

8.2.1. Product 113

8.2.2. Process 113

8.2.3. Procedures 114

8.2.4. Combining the three dimensions114

8.3. Enterprise system topology according to the Praxeme method 115

8.3.1. Upstream models 115

8.3.2. Logical (SOA), technical and software architecture models 117

8.3.3. Hardware and physical architecture models 117

8.3.4. Enterprise system topology 118

8.3.5. Pre-modeling 119

8.4. What the Praxeme method means for SOA 120

8.4.1. How can we find the correct services? 120

8.4.2. The link between urbanization, the object-oriented approach and SOA 121

8.5. Advantages of the Praxeme method 124

8.5.1. A method that unites different approaches and integrates SOA 124

8.5.2. Risks associated with the Praxeme method 126

Chapter 9. Modeling with Praxeme 129

9.1. The modeling of requirements 130

9.2. Semantic modeling 130

9.2.1. The basic principles 130

9.2.2. How to obtain a semantic model 133

9.2.3. How to validate a semantic model 134

9.2.4. Semantic models and property rights – who owns a semantic model? 134

9.2.5. The structure of a semantic model 135

9.3. Pragmatic modeling 137

9.3.1. The basic principles 137

9.3.2. A new procedure for designing processes 139

9.3.3. Usage view 140

9.4. Pre-modeling 142

9.5. Logical modeling 143

9.5.1. SOA’s style of logical architecture 143

9.5.2. Service-oriented architecture as logical architecture 144

9.5.3. Types of logical components 145

9.5.4. The strata of logical architecture 151

9.5.5. Pivot language 153

9.5.6. Service algorithm specification 154

9.5.7. Specification of the services’ pre- and post-conditions 154

9.5.8. Logical architecture of data 156

9.5.9. Logical architecture of data repositories 157

9.5.10. Logical architecture and user interface 158

9.5.11. Designing a logic for tests 159

9.5.12. Considering ERP 160

9.5.13. Considering existent assets 160

9.5.14. Federation of systems 160

9.5.15. Roles of logical modeling 161

9.6. Logical modeling of batch computing 162

9.7. Technical modeling 163

9.7.1. Required competences 163

9.7.2. Technical/logical negotiation 164

9.8. Software modeling 166

9.8.1. General principles 166

9.8.2. Towards the industrialization of programming 169

9.9. Benefits of the methodology 169

9.9.1. Opportunities 169

9.9.2. Obstacles 171

Part IV. Mastering Existing Techniques 173

Chapter 10. Tools for Industrializing the Method 175

10.1. Requirements in the industrialization of procedures 176

10.2. Frameworks and design patterns 178

10.2.1. From services framework to virtual machines 179

10.2.2. Frameworks and human–machine interfaces 182

10.2.3. Design patterns 186

10.3. Tools for increased agility 189

10.3.1. Rules engine 189

10.3.2. Reference data management system 196

10.4. Representation tools 203

10.4.1. Modeling CASE tool 203

10.4.2. Formal language (pseudo-language) 207

10.4.3. MDA 209

10.5. Tools for tests and management 212

10.5.1. Non-regression tests 212

10.5.2. Designing tests and test data 213

10.5.3. Different levels of tests 214

10.6. Tools for the management of different versions and the configuration of programs 216

10.6.1. The level of versions and variants 216

10.6.2. The level of delivery packages 218

10.7. Benefits of using tools in the method 219

10.7.1. Opportunities 219

10.7.2. Risks 220

Chapter 11. Systems Integration and Common Information Language 223

11.1. New requirements in communication 225

11.1.1. Increase of data flow 225

11.1.2. Considering the business 225

11.1.3. Take the bus! 227

11.2. ESB’s functions 227

11.2.1. Use perimeter 227

11.2.2. ESB’s components 230

11.3. Integrating ESB into SI 235

11.3.1. Towards a common language 235

11.4. ESB’s benefits 239

11.4.1. Opportunities 239

11.4.2. Limitations 240

Chapter 12. SOA Platform 243

12.1. Requirements for the global vision of technical architecture 244

12.2. New technical components 245

12.2.1. The transformation of data 245

12.2.2. From a directory to a registry of services 248

12.2.3. Security 250

12.2.4. Traceability of services in production 252

12.2.5. BAM and CEP 254

12.2.6. Business Intelligence 255

12.2.7. Editing 257

12.3. Managing performance 259

12.3.1. A new order of things? 259

12.3.2. Best practice 260

12.3.3. Testing performance 261

12.4. Managing exploitation 263

12.5. Managing maintenance 269

12.6. Benefits of SOA platforms 265

12.6.1. Opportunities 265

12.6.2. Limitations 266

Chapter 13. Rules Management at the Scale of the Whole Enterprise 267
Jérôme BOYER, ILOG Software

13.1. Overview 267

13.2. Deep view 268

13.3. When to use a rule engine 271

13.4. Logical architecture view 273

13.5. BRMS and SOA 283

Chapter 14. Semantic Integration 287
Erik STEINHOLTZ, Progress Software

14.1. Enabling the adaptive enterprise 288

14.2. Inhibitors for change 289

14.3. Definition of semantic integration 290

14.4. Parallel track information modeling 291

14.5. Change inhibitors addressed with semantic integration 294

14.6. Putting it to work 295

14.6.1. Canonicalizing the BIM 295

14.6.2. The quick win: a pilot project 296

14.6.3. Using the CIM for integration 296

14.6.4. Tools used 297

14.6.5. Managing change and keeping the models alive 298

Conclusion 299

Weblinks 303

Bibliography 305

Special Technical Note 307

Index 309

Sustainable IT Architecture: The Progressive Way

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    A Hardback by Pierre Bonnet, Jean-Michel Detavernier, Dominique Vauquier

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      Publisher: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 17/04/2009
      ISBN13: 9781848210899, 978-1848210899
      ISBN10: 1848210892
      Also in:
      Computer science

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book focuses on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), the basis of sustainable and more agile IT systems that are able to adapt themselves to new trends and manage processes involving a third party. The discussion is based on the public Praxeme method and features a number of examples taken from large SOA projects which were used to rewrite the information systems of an insurance company; as such, decision-makers, creators of IT systems, programmers and computer scientists, as well as those who will use these new developments, will find this a useful resource.

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements xiii

      Foreword xv

      Preface xxi

      Guide for the Reader xxvii

      Introduction to the SOA Project at SMABTP xxxi

      Chapter 1. Initial Perspectives 1

      1.1. 50 years of computing – an overview 1

      1.2. What remains today? 5

      Part I. Why a Sustainable Information System? 7

      Chapter 2. Company-oriented Services 9

      2.1. Consequences of the Internet revolution 9

      2.2. What do the leading market players say? 12

      2.3. What do the chief information officers think? 14

      2.4. The issues faced at general management level 14

      2.5. Levels of maturity 16

      Chapter 3. SOA Maturity Levels 21

      3.1. Towards the creation of a more agile information system 21

      3.2. Cosmetic SOA 23

      3.3. Extended SOA 24

      3.4. Overhaul SOA 26

      3.5. The matrices of SOA maturity 28

      3.5.1. The matrix showing the definitions of SOA 28

      3.5.2. The matrix showing the quality criteria of SOA 29

      3.5.3. The matrix showing the strengths and weaknesses of SOA 29

      Chapter 4. Economic and Social Aspects 31

      4.1. Removal of obstacles that may slow down the progressive overhaul of an information system 32

      4.2. The future of IT specialists 33

      4.3. Off-shoring 33

      4.4. The generation mix 34

      4.5. The role of software infrastructure editors 35

      Part II. The Principles of SOA 37

      Chapter 5. The Properties of SOA 39

      5.1. The definition of service for users 41

      5.1.1. The user of the service 42

      5.1.2. A business ambiguity 42

      5.1.3. An example of a business service 43

      5.2. The definition of service for IT specialists 44

      5.2.1. The granularity of service 44

      5.2.2. The separation of concerns 46

      5.2.3. The service categories 47

      5.2.4. Batch services 49

      5.3. The properties of basic SOA 50

      5.3.1. Loose coupling 50

      5.3.2. Communication by messages 51

      5.3.3. Design by contract 52

      5.3.4. The limits of the basic properties 56

      5.4. The properties of agility 56

      5.4.1. The difference between the version and the variant of a service 58

      5.4.2. Agility of the data 60

      5.4.3. Agility of the rules 65

      5.4.4. Agility of the processes 66

      5.4.5. Agility of the human–computer interface 67

      Chapter 6. Orchestration (BPM and SOA) 69

      6.1. Multiple requirements in orchestration 71

      6.1.1. Orchestration and SOA maturity levels 71

      6.1.2. Functional requirements 73

      6.1.3. Technical requirements 75

      6.1.4. Enterprise architecture requirements 77

      6.2. The levels of orchestration 78

      6.2.1. Orchestration at the process level 79

      6.2.2. Orchestration at screen level 80

      6.2.3. Orchestration at the micro-process level (use cases) 81

      6.2.4. Orchestration at the business service level 82

      6.2.5. Orchestration between domains through the use of ESB 83

      6.2.6. The orchestration of batches 83

      6.3. The techniques of orchestration 85

      6.3.1. The BPM engine 85

      6.3.2. The business rules engine 86

      6.3.3. Specific programming 86

      6.4. Towards the homogenization of orchestration 87

      6.4.1. Unified modeling 87

      6.4.2. Unified standard 89

      6.5. The benefits of orchestration 91

      6.5.1. Advantages 91

      6.5.2. Disadvantages 91

      Part III. The Need for an Enterprise Method 93

      Chapter 7. The Discovery of Services (Reference Framework and Urbanization) 95

      7.1. New needs for the information system 96

      7.1.1. Expansiveness and progressiveness 97

      7.1.2. Mobilizing the many different competences 98

      7.2. Why are different methods seldom used within companies? 98

      7.3. Reference frameworks 101

      7.3.1. Zachman’s framework 101

      7.3.2. TOGAF 102

      7.3.3. Peter Herzum’s framework 103

      7.3.4. Important information to be taken from the reference frameworks 104

      7.4. Essential tools 105

      7.4.1. UML (Unified Modeling Language) 105

      7.4.2. MDA (Model Driven Architecture) 106

      7.4.3. Urbanization of the information system 107

      Chapter 8. The Praxeme Enterprise Method 111

      8.1. Praxeme: the initiative behind a public method 112

      8.2. The Praxeme method 112

      8.2.1. Product 113

      8.2.2. Process 113

      8.2.3. Procedures 114

      8.2.4. Combining the three dimensions114

      8.3. Enterprise system topology according to the Praxeme method 115

      8.3.1. Upstream models 115

      8.3.2. Logical (SOA), technical and software architecture models 117

      8.3.3. Hardware and physical architecture models 117

      8.3.4. Enterprise system topology 118

      8.3.5. Pre-modeling 119

      8.4. What the Praxeme method means for SOA 120

      8.4.1. How can we find the correct services? 120

      8.4.2. The link between urbanization, the object-oriented approach and SOA 121

      8.5. Advantages of the Praxeme method 124

      8.5.1. A method that unites different approaches and integrates SOA 124

      8.5.2. Risks associated with the Praxeme method 126

      Chapter 9. Modeling with Praxeme 129

      9.1. The modeling of requirements 130

      9.2. Semantic modeling 130

      9.2.1. The basic principles 130

      9.2.2. How to obtain a semantic model 133

      9.2.3. How to validate a semantic model 134

      9.2.4. Semantic models and property rights – who owns a semantic model? 134

      9.2.5. The structure of a semantic model 135

      9.3. Pragmatic modeling 137

      9.3.1. The basic principles 137

      9.3.2. A new procedure for designing processes 139

      9.3.3. Usage view 140

      9.4. Pre-modeling 142

      9.5. Logical modeling 143

      9.5.1. SOA’s style of logical architecture 143

      9.5.2. Service-oriented architecture as logical architecture 144

      9.5.3. Types of logical components 145

      9.5.4. The strata of logical architecture 151

      9.5.5. Pivot language 153

      9.5.6. Service algorithm specification 154

      9.5.7. Specification of the services’ pre- and post-conditions 154

      9.5.8. Logical architecture of data 156

      9.5.9. Logical architecture of data repositories 157

      9.5.10. Logical architecture and user interface 158

      9.5.11. Designing a logic for tests 159

      9.5.12. Considering ERP 160

      9.5.13. Considering existent assets 160

      9.5.14. Federation of systems 160

      9.5.15. Roles of logical modeling 161

      9.6. Logical modeling of batch computing 162

      9.7. Technical modeling 163

      9.7.1. Required competences 163

      9.7.2. Technical/logical negotiation 164

      9.8. Software modeling 166

      9.8.1. General principles 166

      9.8.2. Towards the industrialization of programming 169

      9.9. Benefits of the methodology 169

      9.9.1. Opportunities 169

      9.9.2. Obstacles 171

      Part IV. Mastering Existing Techniques 173

      Chapter 10. Tools for Industrializing the Method 175

      10.1. Requirements in the industrialization of procedures 176

      10.2. Frameworks and design patterns 178

      10.2.1. From services framework to virtual machines 179

      10.2.2. Frameworks and human–machine interfaces 182

      10.2.3. Design patterns 186

      10.3. Tools for increased agility 189

      10.3.1. Rules engine 189

      10.3.2. Reference data management system 196

      10.4. Representation tools 203

      10.4.1. Modeling CASE tool 203

      10.4.2. Formal language (pseudo-language) 207

      10.4.3. MDA 209

      10.5. Tools for tests and management 212

      10.5.1. Non-regression tests 212

      10.5.2. Designing tests and test data 213

      10.5.3. Different levels of tests 214

      10.6. Tools for the management of different versions and the configuration of programs 216

      10.6.1. The level of versions and variants 216

      10.6.2. The level of delivery packages 218

      10.7. Benefits of using tools in the method 219

      10.7.1. Opportunities 219

      10.7.2. Risks 220

      Chapter 11. Systems Integration and Common Information Language 223

      11.1. New requirements in communication 225

      11.1.1. Increase of data flow 225

      11.1.2. Considering the business 225

      11.1.3. Take the bus! 227

      11.2. ESB’s functions 227

      11.2.1. Use perimeter 227

      11.2.2. ESB’s components 230

      11.3. Integrating ESB into SI 235

      11.3.1. Towards a common language 235

      11.4. ESB’s benefits 239

      11.4.1. Opportunities 239

      11.4.2. Limitations 240

      Chapter 12. SOA Platform 243

      12.1. Requirements for the global vision of technical architecture 244

      12.2. New technical components 245

      12.2.1. The transformation of data 245

      12.2.2. From a directory to a registry of services 248

      12.2.3. Security 250

      12.2.4. Traceability of services in production 252

      12.2.5. BAM and CEP 254

      12.2.6. Business Intelligence 255

      12.2.7. Editing 257

      12.3. Managing performance 259

      12.3.1. A new order of things? 259

      12.3.2. Best practice 260

      12.3.3. Testing performance 261

      12.4. Managing exploitation 263

      12.5. Managing maintenance 269

      12.6. Benefits of SOA platforms 265

      12.6.1. Opportunities 265

      12.6.2. Limitations 266

      Chapter 13. Rules Management at the Scale of the Whole Enterprise 267
      Jérôme BOYER, ILOG Software

      13.1. Overview 267

      13.2. Deep view 268

      13.3. When to use a rule engine 271

      13.4. Logical architecture view 273

      13.5. BRMS and SOA 283

      Chapter 14. Semantic Integration 287
      Erik STEINHOLTZ, Progress Software

      14.1. Enabling the adaptive enterprise 288

      14.2. Inhibitors for change 289

      14.3. Definition of semantic integration 290

      14.4. Parallel track information modeling 291

      14.5. Change inhibitors addressed with semantic integration 294

      14.6. Putting it to work 295

      14.6.1. Canonicalizing the BIM 295

      14.6.2. The quick win: a pilot project 296

      14.6.3. Using the CIM for integration 296

      14.6.4. Tools used 297

      14.6.5. Managing change and keeping the models alive 298

      Conclusion 299

      Weblinks 303

      Bibliography 305

      Special Technical Note 307

      Index 309

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