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Overview
This course will provide each participant with a high-level comprehensive overview of the Oracle Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) and business integration components of the eCommerce environment. This briefing will focus on the concept and role of the SOA surroundings in the corporate environment, integration of Web services, architecture of the Oracle Enterprise Service Bus and the message broker, routing of SOA messages, event driven processing, business process modeling using BPEL, BPEL4WS and BPMN, using JDeveloper and BPEL Process Manager for modeling, XML data transformations, logging and auditing, security concerns, Oracle business integration architecture (Integration Server, MOM, adapters, etc) and the development tools that can be utilized.All aspects of this class will incorporate the architecture offerings of the different preeminent vendors to illustrate the implementation of these techniques.
Prerequisites
Each student should have an understanding of application development and basic web-based development methodologies
Class Format
Lecture and Lab
Audience
Designed for managers, project leaders, IT executives and other technical individuals that need to understand the Service-Oriented architecture business integration environment.
Learning Objectives
Upon conclusion, each participant will have acquired these skills:
- Understand the Oracle Service-Oriented Architecture
- Depict the role of Web services and corresponding client interaction
- Discuss the Publisher and Subscriber models
- Illustrate the deployed components in the Oracle Integration environment and their distinctive roles.
- Define the use of the Oracle Enterprise Service Bus for managing SOA communications
- Illustrate the role of different messaging brokers as the deployed ESB component
- Discuss the logical and physical SOA components in the Oracle corporate environment
- Understand the business process modeling concept for depicting enterprise workflows
- Depict the implementation of Business Process Execution Language (BPEL), BPEL4WS and the modeling notation of BPMN
- Define the integration of JDeveloper and Oracle BPEL Process Manager for creating SOA components
- Illustrate the role of adapters for accessing backend components
Course Duration
2 Days
Course outline
Introduction to SOA
- Service Oriented Architecture
- UDDI Registries
- Service Requestor
- Web Service
- Web Services Descriptive Language (WSDL)
SOA Implementation
- J2EE Integration
- Web Services Gateway
- Enterprise Service Bus
- EJB Service Interface
- Client proxy
- ECommerce usage
- Hosted
- Published
- Discovery
- Usage
- Development using IDE tools
Integration Server
- Create and deploy internal/external business processes
- 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 Enterprise Service Bus
- Architecture pattern
- Unify message oriented, event driven and service oriented processes
- Optimize delivery of information and services
- Product integration
- Interoperability with different platforms
Messaging
- Application integration
- Centralized message broker
- Database logging
- SOA and SOAP messages
J2CA Adapters
- J2EE JCA
- Resource adapters roles
- Technology adapters
- JDBC
- COM
- EJB
- Exchange
- XML
- Mapping business objects
- Business object extraction via adapters
Messaging WorkFlow
- Workflow concepts
- Business process tracking
- Integration with modeling tools
- SOA implementation
Business Process Modeling
- Defining BPM
- Benefits of BPM
- Integrating SOA into BPM
- Notation specification
- Behavior modeling
- Process activity sequencing
- Illustrate usage of BPEL
- Define SOA with BPEL4WS
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