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Soanotes

The document describes the main components of Oracle SOA Infrastructure which include service engines like BPEL and Mediator, a metadata store, Oracle Service Bus, Enterprise Manager, Web Service Manager, B2B, an adapter framework, and tools like JDeveloper and Oracle Business Activity Monitoring. These components provide capabilities like orchestration, routing, transformation, workflow, monitoring, policy management, business-to-business integration, and a development environment.

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Dhinakar Reddy
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views

Soanotes

The document describes the main components of Oracle SOA Infrastructure which include service engines like BPEL and Mediator, a metadata store, Oracle Service Bus, Enterprise Manager, Web Service Manager, B2B, an adapter framework, and tools like JDeveloper and Oracle Business Activity Monitoring. These components provide capabilities like orchestration, routing, transformation, workflow, monitoring, policy management, business-to-business integration, and a development environment.

Uploaded by

Dhinakar Reddy
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Service Engines: BPEL: The service engine in charge of orchestration.

Mediator: The service engine that provides filtering, routing, and transformation capabilities. Business Rules: An inference-based rules engine responsible for providing decision services. Human Workflow: A workflow engine that provides human workflow services. Metadata Store (MDS): A central metadata repository that holds all runtime artifacts of all deployed applications and composites, as well as generic artifacts like security and management policies. Oracle Service Bus (OSB): A high-performance service bus that provides service virtualization, protocol translation, request routing, traffic shaping, and so on. Enterprise Manager: A web-based console that provides a single, integrated management console for all Fusion Middleware components. Web Service Manager: An integrated policy management and enforcement service, which is part of the Oracle Portability Layer on which the SOA Infrastructure runs. B2B: A multi-protocol engine that provides business-to-business communication services over a variety of protocols and formats, such as EDI, RosettaNet, ebXML, HL7, and so on. Adapter Framework: A Java Component Architecture (JCA)-based adapter framework that provides standards-based access to non-service-oriented enterprise information systems. Database adapter, FTP adapter, JMS adapter, and eBusiness Suite adapter are some examples of adapters leveraging the adapter framework. JDeveloper and the composite editor provide a single, integrated development environment. Oracle Business Activity Monitoring (BAM) is an activity monitoring tool that, unlike Enterprise Manager, is geared towards business users. It uses push techniques to offer realtime business dashboards, leveraging data captured as part of a composite's execution flow.

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