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“Paul Brown has done a favor for the TIBCO community and anyone wanting to get into this product set. Architecting TIBCO solutions without knowing the TIBCO architecture fundamentals and having insight to the topics discussed in this book is risky to any organization. I fully recommend this book to anyone involved in designing solutions using the TIBCO ActiveMatrix products.”
—Nikky Sooriakumar, TIBCO Architect, PruHealth
“An effective primer for building composite services using TIBCO, this book provides a holistic approach to strategy integrated with implementation details. I find it tremendously useful in moving recursively from business solutions to design patterns to architecture. Tangible examples are provided that build to composite services. And advanced topics are explored that add another valuable implementation dimension. I recommend this book to software architects who need to quickly build an effective business- services-oriented environment.”
—Abby H. Brown, Ph.D., Enterprise Architect, Intel Corp.
The architecture series from TIBCO® Press comprises a coordinated set of titles for software architects and developers, showing how to combine TIBCO components to design and build real-world solutions. TIBCO’s product suite comprises components with functionality ranging from messaging through services, service orchestration, business process management, master data management, and complex event processing.
In composite applications and services, multiple components collaborate to provide the required functionality. There are many possible architectures for these distributed solutions: Some will serve the enterprise well, while others will lead to dead-end projects. Architecting Composite Applications and Services with TIBCO® shows how to create successful architectures with TIBCO products for both overall solutions and individual services. This guide builds on the basic design patterns and product information presented in the first title in the series, TIBCO® Architecture Fundamentals (Addison-Wesley, 2011).
After reading this title, you will be able to
Architecting Composite Applications and Services with TIBCO® is intended primarily for project architects defining overall solutions and specifying the supporting components and services. TIBCO developers, enterprise architects, and technical managers will also find material of interest. No specific prior knowledge of architecture is assumed.
Examples and templates from Architecting Composite Applications and Services with TIBCO can be downloaded here:
Download a pdf of Solution Architecture Example here.
Download a pdf of Service Specification Example here.
Download a Word document of Solution ArchitectureTemplate here.
Download a Word document of Service Specification Template here.
Architecting Composite Applications and Services with TIBCO: Observable Dependencies and Behaviors
Download the sample pages (includes Chapters 5 and 8 and Index)
Preface xxv
Acknowledgments xxxiii
About the Author xxxv
Part I: Getting Started 1
Chapter 1: Components, Services, and Architectures 3
Objectives 3
Architecture Views 4
A Hierarchy of Architectures 7
Why Make These Architecture Distinctions? 11
Design Patterns: Reference Architectures 13
Solution Architecture 14
Service Architecture 17
Service Utilization Pattern 17
Composite Service Architecture 20
Service Utilization Contract 22
Component Life Cycle 22
Summary 23
Chapter 2: TIBCO® Architecture Fundamentals Review 25
Objectives 25
Products Covered in TIBCO® Architecture Fundamentals 25
ActiveMatrix Deployment Options 31
Design Patterns 33
ActiveMatrix Service Bus Policies 44
Summary 46
Chapter 3: TIBCO Products 47
Objectives 47
Hawk® 48
TIBCO® Managed File Transfer Product Portfolio 56
Mainframe and iSeries Integration 58
BusinessConnect™ 63
TIBCO Collaborative Information Manager 64
Summary 65
Chapter 4: Case Study: Nouveau Health Care 67
Objectives 67
Nouveau Health Care Solution Architecture 68
Payment Manager Service Specification 73Payment Manager Specification: Process Overview 74
Payment Manager Specification: Domain Model 77Payment Manager Specification: Interfaces 82
Payment Manager Specification: Processes 83
Summary 91Part II: Designing Services 93
Chapter 5: Observable Dependencies and Behaviors 95
Objectives 95
The Black Box Perspective 96
Facets of Observable Dependencies and Behaviors 97
Example: Sales Order Service 97
Characterizing Observable Dependencies and Behaviors 111Summary 119
Chapter 6: Service-Related Documentation 121
Objectives 121
Service One-Line Description and Abstract 122
Service Specification Contents 123Example Service Specification: Payment Manager 128
Service Usage Contracts 142Service Architecture 144
Summary 149Chapter 7: Versioning 151
Objectives 151
Dependencies and Compatibility 152
Packages 152
OSGI Versioning 153
WSDL and XML Schema Versioning 156Version Number Placement for WSDLs and XML Schemas 159
Backwards-Compatible WSDL and XML Schema Changes 160Rules for Versioning WSDLs and Schemas 164
Architecture Patterns for Versioning 165
Versioning SOAP Interface Addresses (Endpoints) 168Versioning the SOAP Action 168
How Many Versions Should Be Maintained? 169
Summary 171
Chapter 8: Naming Standards 173
Objectives 173
Using This Chapter 174
Concepts 174
What Needs a Name? 182Structured Name Design Principles 183
Applying Naming Principles 191Complicating Realities 205
Developing Your Standard 211Summary 212
Chapter 9: Data Structures 215
Objectives 215
Domain Models 215
Information Models 218
Data Structure Design 220
Common Data Models 224Designing an XML Schema 227
Organizing Schema and Interfaces 233Example Schema 235
Summary 235
Part III: Service Architecture Patterns 237
Chapter 10: Building-Block Design Patterns 239
Objectives 239
Solution Architecture Decisions 240
Separating Interface and Business Logic 240
Design Pattern: Separate Interface and Business Logic 241
Using Services for Accessing Back-End Systems 243
Rule Service Governing Process Flow 244
Rule Services and Data 250Business Exceptions: Services Returning Variant Business Responses 252
Asynchronous JMS Request-Reply Interactions 257
Supporting Dual Coordination Patterns 261Summary 262
Chapter 11: Load Distribution and Sequencing Patterns 265
Objectives 265
Using IP Redirectors to Distribute Load 266
Using JMS Queues to Distribute Load 266
Partitioning JMS Message Load between Servers 267
Enterprise Message Service Client Connection Load Distribution 269
Load Distribution in ActiveMatrix Service Bus 271
The Sequencing Problem 273
Patterns That Preserve Total Sequencing 275
Load Distribution Patterns That Preserve Partial Ordering 278
Summary 280Chapter 12: Data Management Patterns 283
Objectives 283
System-of-Record Pattern 284
System of Record with Cached Read-Only Copies Pattern 285
Replicated Data with Transactional Update Pattern 286
Edit-Anywhere-Reconcile-Later Pattern 287
Master-Data-Management Pattern 288
Summary 290
Chapter 13: Composites 293
Objectives 293
What Is a Composite? 293
Specifying a Composite 294
Architecting a Composite 294
Composite Services and Applications 303Information Retrieval Design Patterns 304
TIBCO ActiveMatrix Composite Implementation 307Summary 308
Part IV: Advanced Topics 311
Chapter 14: Benchmarking 313
Objectives 313
Misleading Results 314
Determining Operating Capacity 316Documenting the Test Design 317
Benchmarking Complex Components 324Interpreting Benchmark Results 327
Using Benchmark Results 336Summary 338
Chapter 15: Tuning 341
Objectives 341
ActiveMatrix Service Bus Node Architecture 341
ActiveMatrix BusinessWorks™ Service Engine Architecture 357Chapter 16: Fault Tolerance and High Availability 371
Objectives 371
Common Terms 372
Deferred JMS Acknowledgement Pattern 373
Intra-Site Cluster Failover Pattern 374
Generic Site Failover 377
Enterprise Message Service Failover 381ActiveMatrix BusinessWorks Failover 385
ActiveMatrix Service Bus Failover 390Summary 396
Chapter 17: Service Federation 401
Objectives 401
Factors Leading to Federation 402
Issues in Federation 402
Basic Federation Pattern 403
Federation with Remote Domain Pattern 405
Distributed Federation Pattern 406
Standardizing Service Domain Technology 407
Summary 407
Chapter 18: Documenting a Solution Architecture 409
Business Objectives and Constraints 409
Solution Context 410Business Process Inventory 410
Domain Model 410
Solution Architecture Pattern 411
Business Process 1 411
Business Process 2 411Business Process n 412
Addressing Nonfunctional Solution Requirements 412
Component/Service A 413Component/Service B 415
Component/Service n 415
Deployment 416
Integration and Testing Requirements 416Appendix A: Common Data Format Specifications 417
Appendix B: Message Format Specifications 417
Appendix C: Service Interface Specifications 417
Appendix D: Data Storage Specifications 417
Chapter 19: Documenting a Service Specification 419
Service Overview 419
Service Context 420Intended Utilization Scenarios 420
Interface Definitions 421
Referenced Components 421
Observable State 421
Triggered Behaviors 422
Coordination 422
Constraints 422
Nonfunctional Behavior 422
Deployment 423
Appendix A: Service Interface Specifications 423
Appendix B: Referenced Interface Specifications 423
Afterword 425
Appendix A: UML Notation Reference 427
Class Diagram Basics 427
Structure 432Activity Diagrams 437
Collaborations 440State Machines 441
Index 453