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Microsoft BizTalk Server 2010 Unleashed is the 100% new, 100% practical developer’s guide to Microsoft’s most powerful version of BizTalk Server. Written by an expert team of Microsoft insiders and BizTalk MVPs, it reflects unsurpassed experience with all phases of BizTalk enterprise solutions development, from planning through deployment and administration.
The authors begin by introducing BizTalk Server’s architecture and key integration concepts. Next, they offer in-depth coverage of BizTalk’s foundational features, including schemas, maps, orchestrations, and pipelines. You’ll learn how to effectively utilize both standard and custom adapters; monitor integration services; leverage cloud computing via Windows Azure; implement operational BI solutions; and make the most of business rules and BizTalk’s Business Rules Engine (BRE).
The authors offer best practices and “in the trenches” tips for everything from managing deployments through implementing state-of-the-art mobile RFID solutions. No other book offers this much useful, pragmatic, and tested knowledge for successful BizTalk development.
Brian Loesgen is a Principal Architect Evangelist on Microsoft’s Azure ISV team. A six-time Microsoft MVP, he has extensive experience in building advanced enterprise, ESB, and SOA solutions. He has coauthored eight books, including SOA with .NET and Windows Azure. Charles Young, a principal consultant at Solidsoft, and Jan Eliasen, an IT architect at Logica, have each been honored repeatedly as BizTalk MVPs, and are highly respected bloggers in the BizTalk community. Scott Colestock, chief architect for Trace Ventures, specializes in using BizTalk to implement integration and service orchestration solutions. He is a member of Microsoft’s Architectural Advisory Board and a BizTalk MVP. Anush Kumar, CTO of S3Edge, served as Microsoft’s RFID business leader and was heavily involved in designing and architecting its BizTalk RFID offerings. Jon Flanders is an independent consultant, instructor for Pluralsight, BizTalk MVP, and author of RESTful .NET.
Maps in Microsoft BizTalk Server 2010
Download the sample pages (includes Chapter 3 and Index)
Foreword xxii
Part I The Basics
1 What Is BizTalk Server? 3
A Brief History of Application Integration 3
BizTalk Server Capabilities 7
Adaptation 7
Mediation 8
Exception Handling 8
Orchestration and Choreography 9
Performance and Scalability 9
Security 10
Insight 10
Electronic Data Interchange 11
RFID Event Handling 11
What Is a “Typical” BizTalk Solution? 11
BizTalk Server, WCF, and WF 12
Summary 14
2 Schemas 15
BizTalk Schemas 16
XML Schema Definition 16
Properties 17
Internal Schemas 18
XML Schemas 20
Existing XSDs 20
Generating an XSD 21
Creating an XSD 21
Flat File Schemas 36
Add Existing Schemas 38
Creating by Hand 38
Flat File Schema Wizard 47
EDI Schemas 60
Messages That Are Not XML and Not Flat File 60
Pass-Through Pipeline 60
Custom Disassembler 61
Custom Editor Extensions 61
Third-Party Components 61
Property Promotion 61
Distinguished Fields 63
Promoted Properties 65
Property Demotion 66
When to Use What 67
Versioning of Schemas 69
No Long-Running Transactions and a Short Downtime Acceptable 69
Long-Running Transactions or a Short Downtime Is Unacceptable 70
Testing 71
Validate Schemas 71
Validate Instances 72
Generate Instances 74
Unit Testing of Schemas 75
Testing Using Pipeline Tools 80
Schemas for Scenario Used in This Book 81
FineFoods.Common.Schemas 81
FineFoods.CreditCheck.Schemas 82
FineFoods.Customers.C1701 82
FineFoods.Customers.C1702 83
FineFoods.Customers.Schemas 84
FineFoods.Inventory.Schemas 84
FineFoods.Orders.Schemas 84
FineFoods.PurchaseOrders.Schemas 87
Summary 88
3 Maps 89
The Mapper 90
Layout of Mapper 90
Initial Considerations 92
Creating a Simple Map 94
Functoids 108
String Functoids 111
Mathematical Functoids 112
Logical Functoids 113
Date/Time Functoids 115
Conversion Functoids 116
Scientific Functoids 116
Cumulative Functoids 117
Database Functoids 118
Advanced Functoids 120
Third-Party Functoids 122
Advanced Maps 123
Mapping Optional Fields 123
Looping Functoid 123
Index Functoid 125
Database Lookup 127
Scripting Functoid 129
Functoid Combination 131
Combination of Functoids for If-Then-Else 131
Create Separated List 132
Table Looping Functoid 132
Conditional Creation of Output Nodes 135
Custom XSLT 136
Cross Referencing 136
Building Custom Functoids 140
Initial Setup 141
Normal Functoid 146
Cumulative Functoid 151
Developing Advanced Functoids 155
Deployment of Custom Functoids 157
Debugging 161
Testing of Maps 163
Validating Maps 164
Testing Maps 164
Debugging a Map 167
Unit Testing 168
Summary 172
4 Orchestrations 173
Orchestration Designer 174
Defining Orchestrations 177
Building Orchestrations 178
Messages 182
Variables 186
Shapes 188
Delivery Notification and Handling Retries 217
Calling Pipelines 218
Web Services 221
Dehydration and Rehydration 228
Correlations 229
Convoys 234
Parallel Convoys 234
Sequential Convoys 235
Zombies 236
Transactions 237
Atomic 238
Long Running 240
Compensating Code 241
Persistence Points 246
Exception Handling 247
Debugging 250
Send Out Messages 250
Debug and Trace 250
Breakpoints in Orchestration Debugger 250
Summary 255
5 Pipelines 257
Stages in Pipelines 258
Stages in a Receive Pipeline 259
Stages in a Send Pipeline 261
Built-In Pipelines 262
Receive Pipelines 262
Send Pipelines 263
Built-In Pipeline Components 263
XML Components 264
Flat Files 268
Encoding, Encrypting, and Signing 272
BizTalk Framework 275
Validator and Party Resolution 280
Custom Pipelines 283
Using the Built-In Pipeline Templates 283
Creating Custom Pipeline Templates 284
Custom Pipeline Components 287
Resources, Attributes, and Constructors 288
Interfaces 292
Message and Context Interfaces 305
Miscellaneous Functionality 309
Streaming 314
Properties 317
Really Fast Pipeline Component Implementation 323
Deployment 324
Debugging 327
Pipeline Component Wizard 329
Testing 330
Pipeline exe 330
Unit Testing 331
Summary 334
6 Adapters 337
BizTalk Adapters 337
Native Adapters 338
Line-of-Business Adapters 339
BizTalk Adapter Pack 339
Host Adapters 339
Third-Party and Custom Adapters 339
Additional Microsoft Adapters 340
The Role of WCF Adapters 340
Adapter Characteristics 340
Direction 341
Push and Pull 341
Message Interchange Pattern 341
Hosting 342
Configuration 342
Batches 343
Transactions 344
Message Context 344
Metadata Harvesting 344
Registering Adapters 345
Creating Adapter Handlers 346
Port-Level Configuration 349
Configuring Receive Locations 350
Configuring Send Ports 352
Adapter Properties 355
Deploying Bindings 355
Native Adapters 357
File Adapter 357
Robust Interchange 357
Polling Locked Files 358
File Renaming 359
Reliable Messaging Issues 359
Path and File Names 359
Security 360
Additional Send Handler Issues 360
FTP Adapter 360
FTP Issues 361
Handling Duplicate Messages 362
Staging Files in Temporary Folders 362
Raw FTP Commands 363
Secure Messaging 363
HTTP Adapter 364
Using HTTP Receive Handlers 364
Using HTTP Send Handlers 366
Additional Configuration 366
MQ Series Adapter 367
Using MQ Series Receive Handlers 368
Using MQ Series Send Handlers 369
Managing Queues 369
Configuring MQSAgent 370
MSMQ Adapter 370
Using MSMQ Receive Handlers 371
Using MSMQ Send Handlers 372
Authenticating and Securing Messages 374
POP3 Adapter 375
Using POP3 Receive Handlers 376
Handling Encrypted Messages 377
SMTP Adapter 377
Using SMTP Send Handlers 378
Windows SharePoint Services Adapter 379
Using WSS Receive Handlers 380
Using WSS Send Handlers 381
Mapping SharePoint Columns 383
SOAP Adapter 383
WCF Adapters 384
Windows Communication Foundation 385
Comparing WCF to BizTalk Server 386
The Role of BizTalk Native WCF Adapters 388
Hosting Native WCF Adapters 389
The WCF Service Publishing Wizard 389
Publishing Orchestrations 392
Publishing Schemas 392
WCF Send Handlers 394
Importing MEX Endpoints 395
Importing Metadata Files 396
Dynamic Ports 397
Configuring WCF Adapters 397
Addresses and Identity 398
Bindings 399
Behavior 400
Security and Credentials 401
Message Handling 402
Using the SQL Server LoB Adapter 404
WCF LoB Framework and SDK 404
SQL Server Adapter 404
Polling and Notification 405
Performing Operations via a Send Handler 407
Additional Adapter Capabilities 408
Metadata Harvesting 409
Summary 412
Part II Advanced Topics
7 BizTalk 2010 and WCF: Extensibility 415
WCF Extensibility 416
The WCF Channel Stack 416
ABCs Reviewed 417
ServiceContract in BizTalk 418
WCF Behaviors 420
Example of WCF Extensibility in BizTalk 420
Summary 429
8 BizTalk and Windows Azure 431
Extending the Reach of BizTalk Applications 431
The AppFabric SDK 432
Receiving Messages 433
Sending Messages 434
Static Send Port 435
Dynamic Send Port 436
ESB Off-Ramp 436
Using InfoPath as a Client 438
Summary 439
9 Business Activity Monitoring with BizTalk BAM 441
BAM and Metrics 441
What Is BizTalk BAM? 442
Using BizTalk BAM 444
End-to-End, High-Level Walkthrough of the BAM Process 444
Real-Time Versus Scheduled Aggregations 446
Defining Activities and Views 447
Progress Dimension 450
Data Dimension 450
Numeric Range Dimension 450
Time Dimension 450
Using the Tracking Profile Editor 452
Using the BAM APIs 453
DirectEventStream (DES) 453
BufferedEventStream (BES) 453
OrchestrationEventStream (OES) 454
IPipelineContext Interface 454
Creating a Higher-Level API Specifically for Service Metrics 454
Working with the WCF and WF Interceptors 457
Using Notifications 460
Rapid Prototyping 460
REST and BAM 461
Managing BAM 461
BAM Database Considerations 461
Deployment and Management 461
Security 462
Scripting Deployment 462
Summary 465
10 The Business Rules Framework 467
The Importance of Rules 468
Processes and Policies 468
Business Policies 469
Policy Externalization 469
Policy Scenarios 471
Business Versus Executable Rules 472
Business Rule Management 473
BRMS and the BRF 475
Example Scenario: Order Processing 476
Incomplete and Implicit Business Rules 478
Indirect Policy Mapping 478
Technical Policy 479
Data Models 479
Programmatic Bindings 479
Priority 479
Traceability 479
Refactoring 480
Testing, Publishing, and Deployment 480
Managing Change 481
Real-World Rule-Processing 482
Using Vocabularies 483
What About Performance? 484
Inference and Reasoning 485
The Business Rules Framework 487
Introducing the BRF 487
Rule Storage and Administration 488
Rule Deployment 489
Rule Modeling 495
Rule Execution 497
Components and Tools 499
Microsoft Business Rule Language 499
Business Rules Database 499
Pub-Sub Adapter 504
Rule Store Components 505
SqlRuleStore 505
OleDbRuleStore 505
FileRuleStore 506
Rule Set Deployment Driver 507
Business Rules Language Converter 507
Business Rules Engine 507
Policy Class 507
Policy Tester Class 509
BizTalk Server 2010 Rule Engine Extensions 511
Rule Definition and Deployment 511
The Rule Composer 512
Loading Rule Stores 513
Using the Policy Explorer 516
Using the Facts Explorer 520
Composing Rule Conditions 525
Creating Rule Actions 530
Rule Engine Component Configuration 532
Testing Rule Sets 534
Vocabularies 538
Strategies for Vocabulary Versioning 543
Publishing and Deployment 545
The Rules Engine Deployment Wizard 546
Using Rules with BizTalk Server 547
ESB Toolkit 547
RFID Server 548
Using Rules in Custom Code 548
Policy Management in the Administration Console 548
The Call Rules Orchestration Shape 551
Policy-Driven Features of the ESB Toolkit 556
The RFID Server BRE Event Handler 558
Summary 561
11 Rule-Based Programming 563
The Roots of Confusion 563
Declarativity 564
Set-Based Programming 565
Recursive Processing 565
Blended Paradigms 566
Limits of Expressivity 567
Understanding the Rule Engine 568
Understanding Production Systems 568
Understanding Short-Circuiting 571
Using OR Connectives 573
Understanding Implicit Conditions 576
Common Rule Patterns 577
Implementing Quantification 577
Handling Negation-as-Failure 581
Using Strong Negation 583
Designing Rule Sets as State Machines 584
Exploiting Situated Reasoning 587
Rule Engine Mechanisms 589
Understanding Working Memory 589
The Match-Resolve-Act Cycle 590
Introducing the Rete Algorithm 593
Managing Conflict Resolution 594
Forward- and Backward-Chaining 595
Working with Facts 597
Using Typed Fact Classes 597
Handling XML Documents 598
Setting XPath Properties in the Rule Composer 599
XML Type Specifiers 600
Handling XML Namespaces 602
Reading and Writing XML Data 602
Managing Optional XML Nodes 603
Handling ADO NET DataTable and DataRow Objects 606
Handling Data Connections 607
Handling NET Types 609
Invoking Static Type Members 613
Optimizing Rule Sets 615
Controlling Side Effects 615
Optimizing the Rete Network 617
Programming with the Rule API 618
Using the Policy Class 618
Handling Long-Term Facts 623
Implementing Compensation Handlers 624
Using the RuleEngine Class 627
Implementing Custom Rule Store Components 628
Managing Deployment Programmatically 630
Creating Rules Programmatically 633
Summary 637
12 ESB with BizTalk Server 639
What Is an ESB? 639
Introducing the Enterprise Service Bus 639
What Problems Does an ESB Solve? 640
What Are the Components of an ESB? 641
Dynamic Routing 643
Dynamic Transformation 644
Message Validation 644
Message-Oriented Middleware 645
Is BizTalk a Fully Functional ESB? 645
What Is the ESB Toolkit? 645
History of the ESB Toolkit 646
What Is in the ESB Toolkit? 646
What’s the Difference Between Native BizTalk Server and BizTalk Server with the ESB Toolkit? 646
The Magic Behind an ESB 647
The ESB Toolkit Stack 649
Itineraries 650
Specifying Itineraries 651
The Itinerary Lifecycle 652
Dynamic Resolution: The Resolvers 653
Adapter Providers 655
Service Composition 656
Messaging-Only Implementations 657
Unified Exception Management 658
Exposing Core Services 660
Distributed ESBs 660
REST and BizTalk ESB 661
A Stylistic Comparison 661
Incorporating REST into the BizTalk ESB 662
Management 662
Provisioning and Runtime Governance 662
SLA Enforcement 663
Monitoring 663
Organizational Considerations 664
Ensuring a Smooth Transition 664
Gatekeeper Process 665
Summary 666
Part III Deployment and Administration
13 Administration Console Concepts 669
Introducing the Administration Console 669
BizTalk Group Properties 670
BizTalk Settings Dashboard 672
Group Hub and Query View 678
Applications Node 680
Platform Settings 681
Hosts 681
Host Instances 681
Servers 682
Message Boxes 683
Adapters 684
Summary 685
14 Deployment Concepts 687
The Work to Be Done 687
“Application” as a Formal Concept 689
Where Does It All Begin? (Inside Visual Studio) 691
Folder and Project Structure 691
Namespaces and Assembly Names 692
Applying Strong Names 693
Setting Deployment Properties 694
Fine Foods Solution 696
Deploying from Visual Studio 697
Binding and Starting the Application 698
Edit/Debug Cycle 700
Handling Binding Files During Development 703
Creating and Managing Deployable Packages 704
Other Types of Resources 707
Binding Files as Resources 708
Deployment Scripts as Resources 709
Exporting MSI Files 712
Handling MSI Export on a Build Server 713
Deploying MSI Packages to a BizTalk Group 715
Import/Install via Command Line 717
Handling Other Deployables 718
Business Activity Monitoring 718
Rule Vocabularies and Policies 719
Handling Upgrade and Versioning Scenarios 719
Summary 720
Part IV RFID
15 BizTalk RFID 723
RFID Overview 724
The BizTalk RFID Framework 725
Installation Notes for BizTalk RFID 727
Device Applications 731
Vendor Extensions and Extensibility 743
Tag Operations 749
Introducing RFID Processes 756
Exception Handling 771
Debugging (Process Hosting Model) 773
Integration and Deployment Considerations 773
Summary 778
16 BizTalk RFID Mobile 779
Mobile RFID Overview 779
The BizTalk RFID Mobile Framework 780
Installation Notes 781
Device Applications 782
Running Your First Mobile Application 787
Barcode Support 791
BizTalk RFID Mobile Connector Architecture (Store and Forward) 792
Remote Device Management 796
Summary 798
Closing notes 799
Index 803
Although there is mention of source code on the back cover, no source code exists for this title.