Home > Articles > Web Services > SOA

SOA

49 Items

Sort by Date | Title

Parallel Computing and Business Applications
Dec 30, 2008
Cory Isaacson explains how Software Pipelines architecture enables you to easily scale your application to any size, maximize your resources, and best of all, do all this and still maintain critical business transaction and integrity requirements.
Project-Oriented SOA
Apr 7, 2009
This article introduces an effective technique for moving your SOA program forward through an incremental, project-based approach.
REST-Inspired SOA Design Patterns
Mar 10, 2009
Raj Balasubramanian presents a series of REST-inspired SOA patterns has been developed as candidate patterns for inclusion in the master SOA design patterns catalog.
So, What Is This WCF Anyway?
Feb 22, 2008
Steve Resnick, Richard Crane and Chris Bowen walk us through the basics of Windows Communication Foundation.
SOA and Web 2.0: Putting It All Together
Dec 28, 2007
Create a plan for your company's journey toward innovation by building and following a set of guiding principles and goals, as outlined in this chapter.
SOA Basics
Dec 13, 2010
This chapter from 100 SOA Questions answers the questions, what is SOA, is SOA an architectural style, what are fundamental constructs (the DNA) of SOA, what is the difference between a Web Service and an SOA service and what makes a project an SOA implementation?
SOA Design Patterns: Capability Composition Patterns
Nov 4, 2008
Capability composition patterns build upon the service identification and definition patterns to establish the concept of service composition. Thomas Erl discusses this pattern in this chapter.
SOA Design Patterns: Service Governance Patterns
Jan 14, 2009
This chapter covers several SOA patterns that have emerged to help evolve a service without compromising its responsibilities as an active member of a service inventory.
SOA Governance: Governing the Service Factory
Feb 19, 2009
This chapter covers a practical approach for governing both the operation of the service factory and the management of services after they have been deployed to production.
SOA Pattern (#13): Canonical Protocol
Apr 29, 2010
The Canonical Protocol design pattern is one of the inventory standardization patterns that aims to elevate the composition-centric characteristic of SOA by making services interoperable with each other. By enforcing the use of a common communication framework, it eliminates the need for protocol bridging and increases the reusability and the recomposability potential of services in a service inventory.
SOA Pattern (#1): Service Façade
Jan 20, 2009
Thomas Erl brings you the first SOA Pattern of the Week.
SOA Pattern (#10): Service Refactoring
Mar 9, 2010
At some point during its lifetime a service might need to be enhanced or modified as a result of an external or an internal stimulus. The Service Refactoring design pattern addresses this issue in a manner so that the existing service consumers are not affected by the required change.
SOA Pattern (#11): Event-Driven Messaging
Mar 27, 2010
The Event-Driven Messaging design pattern attempts to address the inefficiencies related to the use of the traditional polling based model by suggesting a publisher-subscriber based model whereby a service interaction occurs only when an event occurs within the boundary of the service provider.
SOA Pattern (#12): Service Layers
Apr 20, 2010
The Service Layers design pattern attempts to standardize the way services are designed within a service inventory by organizing services into logical layers that share a common type of functionality. By structuring the service inventory around common types of functionalities, this design pattern eases the evolution of services and reduces their governance burden.
SOA Pattern (#14): Logic Centralization
Jun 11, 2010
The Logic Centralization pattern is one of the basic inventory design patterns that structures the service inventory in a way so that it is free from redundant solution logic and endeavors to increase the reuse potential of agnostic services by enforcing use of agnostic services according to their functional boundaries.
SOA Pattern (#2): Non-Agnostic Context
Jan 28, 2009
Should a service only be considered a service if it’s reusable?
SOA Pattern (#3): Domain Inventory
Feb 5, 2009
You are not required to carry out an enterprise-wide adoption of SOA in order to realize its benefits. This is the very reason the Domain Inventory pattern emerged.
SOA Pattern (#4): Service Normalization
Feb 25, 2009
Like data normalization, the Service Normalization pattern is intent on reducing redundancy and waste in order to avoid the governance burden associated with having to maintain and synchronize similar or duplicate bodies of service logic.
SOA Pattern (#5): Service Decomposition
Apr 2, 2009
The Service Decomposition pattern provides a technique for splitting up a service after its initial deployment into two or more fine-grained services.
SOA Pattern (#6): Canonical Schema
May 19, 2009
Of all the patterns in the SOA design patterns catalog there is perhaps no other as simple to understand yet as difficult to apply in practice as Canonical Schema.

< Prev Page 1 2 3 Next >