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Java Business Integration JSR 208 Chin-Yi Tsai

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1 Java Business Integration JSR 208 Chin-Yi Tsai cyt@pmlab.iecs.fcu.edu.tw http://140.134.26.25/~cyt

2 2 Integration Difficulties

3 3 Integration Solution Services (WS- I ) Enterprise Service Bus (interoperability) Components (pluggable) (interoperability)

4 4 Specification ( 非 Java EE 5 的一部分 ) Java Business Integration JSR 208 JBI-Compliant Component1 JBI-Compliant Component2 JBI Environment / JBI Container

5 5 ESB, SOA, JBI ESB  Architecture technique to integrate incompatible business applications over a common messaging bus.  Unlock and extend your existing systems and technology investments on a modern Service Oriented and Event Driven Architecture SOA  An architectural principle for structuring systems that SOA emphasizes the de-coupling of system components ESB & SOA  ESB is one architecture style that abides by the rules of a Service Orientated Architecture. JBI  Defines common interfaces (SPI) for components and message exchanges and service deployment.

6 6 What Does a Service Do Transform data Route messages Query databases Orchestrate conversations Apply business logic Apply business policy Handle business exceptions Solicit approvals How Is a Service Implemented? XSLT Enterprise JavaBeans. (EJB.) technology BPEL SQL XQuery Routing Table Business Rules EDI Transform

7 Outline Overview of JBI  integration JBI Architecture  SE  BC  NMR  JMX (Management) Conclusion (Keywords) Reference Appendix

8 8 Overview of JBI Standard “meta-container” for services Standard SPI for plug-in  Service Engines — provide and aggregate services  Binding Components — provide protocols and transports Loose coupling via WSDL message exchanges JBI defines an environment for plug-in components that interact using a services model based directly on WSDL 2.0 容器放元件進去 (plug-in) 元件也是一個容器

9 9 Component as Container JBI directly supports the deployment of artifacts to plug-in components, using an archive (ZIP file) package called a service unit.

10 10 Component as Container (Cont’d) Groups of service units are often developed or collected together, to form parts of a larger application or new service that are tested and deployed together. A group of JBI service units, along with a description of their relationships and target components, is called a service assembly.

11 11 Overview of JBI Java Business Integration (JBI) is a specification developed under the Java Community Process (JCP) for an approach to implementing a service-oriented architecture (SOA).  Creating a standards-based architecture for integration solutions  A suitable standard technology instead of proprietary vendor solution JBI defines an architecture that allows the construction of integration systems from plug-in components, that interoperate through the method of mediated message exchange.

12 12 Overview of JBI (Cont’d) JBI plug-in components are responsible for providing and consuming services.

13 13 JBI Architecture JBI provides an environment in which plug-in components reside.  The environment provides a set of services to facilitate execution of provided services, interaction between components, as well as management of the overall system created by a JBI installation and all installed components. JBI provides for interoperation between plug-in components by means of message-based service invocation, described using a standard service description language. JBI provides a set of services to facilitate management of the JBI environment, including the installed components. This includes component installation and life cycle management services. Plug-in component Message exchange Management

14 14 High-level View of JBI Architecture Single JVM Othe r JVM SE BC NMR JMX (Management)

15 15 Component Framework JBI components (service engines and binding components) provide interfaces for the use of JBI, and use interfaces provided by JBI. The JBI framework provides the following for the use of components  Component installation context  Component context  Class loading  Error indication

16 16 Standardized Integration SPI (Service Provider Interface) not API  Allow for proprietary “black boxes” as integration services DBMS2 DBMS1 JDBC Application Program Use JDBC API SPI

17 17 Service Engine Hosts business logic implementing services Exposes service endpoints Is a target for deployment — a container

18 18 Binding Component Handles protocol-specific message re-formatting Should contain no business logic 與 外部 服務的 溝通

19 19 Normalized Message Router The normalized message router, or NMR, receives message exchanges from JBI components (engines or bindings), and routes them to the appropriate component for processing.  decoupling The JBI environment's primary function is to route normalized message exchanges from one component to another.  Messages are delivered in a normalized form. NMR normalize De-normalize component normalize De-normalize component

20 20 Normalized Message Router (Cont’d)

21 21 Message Exchange A Message Exchange (ME) serves as a “container” for the normalized messages that are part of a service invocation. JBI supports a fixed set of message exchange patterns  a well-defined sequence of message exchanges between the consumer and the provider. A message exchange pattern (or MEP) no matter what contents (or type) of the messages themselves. By supporting a limited set of MEPs, the JBI standard ensures that components have a simple, well known interaction model to implement, ensuring interoperability.

22 22 JBI Messaging Architecture

23 23 Normalized Message Exchange (1) External Service Consumer Message Processing

24 24 Normalized Message Exchange (2) External Service Provider Message Processing

25 25 Example One-way Message Adapter  A message is sent to the JBI environment, transformed, then sent to a destination outside of the environment.

26 26 Service Invocation to MEP Mapping

27 27 Message Exchange Patterns (MEPs) An MEP defines the sequence, direction, and cardinality of all messages that occur in the course of invoking and performing the operation. All message exchanges between consumer and provider are mediated by the NMR. The components interact with the NMR, using their individual DeliveryChannels  Sending MessageExchange instance  Accepting MessageExchange instance MEPs  In-only Message Exchange Pattern  Robust In-Only Message Exchange Pattern  In-Out Message Exchange Pattern  In-Optional-Out Message Exchange Pattern

28 28 In-only Message Exchange Pattern Describing a one-way messaging pattern

29 29 Robust In-Only Message Exchange Pattern (fault scenario) Allowing the provider to easily return error responses to in-only message exchange

30 30 In-Out Message Exchange Pattern Normal response

31 31 In-Out Message Exchange Pattern (Cont’d) Fault response

32 32 In-Optional-Out Message Exchange Pattern Normal response 1

33 33 In-Optional-Out Message Exchange Pattern (Cont’d) Normal response 2

34 34 In-Optional-Out Message Exchange Pattern (Cont’d) Provider fault response

35 35 In-Optional-Out Message Exchange Pattern (Cont’d) Provider “done” response

36 36 One-way Service Invocation Between two Service Engines

37 37 SE Invokes Service Provided by Remote JBI Instance: Robust In with Fault

38 38 SE Invokes Remote Service

39 39 Management (JMX) The JBI environment, including bindings and engines, is administered through JMX. (MBean)  Installation of engines and bindings (components)  Life cycle management of components (start/stop controls)  Deployment of component artifacts to engines and bindings that support dynamic additions to their internal execution environments.  Monitoring and control.

40 40 Conclusion (Keywords) JSR 208 (SOA infrastructure/enabler) Meta-container (JBI Environment / JBI Container) Plug-in WSDL 2.0 JMX (Management) Messaging (NMR) SE & BC ESB enabler Assembling JBI-compliant component Installation (AP server, EJB Container, BPEL engine)  Installing it into the JBI environment thanks to JMX based administrative tools Deployment (BPEL process definition)  JBI component can be seen as a container (ex: BPEL engine)  Services (ex: BPEL) must be deployed into the component thanks to JBI administrative tools Activation  After deployment, services are accessible through the JBI environment as Endpoints

41 Reference

42 42 Reference Sun SOA Home  http://www.sun.com/products/soa/ind ex.jsp The Java EE 5 Tutorial  http://java.sun.com/javaee/5/docs/tut orial/doc/ Java EE At a Glance  http://java.sun.com/javaee/ Project Open ESB  https://open-esb.dev.java.net/ LogicBlaze FUSE: Open source SOA platform  http://www.logicblaze.com/index.jsp ServiceMix Home  http://servicemix.org/site/home.html ActiveMQ Home  http://www.activemq.org/site/home.ht ml PETALS Services Platform  http://petals.objectweb.org/ Mule Home  http://mule.codehaus.org/ Celtix  http://celtix.objectweb.org/ JBoss JEMS - The Open Source Platform for SOA  http://www.jboss.com/products/soa Oracle Service-Oriented Architecture Technology Center  http://www.oracle.com/technology/te ch/webservices/index.html

43 43 Reference (Cont’d) Sun SOA Home  http://www.sun.com/products/ soa/index.jsp JCP (Java Community Process)  http://jcp.org/en/home/index JSR 208 (JBI)  http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id= 208

44 Appendix

45 45 ESB ServiceMix Apache Synapsele Mule Celtix Sun’s Java Open Enterprise Service Bus

46 46 ServiceMiX Open Source JBI Container based on JBI Specification (JSR208) Supports Transaction Management through Jencks and Java Transaction API (JTA) Supports Java Message Service (JMS) through ActiveMQ Can extend any J2EE compliant Server with JBI by simply deploying Servicemix (e.g. Geronimo)

47 47 ServiceMix

48 48 (ServiceMix) Standard Component-Binding Component HTTP FTP File RSS Email SOAP WSIF(Web Service Invocation Framework) SAAJ(Soap With Attachments and Apache Axis) JAX WS(Java API for XML Web Services) XSQL(XML Query Language) JMS(Java Message Service)

49 49 (ServiceMix) Standard Component-Service Engine BPE(Container for BPEL) EIP (Enterprise Integration Patterns) Groovy(Container for Scripting) JCA(Java Connector Architecture) JSR181(Container for annotated POJOs) Quartz(Timer) XPath(Message Transformation with XPath) XSLT(Message Transformation with XSLT)

50 50 ServiceMix

51 51 (ServiceMix) Straight-throw flow

52 52 (ServiceMix) Seda Flow

53 53 (ServiceMix) JMS Flow

54 54 Basic Example Message Flow Diagram

55 55 Basic Example Message Flow Diagram Messages flow through the components as follows: 1.The timer component sends a message to inputSender through the Normalized Message Router (NMR). 2.inputSender converts the message (marshals it) into a JMS message, then uses the jmsTemplate bean to publish the message. 3.jmsTemplate uses the jmsFactorybean to get a connection to the port associated with the JMS topic called "demo.org.servicemix.source." The message is published on the "demo.org.servicemix.source" topic. 4.jencks (the JCA resource adapter) listens on port 61616 for messages. 5.inputReceiver subscribes to the "demo.org.servicemix.source" topic via jencks and receives the JMS message. 6.inputReceiver normalizes the JMS message and sends it to outputSender via the NMR. 7.outputSender marshals the normalized message to a JMS message and uses jmsTemplate to publish the message on the "demo.org.servicemix.result" topic. 8.jmsTemplate publishes it on the "demo.org.servicemix.result" topic using jmsFactory to get a connection to the result topic. 9.jencks listens on port 61616 for messages. 10.jmsTrace subscribes to the "demo.org.servicemix.result" topic and receives the JMS message via jencks. 11.jmsTrace converts the JMS message into a normalized message and sends it to trace via the NMR. 12.trace transforms the normalized message into a string and logs it to the console.

56 56 Basic Example Message Flow Diagram 1.Using the distributor's web interface, a department store customer submits an order for multiple products. An HTTP request is sent to the OrderReceiver, an HTTP binding component (BC). 3 2.The OrderReceiver sends the message to an OrderRouter service engine (SE) 4 component. This SE is responsible for parsing the order and deciding, based on the message content, which OrderTransformer should receive which part of the message (i.e., an order for a product). 3.The OrderRouter publishes the orders to the appropriate message topics based on the message content. Specifically, the OrderRouter publishes the messages based on which wholesaler sells the item. 4.The OrderTransformer is a service engine component, which modifies the message and puts it in a format which is readable by the wholesaler interface that will fulfill the order. 5.Each OrderTransformer sends the modified message to the OrderProcessor. 6.The OrderProcessor is a binding component that has two functions: a. It places an order to the appropriate wholesaler through the wholesaler's Webservice or proprietary interface. b. It also publishes a message about the order on a topic. 7.The message on the topic is subsequently picked up by the BusinessMonitor component via the jmsTrace component. 8.The BusinessMonitor component monitors the orders for quality assurance and business analytics, such as data mining.

57 57 Basic Example Message Flow Diagram

58 58 BPEL Logical Flow Diagram

59 59 File Binding Logical Flow Diagram

60 60 HTTP Binding Example Message Flow Diagram

61 61 JMS Binding Example Message Flow Diagram

62 62 Quartz Example Message Flow Diagram

63 63 RSS Binding Example Message Flow Diagram

64 64 Department Store Distributor Order Processing System

65 65

66 66 Online Ticket Reservation System

67 67 Online Application for Tax ID No. System

68 68 Department of Public Works Project Monitoring System

69 69 Network Status Indicator

70 70 News Feed Monitoring System

71 71

72 72 Mule Implementing ESB

73 73 Reliable One-way MEP with Fault Message Sequence Chart

74 74 Reliable Two-way Exchange Message Sequence Chart

75 75 One-way Transactional Message Exchange

76 76 A simple integration problem using JBI Example: Adapter Pattern

77 77 JBI Components for Adapter Application

78 78 SU SE-Tx: Transformation Service BC-Y: Provider Service Proxy SE-Seq: Adapter Logic BC-X: Client Service Proxy

79 79 Graphic View of Adapter Service Assembly SA

80 80 Adapter Pattern Message Sequence Diagram

81 81 JBI Component Installation Time

82 82

83 83 JBI Component Execution Time

84 84 Component Interaction -- Service Consumer Find a service endpoint Create a message exchange Send the message

85 85 Component Interaction -- Service Provider Activate an endpoint Receive a message Send the response Close the exchange

86 86

87 87 SOA Architecture Principles Well-defined service interfaces Loose coupling Document-based, mostly asynchronous, conversational interactions Service registration and discovery

88 88 To Form Ideal SOA Infrastructure Combine the best of previous technologies

89 89 JBI Architecture

90 90 Bring it Together

91 91 Assembling Services into Processes

92 92 Events-Driven Application Models Asynchronous One-way Communication  Simple Events  Brokered Events  Enterprise Service Busses  Event Stream Processing Engines

93 93 Simple Events  Simulating Request/Reply

94 94 Brokered Event  Point to point (Send to One Interested Party )

95 95 Enterprise Service Bus - Orchestration Service Event Stream Processing (ESP)

96 96 SOA and Events Service Consumer Service Consumer Service Provide r Service Provide r Event Sink Event Source Service Consumer Service Consumer Service Provide r Service Provide r Notification One-way Event Sink Event Source

97 97 ESB enables SOA and EDA SOA – Service Oriented Architecture  Distributed, Web Services  WSDL, SOAP, XML, XSD  Registry Lookup, UDDI  Request / Reply EDA – Event Driven Enterprise  Message Oriented  Qualities of Service  Asynchronous Publish / Subscribe

98 98 JBI Messaging JBI defines a model and the APIs for messaging between JBI components All types of interaction  One-Way  Reliable One-Way  Request Response  Request Optional-Response Messaging API  Components send messages to the JBI container  Components read messages from the JBI container JBI vs JMS

99 99 JBI Addressing An interface is a group of operations A service implements an interface represented by qualified name and its WSDL definition A service has one or more endpoints accessible by different bindings Endpoints can be  external for services accessible via a binding component  internal for services provided by a service engine

100 100 JBI Component Packaging (installation) Write an XML descriptor for the component  the deployment descriptor Package the descriptor with component logic in a JAR archive Install the component in JBI environment Component deployment descriptor

101 101 Deployment Provide services to JBI environment through the JBI component Service (component artifact) is described by XML descriptor and packaged as “Service Unit” (SU) Services that have to be deployed into different components to produce a new application can be grouped into a “Service Assembly” (SA). The SA contains an XML descriptor to describe how each SU is deployed on its target component Service assembly deployment descriptor

102 102 Components and Artifacts Lifecycle Components and artifacts are managed with the same unified lifecycle Lifecycle management is accessible by admin tools via standard JMX MBean defined by the specification

103 103 Applying JBI With ESB Open ESB  Sun's Open Source Enterprise Service Bus  A standard, distributed integration infrastructure  Highly distributed scalable JBI services  Uses JBI Reference Implementation code  Based on MOM—async XML message exchanges  Centralized management  Standard deployment of composite services  QOS characteristics Open ESB Architecture

104 104 Integration Solution: Proxy Service

105 105 Integration Solution: Proxy Service Composite App: Service Assembly  A collection of service unit Proxy service deployment

106 106 Composite Application Using JBI

107 107

108 108 BPEL

109 109 JBI Service based  Plug-in components serve roles  Service provider, consumer, both  Providers supply self-description  Messages  Operations and message exchange patterns  Services  Endpoints  …All using WSDL Service Engines  Provide local services  Business Processes (orchestration: BPEL4WS)  Transformation (XSLT, EDI)  Business Logic (EJBs)  Integrated Java technology-based apps  Consume services  Orchestration  No Restrictions Binding Components  Proxy for remote service providers  Protocol: SOAP, AS2, ebXML MSH, XML-over-HTTP, EDI, etc.  Access for remote service consumers  Protocol access to  SE-provided services  BC-proxied services  Contain no business logic  Convention: break at your peril  No Restrictions

110 110 Normalized Message Router Key to interoperation between components Mediated Message Exchange Normalized Message  Abstract Message (payload) + Message Properties (metadata)  WSDL Abstract Message  WSDL interface operation message definition  Properties (metadata)  Protocol-supplied context information  Security tokens  Transaction information  Data other components may recognize Message Exchange Pattern  Support for simple communications primitives  Message exchange patterns are defined from the provider’s perspective

111 111 Inside Message Exchange Handling

112 112 JBI JBI is a messaging-based plug-in architecture JBI does not define the pluggable component themselves, but  Defines the framework, container interface, behavior, and common services JBI allows anyone to create JBI compliant integration plug-in component and integrate them dynamically into the JBI infrastructure Key pieces of the JBI environment  SE  BC  NMR  JBI runtime environment (JBI meta container)

113 113 JBI JBI is an architecture for integration systems specifying plug-in components that interoperate by exchanging messages, rather than by interacting directly. This decoupling increases flexibility because each component needs to know how to interact with the JBI bus only and not with n number of other components. JBI components provide services, consume services, or sometimes both. There are two types of components: Service Engines (SE) and Binding Components (BC). The SEs provide business logic and transformation services. The BCs provide connectivity for applications that are external to the JBI. The separation of business and processing logic from communication logic makes the implementation of components much less complex. The mediated message exchange between components is provided by the Normalized Message Router (NMR). The NMR routes normalized messages between service providers and consumers. A normalized message consists of two parts: the message content (payload) and the message metadata. The message metadata contains information such as security information, that can affect the processing of the message as it routes through the JBI. Messages flowing into the JBI, via binding components, are translated into a normalized (neutral) format, then routed to their destination. Prior to final delivery the normalized message is translated into the appropriate format for the recipient. A message can be routed through several JBI components depending on what processing is needed. The JBI environment also supplies a set of services for self management, including services for component installation and life cycle management of components. In summary, the JBI specification creates a standards-based technology for enterprise application integration.

114 114 JBI LogicBlaze has implemented the ServiceMix ESB based on the JBI (JSR 208) specification in order to create a standards based ESB and the ServiceMix ESB combines the functionality of both a Service Oriented Architecture (S0A) and Event Driven Architecture (EDA) to achieve an agile, enterprise ESB. ServiceMix supports event driven architecture for events occurring both internal and external to the bus. In other words, JMS binding components can listen for the arrival of messages, i.e., the "event" on topics or queues which are external to the bus, while other components can listen for messages on the normalized message bus. JSR 208 describes a set of Java APIs to interact with an implementation of a Java-based Enterprise Service Bus (ESB). This ESB must provide for the integration of disparate service components, enabling them to communicate with their consumers or clients through a myriad of communications modules. It is specified as a set of Java based APIs and component packaging conventions that all JBI compliant ESB implementations must follow. The JBI 1.0 APIs attempt to ensure that Java components developed can be deployed and executed across different vendors’ ESB implementations. All plug-in components on the ESB, regardless of type (SE or BC), and regardless of role (consumer or provider), all communicate in the same way. All components on the ESB communicate with one another by passing messages.

115 115 The ESB will only work with normalized messages, i.e. ones with protocol specificity removed. This means that you cannot tell, from examining the message, the connection or protocol over which it was sent. A component must normalize any message before sending it to the ESB. Similarly, if a BC needs to send a message to an external system (outside of the ESB), the message must be denormalized before further routing or use. Denormalization puts back communications protocol-dependent frames, headers, and other information. This is the reason why an ESB is often also called a NMR or Normalized Message Router.

116 116 Services that need to be accessed by the ESB are accessed as endpoints. Endpoint is how a service is addressed by the ESB. Service is the actual business entity the performs the desired function Service units provide information about the services and their endpoints to the component Service assembly is how several service units are packaged and deployed on to target components Integrating old and new components and services using a service-oriented architecture requires an infrastructure that can connect any component or service, regardless of location, messaging protocol, and message format. To orchestrate existing services and components to meet the needs of today's dynamic business climate, this infrastructure must be highly customizable. The enterprise service bus (ESB) infrastructure fulfills these requirements.

117 117 Enterprise service bus (ESB) is a centralized, logical, architectural component that operates in a distributed, heterogeneous environment to facilitate the requirements of a highly scalable, fault-tolerant, service-messaging framework. JBI embodies a messaging model based on Web Services Description Language (WSDL) for easy mapping to Web services, HTTP, email, and JMS. JBI integrates with legacy systems, binary transports, document-oriented transports, and RPC (remote procedure call) systems. Message normalization is the process of mapping context-specific data to a context-neutral abstraction to transport data in a standard format. All messages handled by the NMR are normalized. An NMR is not embodied by any concrete object. It is abstracted as a set of APIs, SPIs (service provider interfaces), and components. The NMR APIs include:  JBI Message API  JBI Service API  JBI Message Exchange Factory API  Service Description SPI  Message Exchange Patterns API  Endpoint Reference API

118 118 JBI supports two kinds of components, service engines and binding components. Components interact with JBI in two ways:  SPIs: Interfaces implemented by a binding or engine  APIs: Interfaces exposed to bindings or engines by the framework An external service consumer sends a service request across a specific protocol and transport to a binding component. The binding component converts the request to a normalized message. The binding component then creates a message packet called a message exchange (ME) and sends it across the binding component's delivery channel to the NMR for delivery to a service provider.


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