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prk |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 7:13 am Post subject: Open source ESB's |
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Centurion
Joined: 17 Feb 2004 Posts: 102
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We currently use IBM's MQ and Message Broker (ESB). Due to the validation efforts involved, implementing new services/POC's and promoting them to Production is a huge time factor. So, we are looking for an open source ESB which can be used to quickly develop SOA based web services and REST style web services and which would be stable.
I did some reseacrh and found that ServiceMix and ChainBuilder ESB's are some of the good ones. Wanted to see if anyone explored any open source products and if you have any feedback. |
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WMBDEV1 |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 7:24 am Post subject: Re: Open source ESB's |
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Sentinel
Joined: 05 Mar 2009 Posts: 888 Location: UK
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Please explain:
prk wrote: |
Due to the validation efforts involved, implementing new services/POC's and promoting them to Production is a huge time factor. |
What makes you think that changing provider will alleviate these "Validation efforts"? |
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prk |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 7:35 am Post subject: |
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Centurion
Joined: 17 Feb 2004 Posts: 102
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The current ESB that we have has high visibility in the organization. If we have an alternate light-weight ESB we can justify ourselves and make faster deployments to provide solutions. The second thing is the licensing costs, we don't want to have one more Broker environment and pay for it. So, I am trying to explore a reliable open source ESB. |
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WMBDEV1 |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 7:45 am Post subject: |
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Sentinel
Joined: 05 Mar 2009 Posts: 888 Location: UK
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prk wrote: |
The current ESB that we have has high visibility in the organization. |
As you'd expect really! I'm not sure moving provider will make it any less "visible" / important to the organisation. Whereas i'm a big fan of open source software, i've never really felt comfortable running key 24 x 7 parts of the business on it, but there will be others that disagree.
Your other point about licensing costs may be valid however and is something that you may be able to negotiate with your IBM sales rep. Wheresas open source may look attractive cus its free to install, you lose the support and SLAs that you may get from a "paid for" product which may then lead to you needing a larger in-house team to support the solution, thereby making it not really "free".
Just my two pennies though. |
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prk |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 8:13 am Post subject: |
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Centurion
Joined: 17 Feb 2004 Posts: 102
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Support issues are always going to be there with open source products but they are getting quite popular. I am looking for feedback from someone who actually tried any open source esb's. |
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WMBDEV1 |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 8:36 am Post subject: |
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Sentinel
Joined: 05 Mar 2009 Posts: 888 Location: UK
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Sure, i'm also interested as to other peoples responses but I was just sharing some of my thoughts around the concepts from your post, especially that moving away from the existing solution wont make their ESB any less important / visible to them and I suspect your "validation efforts" will remain unchanged  |
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bruce2359 |
Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 10:59 am Post subject: |
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 Poobah
Joined: 05 Jan 2008 Posts: 9469 Location: US: west coast, almost. Otherwise, enroute.
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Quote: |
Due to the validation efforts involved |
I'm confused...
Are you looking for a smaller EJB container to do initial validation of the EJB process ONLY? If so, what happens when you next try to validate your real EJB application, and it doesn't work? _________________ I like deadlines. I like to wave as they pass by.
ב''ה
Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi, Lex Vivendi. As we Worship, So we Believe, So we Live. |
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prk |
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:42 am Post subject: |
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Centurion
Joined: 17 Feb 2004 Posts: 102
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No, we want to have a Non-validated instance of ESB and are looking for open source options. We can use this ESB to implement and deploy non-validated services faster. Since the current ESB instance is validated, we have restrictions on it. |
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Vitor |
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 11:04 am Post subject: |
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 Grand High Poobah
Joined: 11 Nov 2005 Posts: 26093 Location: Texas, USA
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prk wrote: |
Since the current ESB instance is validated, we have restrictions on it. |
What do you mean by "validated" in this context? I struggle, like other posters, to see what the open source ESB will allow to do quicker than WMB will. _________________ Honesty is the best policy.
Insanity is the best defence. |
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fjb_saper |
Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 3:05 pm Post subject: |
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 Grand High Poobah
Joined: 18 Nov 2003 Posts: 20756 Location: LI,NY
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Vitor wrote: |
I struggle, like other posters, to see what the open source ESB will allow to do quicker than WMB will. |
The main percieved advantage is to no longer need dedicated ESQL resources, since with open ESBs it could all be handled by java resources...
Well in the end you will still need resources that have an understanding of the framework and how it all works together. You may end up spending more time in fine tuning & performance: WMB (one JVM / eg) against open ESB (one JVM per instance)... and the move from one to the other is probably going to cost you as much as a new installation/deployment.
We had a critical look at out ESB and found that most of the problems did not relate directly to the ESB but more to the way we used it. I.E. moving to a different ESB provider would not resolve those problems...
 _________________ MQ & Broker admin |
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