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MQ endpoint support with WSRR |
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bobbee |
Posted: Wed Oct 17, 2012 3:30 am Post subject: MQ endpoint support with WSRR |
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 Knight
Joined: 20 Sep 2001 Posts: 545 Location: Tampa
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I am looking for some statistical info. How many have or are using WSRR for service endpoint support for MQ in their applications. Are you doing this through WMB, WESB, etc? |
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lancelotlinc |
Posted: Wed Oct 17, 2012 5:15 am Post subject: |
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 Jedi Knight
Joined: 22 Mar 2010 Posts: 4941 Location: Bloomington, IL USA
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I've worked at a dozen different clients in the last ten years. None of these clients use WSRR with Broker. It is possible that one could use WSRR with Broker, just none of them have. Broker lends itself more to static Web Service calls, meaning a flow does not dynamically-programmatically look for Web Services at runtime. WMB flows are preprogrammed to work with specific Web Services and therefore do not usually look them up at runtime.
This may change over the next few decades. I would expect that as WMB and WSRR mature, more general adoption of this pattern would be broadly implemented. _________________ http://leanpub.com/IIB_Tips_and_Tricks
Save $20: Coupon Code: MQSERIES_READER |
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mqjeff |
Posted: Wed Oct 17, 2012 5:24 am Post subject: |
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Grand Master
Joined: 25 Jun 2008 Posts: 17447
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Of course, bobbee was asking about MQ endpoints, not webservice endpoints. |
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lancelotlinc |
Posted: Wed Oct 17, 2012 5:32 am Post subject: |
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 Jedi Knight
Joined: 22 Mar 2010 Posts: 4941 Location: Bloomington, IL USA
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True. I understand the primary use case for service registry in SOA is for Web Services. If clients do not use it for the primary use case, its not likely they would use it for secondary use cases.
The features and benefits of WSRR are:
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Catalogs the details about your services and the services you use.
Automatically discovers existing service directly from their host environment.
Leverages full service lifecycle management to keep track of versions and availability of services, while enforcing best practice during their development and deployment.
Graphically visualizes services and their dependencies to help calculate the impact of change.
Keep track of who is using the services using consumer/provider contract management.
Combines with an enterprise service bus (ESB) like WebSphere Message Broker to provide enforcement of contracts and policies.
Supports authoring and management of service level agreements (SLAs) which can then be automatically enforced by WebSphere DataPower appliances.
Integrates with monitoring tools to bring metrics about service use together with your service definitions. |
Use of WSRR implies a buy-in to SOA governance. SOA governance is considered by most management as ancillary to primary business value (ie. the cost to use the product does not contribute directly to the revenue stream of the company.) Not many companies are willing to invest cash money for indirect benefit. I think larger insurance companies would benefit from maintaining SOA governance using WSRR. So far, in the ones I have direct contact with, the tool has yet to be implemented. _________________ http://leanpub.com/IIB_Tips_and_Tricks
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