Thursday, December 6, 2007

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Friday, January 12, 2007

Tibco backs BPEL 2.0 in ESB

 
Tibco Software on Thursday upgraded its BusinessWorks enterprise service bus to leverage the Web Services BPEL (Business Process Execution Language) 2.0 specification.

This makes Tibco's the first ESB to back the OASIS specification, the company said. The new ESB, which has the version number 5.4, also features expanded security capabilities and 64-bit platform support. Tibco categorizes BusinessWorks as a suite of technologies constituting an ESB.

As an ESB, BusinessWorks can be used in enterprise SOA deployments. It provides such functions as mediation of messages, in which a SOAP message, for example, could be received over HTTP and sent back out via Java Message Service. Full-scale orchestration for specifying process flows for activities also is enabled.

"The biggest single addition [in version 5.4] is support for BPEL 2.0, which is the first standard version of BPEL," said Rourke McNamara, senior product manager for SOA at Tibco.

BPEL provides a common framework for orchestration of processes, akin to how SQL is used in working with databases, according to Tibco. It features a language for specifying business-process behavior based on Web services.

Version 1.1 of BPEL, which has been available for deployment, was never formally ratified as an OASIS standard, a status soon to be bestowed on the 2.0 version of the specification, McNamara said.

"Tibco didn't support 1.1. We actually were holding out for a standardized version of BPEL," McNamara said.

BPEL 2.0, or WS-BPEL, which is the official OASIS acronym, is undergoing a public review period. It could be approved as an official OASIS standard by April 1, an OASIS representative said.

With BPEL 2.0, the use of global variables in Web services calls is no longer required. Global variables added complexity to BPEL because they were visible throughout a system rather than just where they were needed, McNamara said. Examples of variables include a customer processing ID or a response code from a credit check.

Other improvements in BPEL 2.0 include the addition of key looping constructs and extension capabilities to add a user-defined function that was not stipulated in the specification, Tibco said.

BPEL leverages XML to define orchestration of multiple Web services for business processes, said Ronald Schmelzer, senior analyst at ZapThink, in an e-mail. Version 2.0 boosts support for XPath and XSLT. But BPEL is not without its shortcomings, he said.

"The problem with the BPEL spec is that it still doesn't support the human aspects of workflow well, and it approaches composition of services from a programmatic perspective, leading some to believe that BPEL is simply another way of coding processes using XML rather than a programming language," Schmelzer said. More work will be required to make BPEL more declarative to support ad hoc processes and more abstract choreographies, he said.

But a BusinessWorks user said he looked forward to BPEL 2.0. "It'll help us standardize on a notation within all of the tools that we use," said the user, Steve Polaski, director of IT enterprise architecture at Qualcomm.

The company uses BusinessWorks for transformation and mapping functions and also as a Web services container. "We've written some SOAP services that actually execute in BusinessWorks rather than in [an application server such as IBM] WebSphere or Oracle Application Server," Polaski said.

Aside from BPEL 2.0 support, BusinessWorks 5.4 includes the capability to defer to an external security authorization mechanism such as Entrust, Netegrity, and SiteMinder. Also featured is visibility into atomic transactions for improved transactional monitoring.

Native 64-bit operating systems supported by version 5.4 include Solaris x86, Solaris 10, HP-UX, and AIX. The new Windows Vista OS is not yet supported, however.

Also supported in the 5.4 edition are the Microsoft SQL Server 2005 and Oracle 10g R2 databases as well as Apache Tomcat 5.x and Jakarta 3.x Java technologies.

Tibco BusinessWorks 5.4 prices start at $75,000.

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Thursday, January 11, 2007

CWLCB0020E: The Common Event Infrastructure is unavailable

CWLCB0020E: The Common Event Infrastructure is unavailable

CNTR0019E and CNTR0019E issued retrieving events using CBE Browser
 
Problem
You are attempting to retrieve events from the Common Event Infrastructure using the Common Base Event (CBE) Browser in the Administrative Console. The following errors are issued:
"CWLCB0020E: The Common Event Infrastructure is unavailable."
The SystemOut.log shows the following exception:
"[10/12/06 18:15:05:518 MEST] 00000037 ExceptionUtil E CNTR0019E: EJB threw an unexpected (non-declared) exception during invocation of method "getMetaData". Exception data: com.ibm.ejs.container.CreateFailureException: ; nested exception is:
java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException
[...]
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: cbeElementPathList must be specified
at com.ibm.events.datastore.impl.TableColumnImpl .<init>(TableColumnImpl.java:141)" 
 
Cause
The error occurs because the CEI_T_CBE_MAP table has not been populated with the correct metadata. 
 
Solution
Run the script ins_metadata.

For DB2®:
WPS_HOME/profiles/PROFILENAME/event/dbscripts/db2/ins_metadata.db2
For Oracle: WPS_HOME/profiles/PROFILENAME/event/dbscripts/oracle/ins_metadata.ora

This step is also described in the WebSphere Process Server (WPS) Information Center:
http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/dmndhelp/v6rxmx/topic/com.ibm.wsps.ins.doc/doc/tcei_install_configureDb.html 

Link:
http://www-1.ibm.com/support/docview.wss?uid=swg21248738

CWLCB0020E Common Base Event browser with CEI produces CORBA NO_MEMORY exception


CWLCB0020E Common Base Event browser with CEI produces CORBA NO_MEMORY exception
 
 
Problem
You do not see any events and the Common Base Event browser displays the error "CWLCB0020E: The Common Event Infrastructure is unavailable" when retrieving many events. 
 
Cause
When a query is submitted for a large number of events, and the events are retrieved, the Java™ memory heap runs out of space and a java.rmi.RemoteException: CORBA NO_MEMORY exception is produced. 
 
Solution
Follow one of the two methods below to correct the problem:
Reduce the maximum number of events to retrieve from 500 to 100, then retrieve the next blocks of events using the time and date query.

OR
Increase the initial heap size and the maximum heap size by following these steps:
1. Start the WebSphere® Process Server administrative console.

2. Navigate to Servers > Application Servers.

3. Click server1.

4. Under Server Infrastructure, expand Java and Process Management.

5. Click Process Definition.

6. Click Java Virtual Machine.

7. Enter the changes in the initial Heap Size and maximum Heap Size fields.

8. Click OK and click Save.

Try the first option and you still encounter this problem then try the second one. It is a good idea to configure your environment with proper heap size settings to start with.

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Fair Isaac to Participate in the IBM SOA Specialty Program

Fair Isaac to Participate in the IBM SOA Specialty Program

Fair Isaac Corporation announced that it has entered a new marketing alliance agreement with IBM, and also has joined the IBM SOA (service-oriented architecture) Specialty Program. The companies plan to leverage the certified integration of Fair Isaac's Blaze Advisor business rules management system with the IBM SOA Foundation -- a single, unified platform that combines the industry's top application server and integration capabilities to deliver results for clients worldwide.

The companies are planning joint messaging and related activities under the marketing alliance and, as part of this effort, Fair Isaac will participate in IBM SOA educational events.

Last year, IBM announced the IBM SOA Specialty, a marketing initiative for IBM Business Partners in the IBM PartnerWorld for Industry Networks program. SOA enables business flexibility through the integration of often disparate systems, data, applications, and processes across and beyond an enterprise, giving organizations the power to reduce complexities, extend the value of existing IT investments and dynamically respond to changing business conditions.

The IBM SOA certification demonstrates Fair Isaac's ability to provide specific customer solutions in a service-oriented architecture by integrating its Blaze Advisor system with the IBM WebSphere software platform and specifically the WebSphere Process Server. Blaze Advisor accelerates and simplifies strategy execution with enterprise business rules to help businesses more efficiently manage mission-critical business processes. It delivers strategic benefits including improved customer service and responsiveness, higher revenues, regulatory compliance, quicker time-to-market, and reduced overall IT and operational costs.

"Fair Isaac is a leader in automating business decisions, and I welcome their integration with the IBM SOA Platform," said Tom Rosamilia, vice president, WebSphere, IBM Software Group. "Blaze Advisor business rules technology extends the concept of business agility and adds value for our mutual customers."

"The benefits and strategic advantages of implementing business rules technology together with SOA architectures are being demonstrated across many industries," said Mark Layden, Fair Isaac vice president of EDM Technologies and Custom Solutions. "The validation of Blaze Advisor into IBM's SOA framework promises new levels of speed, flexibility, agility, and adaptability for business applications in organizations of every size, in every industry."

The use of Blaze Advisor within a service-oriented architecture provides benefits through the separation of decision logic from application functionality. Blaze Advisor ensures that disparate applications behave consistently, are able to automate complex decisions and quickly adapt to changing business requirements. It also offers organizations the ability to incrementally transition from legacy systems to a service-oriented architecture.

As the industry standard among business rules solutions, Blaze Advisor has hundreds of worldwide customers across multiple industries, including financial services, insurance, healthcare, government and telecommunications. It is the first rules engine to support Java, .NET and COBOL deployment of the same rules. The multi-platform solution supports web services and SOA, Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) platforms, Microsoft .NET, and COBOL for z/OS mainframes.

Fair Isaac's Blaze Advisor is a core technology of the company's suite of products for Enterprise Decision Management, which combines data analytics, predictive modeling, decision model optimization and policy-level control to help organizations define and manage their automated business systems for improved efficiency and greater profitability.