| Number | Key | Space | Headline | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | This IBM® Redpaper publication was produced by the IBM WebSphere® BPM performance teams. It provides performance tuning tips and best practices for the following products: -- WebSphere Process Server 6.2.0 -- WebSphere Enterprise Service Bus 6.2.0 -- WebSphere Integration Developer 6.2.0 -- WebSphere Business Monitor 6.2.0 -- WebSphere Business Services Fabric 6.2.0 These products represent an integrated development and runtime environment based on a key set of service-oriented architecture (SOA) and Business Process Management (BPM) technologies: Service Component Architecture (SCA), Service Data Object (SDO), and Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL). These technologies in turn build on the core capabilities of the WebSphere Application Server 6.1. For those who are either considering or are in the very early stages of implementing a solution incorporating these products, this publication provides best practices for application development and deployment, and setup, tuning and configuration information. It provides a useful introduction to many of the issues influencing each product's performance, and could act as a guide for making rational first choices in terms of configuration and performance settings. Finally, these products build on the capabilities of WebSphere Application Server, so consult tuning, configuration, and best practices information for WebSphere Application Server and corresponding platform JVMs (documented in the Related Publications chapter).
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2009-08-04 | ||
| 2. | This document describes the Dynamic Human Workflow support, also known as support for Case Handling for Knowledge Workers that has been introduced with WebSphere Process Server Version 6.2. If you are interested in Human-centric Business Process Management (BPM) scenarios that go beyond the execution of well-structured, pre-defined human workflows then you might be interested in this paper. Here we are concentrating on scenarios where exceptions make the rule. While not embodied in predefined process model
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2009-07-28 | ||
| 3. | Market demand for business process management (BPM) has grown significantly in recent years and shows no sign of abating. Based on consultations with our clients, a set of capabilities that IBM® makes available enables you to build robust and holistic BPM solutions, whether they are integration-centric, human-centric, or content-centric. In this IBM Redpaper™ publication, we provide an overview of the IBM BPM portfolio to BPM market watchers who have a keen interest in understanding the most current BPM technology releases and how they can be used together. Specifically, we review the key benefits and capabilities of the WebSphere® Dynamic Process Edition of the IBM BPM Suite.
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2009-05-18 | ||
| 4. | You can use WebSphere Integration Developer and WebSphere Process Server 6.2 to enable support of JAXB based JavaBeans as data format on JMS/MQ/HTTP/EIS bindings.
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2008-12-21 | ||
| 5. | IBM WebSphere Integration Developer offers different ways to integrate IBM Lotus Forms into your applications. You can generate a process and all required artifacts out ofan existing form, or you can generate a form that matches the interface of a human task. In this document, we outline the Lotus Forms requirements, show you how to work with generated processes, and give you tips about to how you can customize generated Lotus forms and clients if the client does not meet your requirements.
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2008-05-13 | ||
| 6. | This document describes how the generated JSF client for human tasks works and how it can be customized and enhanced. The intent of this document is to familiarize the reader with the generated JSF client. Although the document steps into the details of the generated JSF client, it does not describe each and every single part of the generated JSF client.
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2008-05-06 | ||
| 7. | IBM WebSphere® Process Server and IBM WebSphere® Integration Developer Version 6.1 are introducing support for the WS-BPEL 2.0 forEach activity. The forEach activity is very useful in scenarios where you want to interact with a set of partners in parallel, and the partners are dynamically determined at runtime. For example, you might want to get a quote from all available supplier services, and can only determine at runtime which services are available. Or you want to perform a document review by several
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2008-02-18 | ||
| 8. | WebSphere Adapters Version 6.0 provide a service-oriented approach to integration with Enterprise Information Systems (EIS). WebSphere Adapters are compliant with J2EE Connector Architecture (JCA 1.5). JCA is the J2EE standard for EIS connectivity. EIS Import and EIS Export provide SCA components with the uniform view of the services external to the module. This allows components to communicate with a variety of external EIS systems using the consistent SCA programming model. WebSphere Adapters are assembled in WebSphere Integration Developer from imported RAR files and then exported as an Enterprise Application Archive (EAR) file and deployed on WebSphere ESB. In this IBM Redpaper, we demonstrate a simple example of how to configure and use the WebSphere Adapter for Flat Files to create and read files for use in a service-oriented solution.
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2006-12-28 | ||
| 9. | This IBM Redpaper is a technical introduction to WebSphere Process Server and WebSphere Integration Developer. Part of the WebSphere Process Integration family of products, WebSphere Process Server and WebSphere Integration Developer provide the core functionality for implementing a Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) in an On Demand Business environment. In the first chapter, we introduce On Demand Business and SOAs, describing the requirements for runtime and the development tools for implementing an SOA. In the second chapter, we discuss the building blocks of WebSphere Process Server and WebSphere Integration Developer and demonstrate how these products allow you to develop services and how they can be mapped and assembled together. While the first two chapters of this redpaper provide you with theoretical information about WebSphere Process Server and WebSphere Integration Developer, the last chapter is an introduction to building solutions using these products. We demonstrate how to develop and test a classic Hello World application to give you a head start for developing of your own solutions.
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2005-12-06 |
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