Improving Business Agility with EDA Going beyond SOA, enterprises
can gain even greater agility by implementing event-driven
architectures (EDAs) that automatically detect and react to
significant business events. However, EDA planning and deployment
is complex, and even experienced SOA architects and developers need
expert guidance. In Event-Driven Architecture, four leading IT
innovators present both the theory of EDA and practical,
step-by-step guidance to implementing it successfully. The authors
first establish a thorough and workable definition of EDA and
explore how EDA can help solve many of today's most difficult
business and IT challenges. You'll learn how EDAs work, what they
can do today, and what they might be able to do as they mature.
You'll learn how to determine whether an EDA approach makes sense
in your environment and how to overcome the difficult
interoperability and integration issues associated with successful
deployment. Finally, the authors present chapter-length case
studies demonstrating how both full and partial EDA implementations
can deliver exceptional business value. Coverage includes How SOA
and Web services can power event-driven architectures The role of
SOA infrastructure, governance, and security in EDA environments
EDA core components: event consumers and producers, message
backbones, Web service transport, and more EDA patterns, including
simple event processing, event stream processing, and complex event
processing Designing flexible stateless events that can respond to
unpredictable customers, suppliers, and business partners
Addressing technical and business challenges such as project
management and communication EDA at work: real-world applications
across multiple verticals Hugh Taylor is a social software
evangelist for IBM Lotus Software. He coauthored Understanding
Enterprise SOA and has written extensively on Web services and SOA.
He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School. Angela Yochem is an
executive in a multinational technology company and is a recognized
thought leader in architecture and large-scale technology
management. Les Phillips, VP, enterprise architecture, at SunTrust
Banks Inc., is responsible for defining the strategic and business
IT foundation for many areas of the enterprise. Frank Martinez,
EVP, product strategy, at SOA Software, is a recognized expert on
distributed, enterprise application, and infrastructure platforms.
He has served as senior operating executive for several
venture-backed firms and helped build Intershop Communications into
a multibillion-dollar public company. Foreword xi Preface xii
Introduction 1 Event-Driven Architecture: A Working Definition 1
The "New" Era of Interoperability Dawns 6 The ETA for Your EDA 9
Endnotes 9 PART I THE THEORY OF EDA Chapter 1 EDA: Opportunities
and Obstacles 13 The Vortex 13 EDA: A Working Systemic Definition
14 The (Not So Smooth) Path to EDA 24 Defining Interoperability 26
Drivers of Interoperability 28 Application Integration: A Means to
Interoperate 29 Interoperation and Business Process Management 31
Is There a Diet for All This Spaghetti? 35 How Architecture
Promotes Integration 37 Management and Governance 39 Chapter
Summary 43 Endnote 45 Chapter 2 SOA: The Building Blocks of EDA 47
Making You an Offer You Can't Understand 47 SOA: The Big Picture 48
Defining Service 49 Service-Based Integration 50 Web Services 51
What Is SOA? 59 Loose Coupling in the SOA 60 Chapter Summary 61
Chapter 3 Characteristics of EDA 63 Firing Up the Corporate Neurons
63 Revisiting the Enterprise Nervous System 63 The Ideal EDA 78
BAM--A Related Concept 86 Chapter Summary 87 Endnotes 89 Chapter 4
The Potential of EDA 91 Introduction 91 EDA's Potential in
Enterprise Computing 91 EDA and Enterprise Agility 100 EDA and
Society's Computing Needs 102 EDA and Compliance 107 Chapter
Summary 108 Chapter 5 The SOA-EDA Connection 111 Getting Real 111
Event Services 112 The Service Network 114 Implementing the SOA and
Service Network 116 How to Design an SOA 122 The Real "Bottom Line"
134 Chapter Summary 137 PART II EDA IN PRACTICE Chapter 6 Thinking
EDA 141 A Novel Mind-Set 141 Reducing Central Control 142 Thinking
about EDA Implementation 148 When EDA Is Not the Answer 151 An EDA
Product Examined 153 Chapter Summary 157 Endnotes 158 Chapter 7
Case Study: Airline Flight Control 159 Learning Objectives 160
Business Context: Airline Crunch Time 160 The Ideal Airline Flight
Control EDA 167 What FEDA Might Look Like in Real Life 176 Program
Success 197 Chapter Summary 206 Endnotes 207 Chapter 8 Case Study:
Anti-Money Laundering 209 Learning Objectives 210 Cracking a
Trillion Dollar, Global Crime Wave 210 IT Aspects of Anti-Money
Laundering 216 EDA as a Weapon in the War on Money Laundering 221
Chapter Summary 259 Endnotes 260 Chapter 9 Case Study: Event-Driven
Productivity Infrastructure 261 Learning Objectives 262 The Often
Inadequate Human Link in the EDA 262 Overview of Productivity
Infrastructure 264 The Potential Benefits of EDA-PI Integration 267
ProdCo, an EDA-PI Integration Scenario 273 Chapter Summary 293
Endnotes 294
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