News Desk
The Million Dollar SOA Question: Software ESBs or Hardware Appliances?
Addressing different technology components
Apr. 7, 2008 05:15 AM
Service-oriented architectures have now become the norm for
IT to deliver value to their respective businesses. A SOA-based approach
promises an environment of agility, loosely coupled integration, and a
composition-based approach, all of which results in faster adaptability to the
demands of the business, lower operational costs, and the increased “pluggability”
of standards-based applications. A service is nothing but an abstraction of
something that does some business unit of work. This could be something like
placing an order, retrieving customer information, or modifying personal
information. Technically these services could be exposed with any
binding/protocol/interface with request/response parameters being structured or
ad-hoc data. Standards-based services have their payloads structured as XML.
In a traditional old school infrastructure, business
functions were encompassed in packaged or customized applications with their
predefined user interfaces. In a SOA, these traditionally "trapped"
business functions tend to add more value when encompassed within a much larger
scoped entity and then used by a more modern interaction mechanism. The true
emancipation of these business functions required the transition of traditional
IT infrastructure toward a new class of technology components. The two major
roles of this new services infrastructure are a service brokering role and a
gatekeeping role. There are other auxiliary roles, including that of a
repository, endpoint management, and some higher-level roles such as
orchestration in this new services infrastructure. However, the remainder of
this article discusses the primary roles of service brokering and gatekeeping
in detail and addresses the different technology components that can fulfill
the roles.
The Primary Roles in Services Infrastructure
Service Brokering
Service brokering is key to the success of SOA. Service brokering
aims to abstract access to the business functions and at the same time allows
for the implementation of complex integration patterns including service
façade, message enrichment, message filter, content-based routing, dynamic
routing, and splitter-aggregator. The service brokering role is also
responsible for performing tasks such as protocol bridging, message
transformations, and bridging different messaging paradigms. This role is also
suitable for authorizing access to services based on the message or request
context.
Gatekeeping
This role is akin to a firewall in network security.
Sometimes it’s referred to as an XML firewall role. The primary agenda of a
gatekeeper is to keep the rogue requests out and protect the business services.
This is the first line of defense as far as security is concerned and
authenticating requests coming in is an obvious requirement. The other subfunctions
in this role include validating requests (against defined XML schemas),
throttling access to a service, and preventing denial of service attacks.
About Shiva BhajekarShiva Bhajekar, a Master Principal Sales Consultant in Oracle's North America technology organization, advises Fortune 1000 companies to define and implement their SOA and BPM strategies and/or application virtualization while evangelizing Oracle's solutions. He plays the role of a Business Solutions Architect creating customized solutions for companies that add immediate business value to their operations. Having been in customer-facing roles for the last 13 years, he previously delivered several mission-critical solutions at Netscape Professional Services to companies such as S&P, Sony and Warner Music.