| By Salvatore Genovese | Article Rating: |
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| November 12, 2007 06:45 PM EST | Reads: |
14,010 |
WSO2, the open source SOA company, announced at the SOA World Conference & Expo, that it has significantly extended the WSO2 Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) to support the heterogeneous, enterprise-scale demands of a service-oriented architecture (SOA). The WSO2 ESB 1.5 adds the ability to run scheduled tasks, caching and other performance enhancements, message augmentation using standard databases, and a wide variety of file systems and FTP. Also new to Version 1.5 are support for XQuery and a simplified Plain Old Java Object (POJO) model based on the Command pattern.

SOA World Conference & Expo - WSO2 booth on Monday, November 12, 2007
Version 1.5 of the WSO2 ESB is the first product based on the 1.1 release of the Apache Synapse ESB, also being launched today. (For more information, visit http://ws.apache.org/synapse.) The open source WSO2 ESB enhances the Apache Synapse ESB with a simple-to-use graphical user interface and built-in registry and repository.
The WSO2 ESB provides an ultra lightweight platform that can route messages with millisecond overhead and can scale to manage thousands of simultaneous connections. The clear user interface allows administrators to connect, manage and transform service-oriented interactions across their networks. The WSO2 ESB can instantly virtualize services, enabling users to route, version, load-balance, log, monitor and manage services without changing their application code.
“With the debut of our WSO2 ESB this past summer, we set new standards for ease-of-use, performance and interoperability in mediating services within an SOA,” said Dr. Sanjiva Weerawarana, CEO of WSO2. “Our new WSO2 ESB 1.5 raises the bar again, providing greater automation through scheduled tasks and extending our commitment to supporting the heterogeneous environments that form today’s SOAs.”
WSO2 ESB 1.5 Features
Version 1.5 of the WSO2 Enterprise Service Bus, available now, is 100-percent open source and based on key open source standards. It works equally well with J2EE, .NET, JMS, and HTTP/S-based systems, as well as Web services frameworks, such as Apache Axis and Axis2. Key new features in Version 1.5 include:
- Scheduled tasks. The new scheduler, based on the popular open source Quartz project, lets administrators schedule tasks to run at specified intervals, for example every hour, or to initiate long-running tasks—automating recurring processes and facilitating reporting.
- Service caching. The ability to cache responses from real services and reply to further requests of the same type reduces load on back end services, can protect against denial of service (DOS) attacks, and improves scalability.
- Database support. The WSO2 ESB 1.5 includes DBReport and DBLookup mediators, which allow the ESB to augment messages with information stored in a database, in addition to updating databases based on service interactions.
- File system support. Based on the Apache VFS project, the new file system adaptor can automatically pick up data from a variety of file systems including local, HTTP, WebDav, and FTP sites.
- POJO Command support. Enhancing the existing support for Java POJOs, the new Command pattern allows Java developers to write message mediations that cleanly separate logic from the underlying message format.
- XQuery support. Developers can now use the standard XQuery language to manipulate data from XML messages going through the ESB.
- Message splitting. Clone, Iterate and Aggregate mediators enable the large or composite messages to be processed in parallel. This pattern has a wide variety of applications in supporting batch processing, transformation and aggregation.
- Improved logging and tracing. Version 1.5 makes it simpler and easier to support service-level logs, while improved message tracing lets administrators track a particular mediation path to facilitate troubleshooting.
Published November 12, 2007 Reads 14,010
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More Stories By Salvatore Genovese
Salvatore Genovese is a Search Engine Optimization consultant and an i-technology blogger based in Rome, Italy. He occasionally blogs about SOA, mergers and acquisitions, open source and bleeding-edge technologies, companies, and personalities. Sal can be reached at hamilton(at)sys-con.com.
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