WSO2 announced the launch of their SOA platform inside the Cloud earlier this week. With this launch, you can try out and use their comprehensive SOA platform inside the cloud.

WSO2 Cloud Platform consists of various products, including

WSO2 is hosting a SOA Workshop in Santa Clara, California in November 3rd 2009. You will be able to attend to the following sessions covered by the industry leading experts in SOA.

  • ESBS and SOA
  • SOA Security
  • Mashups and Business Process Management for SOA
  • SOA Governance
  • SOA with C, C++, PHP
  • SOA Architecture Pattern

Visit here to find more details about the event, http://wso2.com/events/2009-us-soa-workshop/?soaotad=10072009

WSO2 announced an another round of release of their famous SOA products.

Although the version numbers say this is minor patch release (Other than the Mashup Server which is shipping as a major release), in fact there are new features and improvements. Some basic new features shares among all of these products are

  1. Improved registry level transaction Support.
  2. Improved Support for deploying on top of Application Servers other than tomcat like WebSphere, WebLogic, and
    JBoss.
  3. Support for Eclipse P2 based provisioning. (Yes, you can add/remove features from these WSO2 products , see https://wso2.org/wiki/display/carbon/p2-based-provisioning-support for more details)
  4. Improved Remote Registry model

Saminda Wijerathna the lead of the WSO2 tooling team, announced the release of a new version of IDE tools for WSO2 WSAS and BPS. These tools will help you to write web services or web service clients and test them within your Eclipse IDE.

You can download the tools and the related documentation from http://wso2.org/downloads/tools/eclipse.

Here are the key features of the set of IDE tools,

  • Create Web services
  • Create web service client
  • Convert WSDL 1.1 to 2.0
  • Module and service validators
  • Creating wsdl from a java class
  • Create Axis2 archives
  • Hot update a Web service
  • Debug Web services
  • Test Web services
  • Conversion of WSDL 1.1 to 2.0 can now be done vice versa as well.
  • Creating Bpel archives for deploy
  • Start WSAS 3.0.x inside Eclipse
  • Run multiple instances of WSAS inside eclipse

WSO2 announced the release of the Web Services Framework for C++ (WSF/C++) version 2.0.0. Similar to WSF/PHP which is really popular among the PHP community, WSF/CPP is the C++ language binding for the Apache Axis2/C and the other supporting web services projects like Apache Sandesha/C, Apache Rampart/C.

With this release C++ developers will be able to write web services and web service clients to inter-op with .NET/Java/PHP or any other platform built-on web service standards. The release is shiped with a code generation tool that will be used to generate the code for skeletons and stubs from a WSDL, so developers only need to concentrate on their business logic as the generated code will take care of building or parsing xmls and running them on top of the framework.
Here are the key features of the new release.

  1. Support core web service standards like SOAP 1.1, SOAP 1.2, WSDL 1.1, WSDL 2.0, REST
  2. Support for web services QoS specifications.
    • WS-Addressing
    • WS-Security
    • WS-Policy
    • WS-Security-Policy
    • WS-Reliable-Messaging
  3. Support binary attachment with MTOM and SWA (With the Support for large binaries)
  4. Code generation tool.
  5. Proven interoperability with .NET.

As a side note, you will be able to participate to a free summer school training session on the WSF/CPP conducted by Nandika Jayawardane who is the project lead of both WSF/CPP and WSF/PHP on 30th July. You can register to it (for free) from here.

WSO2 Governance Registry (G-Reg) (Formally known as WSO2 Registry) is released its 3.0.0 version along with two other sibling WSO2 products, WSAS 3.1.0 and ESB 2.1.0. This is a major release specially for WSO2 Governance Registry as it contain number of new features and improvements.

1. The New Name – s/Registry/Governance Registry

The product name itself changed from ‘Registry’ to ‘Governance Registry’ (abbreviated as ‘G-Reg’). As it may hint you, now the product is more focused on the ‘Governance’ aspects than just the ‘registry’ or a ‘repository’ aspects. In early releases, it mainly used to store, retrieve configurations and persistence data that the other products would need. Now you can govern these resources (Services, Policies, Processes, People) inside the G-Reg itself. It has emerged to become a complete tool that help you in governing your SOA platform.

2. Separate Views for Add/View/Remove Services

In G-Reg ‘Services’ along with Service MetaData (policies, wsdls, schemas) are distinguished from other resources, as they are the key resources in a SOA platform. You will be able to add/list/view services directly from the main menu in the G-Reg UI.

Add Service Metadata

Add Service Metadata

When adding a service you will be prompted to provide additional details on the services. As they will help users in discovering these services. The fields of these details are configurable as you will change them according to the policies and requirements of your organizations, but the defaults will be adequate for most of the scenarios.  Additionally G-Reg will do WS-I validation as you add WSDLs, Schemas.
Note that this is an additional view you will get as you can still discover services on a tree view arranged according to their namespaces using the registry browser as in previous releases.

3. Service Life cycle Management with Check-lists

Managing service lifecycle is a core part of governing services. G-Reg provides you this functionality with a simple user interface.

Life Cycle Management with Check-Lists

Lifecycle states can be promoted or demoted. The state transition can be ‘Designing’ -> ‘Developing’ -> ‘Testing’ -> ‘Deployed’. You can enforce a validation of a checklist in promoting the state to the next level. This states and the associated check-list items are highly configurable as you will change them to suit to the process of your organizations as you wish.

And G-Reg is shipped with a sample that extend the lifecycle management functionality by making it distributed. In there as you promote or demote the state, the service resource will move its position. The user guide on ‘Distributed Life Cycle Management Sample’ will describe how to use this functionality in more details. This will be really useful if you are enforcing a structured permission model in managing lifecycles. For an example you can enforce only developer role will be able to modify, check or promote a service in the ‘Developing’ state and QA role has permission in promoting a service in ‘Testing’ state and so on.

4. Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)

This is a brand new feature provide in G-Reg. You may find the user guide on ‘BAM’ will be really helpful in configuring the servers you want to monitor. But in order to view the monitoring data you have to go to the dashboard, which is the next new feature.

5. Dashboard

For most of the you, this will be the coolest feature in the new G-Reg., an eye-catching dashboard filled with bunch of Gadgets.

Dashboard

Dashboard

The dashboard provides you the information related to runtime governance as well as design-time governance as described in the ‘Dashboard’ user guide.

6. Eventing and Notifications

If you want you to notified when a resource is updated or a lifecycle state of a service is changed, this feature will be really helpful. Look at the ‘Eventing and Notifications’ user guide on how you can get notified and the built-in events that you can listen.

7. Mount Remote Resources – Federating Registries

If you are maintaining two separate registry instances, this feature will enable you to share resources among them. In G-Reg you can create links to resources in remote registries (remote-links) as well as to the resources in the same registry (sym-links). Here is the user guide for ‘Sym Links and Remote Links’ to read more details of the subject.

8. User Profiles
The new G-Reg has the ability to keep multiple user profiles per user. A simple how to on creating profiles can be found in the user guide on ‘User Profiles’.

9. Checkin/Checkout with Local Filesystem

The new G-Reg is shipped with a command line tool that allows you to checkin and checkout registry resources with your local filesystem. If you are familiar with a version control system like subversion, the checkin/checkout commands will not be much difficult to you.

Checking out a resource is simple as (the following command is what you typed in linux, in windows you will use the checkin-client.bat instead).


./checkin-client.sh co / -u user -p user_pw

And to checkin,


./checkin-client.sh ci -u user -p user_pw

Similarly you can use this tool to create backups or move resource or resource hierarchy off-line. Here is a complete user guide on ‘Checkin-Client’.

10. Performance Boost

Last but not least, the new G-Reg is performing very fast than its predecessor. In the performance test, it was seen each primitive operation in the registry is at least 10% faster in this release, where as some operations are performing much faster (for an example, ‘Add Collection’ operation seemed 50% faster). And the remote registry calls also optimized by keeping a local cache (http-level-caching).

This was a list of most notable new features in addition to the bunch of the features that was already there in the previous releases. You will be able to download WSO2 Governance Registry freely from the product website, http://wso2.org/projects/governance-registry and evaulate these features as you want.

WSO2 -An open source middleware company- announced the release of bunch of their SOA enabling products along with Carbon 2.0.0 which is an OSGI based unified platform that all the WSO2 java products are built on.

  • WSAS (Web Service Application Server) – Provide and consume web services, data services with full WS-*, REST support, GUI tools, Integration with Eclipse, etc..
  • ESB (Enterprise Service Bus) – Message routing, mediation, transformation, logging, task scheduling, load balancing, failover routing, event brokering, etc. with number of transports support
  • Governance Registry – Govern you SOA platform, introducing number of new features including Dashboard with Gadgets, lifecycle management with checklists, eventing and notifications, remote/symbolic links, checkin/checkout functionality and new meta data management UI.

You will be able to get the advantage of the carbon platform by extending the functionality of any of these products, just by mixing components from other products (Just like running an ESB within WSAS).

Download, Play around with them and Enjoy:)!!!

Apache Stonehenge, A project to demonstrate the interoperability between heterogeneous platforms has done their first milestone release few days back.

The first milestone demonstrate the interoperability between

  1. .NET – Microsoft WCF implementation
  2. Java – WSO2 Web Service Application Server (WSAS) implementation
  3. PHP – WSO2 Web Service Framework for PHP (WSF/PHP) implementation

Each of these technologies has implemented a Stock trader application with Business Service, Order Processor and Trader Client components. You will be able to assemble the application by mixing components from any of the above implementations.

It provides you a great sample on using basic web services features (SOAP, WSDL etc..) and WS-Security across the above platforms.

If you are interested, you can download the sources and binaries from here, http://www.apache.org/dist/incubator/stonehenge/. Installation guides and other documentations can be found from here, http://cwiki.apache.org/STONEHENGE/

Early this year, WSO2 released a complete SOA platform, introducing a revolutionary solution to adapt SOA in more flexible and cost-effective manner. It is developed based on the OSGI technology, which allow users to get only the desired components to their requirements and implement their SOA infrastructure. As the requirements grow or change, they can add/upgrade/drop only the relevant component(s) to adjust to their new requirements.

In fact rather than releasing each components separately, WSO2 released few products, pre-bundling some of these components.Those are,

  • WSO2 WSAS – Allows you to consume create and host web services.
  • WSO2 ESB – Complete ESB functionality including message routing, mediation
  • WSO2 BPS – Orchestrate business processes with WS-BPEL
  • WSO2 Registry – The repository for all.

Note that you can always start from one of above and then mix and match among these components until you get the desired features, as explained in my previous blog The Composable SOA Platform.

One of the common component bundled in all of these is the “Registry Core”. It acts as a unified repository for all the storage requirement of the SOA platform. It stores,

  • Service descriptions, policies
  • Configurations of modules (e.g. Security module, Reliable Messaging module, etc..)
  • Configurations of transports
  • Configurations of data sources, event sources, connections
  • Proxy Services, Sequences, Endpoints +  the keys (xslts, schemas) needed in mediator configurations.

In order to deal with these requirements Registry provides functionalities to

  • Store/Retrieve resources.
  • Organize resources in to collections(collections are also considered as resources) in hierarchical manner. (Like directories in a file system)
  • Search resources. (content based search or using custom queries)
  • Tagging, commenting and rating resources
  • Keeps associations, dependencies among resources
  • Support for resource versioning.
  • Monitors activities.

So how you going to use the registry. In fact you can access a registry in different ways. It has

  • Nice web based GUI to explore/add/remove/update resources
  • APIs to embed the Registry to your java program.
  • APIs to access Registry remotely using Atom/pub and web services. Atom clients are also available in C and PHP to access registry.

The another very important aspect of the registry is that who has the permission to view/add/delete resources. For that, registry uses ‘User Manager’ component which allows you to handles the permission in user based and role based schema.

In addition to all of these functionalities, it provides you two different ways to extend the functionalities of the registry.

  • Handlers
  • Aspects

Please look at this article on “Extending WSO2 Registry” for a comprehensive guide on this subject.

The capabilities of the registry are not just limited to act as a repository, but also it can be used as the base for govern the entire SOA platform. The following aspects of the SOA governance can be solved based on a Registry.

  • Service discovery
  • Service policy enforcement and validation
  • Service Life Cycle Management
  • Promote or Demote services with a proper criteria (e.g using a checklist)
  • Service association and dependency management
  • Service Monitoring
  • Service Access Control
  • Service Versioning

You can read how to implement SOA Governance with the Registry 1.1 (An Older version of Registry) in more detail, from this article “SOA Governance with Registry 1.1“.

WSO2 is preparing to release the WSO2 Governance Server that provide a solution to all of these SOA Governance requirements. It will extend the registry features and UI by introducing more views towards SOA Governance.

So you can use WSO2 Registry for all your repository requirements + as a tool to help you govern your SOA in your enterprise.

The release of WSO2 SOA platform – Carbon has unified the process of development to deployment of SOA in several aspects. Here is a list of 5 aspects unified across all the components of the SOA platform namely WSAS (The App Server), ESB (Enterprise Service Bus) and BPS (Business Process Server)

1. Unified QoS configurations – Allows you to add/drop modules for security, reliability, etc of your services + edit their policies in a unified view.
2. Unified Registry Storage – Provides a unified view over the governance of the SOA platform.
3. Unified Trackers – Availability of logs, statistics, graphs and  message tracers making it easy to debug and test your system.
4. Unified User Experience – Well designed unified User interfaces allowing admins/users to get familiar with each of the components very quickly and easily.
5. Unified Extensibility – The underline OSGI environment and the design of the carbon platform itself make it possible to add new OSGI bundles as extensions to fit equally across all the products.


© 2007 Dimuthu’s Blog | iKon Wordpress Theme by Windows Vista Administration | Powered by Wordpress