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Pro BizTalk 2006

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Pro BizTalk 2006, 9781590596999 (1590596994), Apress, 2006

Pro BizTalk 2006 is a high-end resource that is based on real feedback from BizTalk developers. Authors George Dunphy and Ahmed Metwally are well known within the BizTalk community, and here they cover topics not discussed in other books, like performance tuning, scalability, and administration. This book also features examples of specific, real-world implementations.

When BizTalk was still in its infancy, there were two teams within Microsoft—the Commerce Server team and the COM+ team. The Commerce Server team was implementing technology they called “Commerce Server Messaging Pipelines,” essentially software that allowed an application to move messages from one system to another system using the commerce server framework. The goal was to abstract the sending and receiving of messages away from the transports that they used. For example, using this framework, a developer would not care about the physical implementation of how the messages were sent; that information would be abstracted away into another construct called a port. The port would talk to an adapter, which handled the communication to and from the medium in question, whether it was a file system, an FTP server, or a web server.

At the same time, the COM+ team was implementing a new graphical workflow representation system they called XLANG. XLANG schedules, as they were called, would compile down to a binary format and run within the XLANG engine inside of COM+. Each schedule would be drawn, not coded, to model a business process that the developer was trying to automate. This schedule could also access existing components that were present within the organization assuming they used the principles of n-tiered architecture and had implemented a well-defined Business Object Library.

The rumor was that when Bill Gates saw these two technologies, he immediately sought to find a way to combine them. His vision was to allow the developer to graphically draw workflow that modelled a business process and allow information needed by that process to be received and sent freely within or outside an organization. He envisioned a “nextgeneration programming language” type of tool that allowed even nonprogrammer types to model a business process, interact with already defined business objects, and send and receive messages without having to worry about the details of how to physically implement this transport. With that, BizTalk 2000 was born.

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