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      B2B integration : concepts and architecture

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      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=M8894293

      • 저자
      • 발행사항

        Berlin ; New York: Springer, c2003

      • 발행연도

        2003

      • 작성언어

        영어

      • 주제어
      • DDC

        004.6/2 판사항(20)

      • ISBN

        3540434879 (alk. paper): EUR 54.95

      • 자료형태

        일반단행본

      • 서명/저자사항

        B2B integration : concepts and architecture / Christoph Bussler.

      • 형태사항

        xxii, 418 p.: ill.; 24 cm.

      • 일반주기명

        Includes bibliographical references and index.

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      목차 (Table of Contents)

      • CONTENTS
      • Part Ⅰ Introduction to Business-to-Business Integration = 1
      • 1 History = 3
      • 1.1 Why Integration? = 4
      • 1.2 Evolution of Business-to-Business Integration Technology = 5
      • CONTENTS
      • Part Ⅰ Introduction to Business-to-Business Integration = 1
      • 1 History = 3
      • 1.1 Why Integration? = 4
      • 1.2 Evolution of Business-to-Business Integration Technology = 5
      • 1.2.1 Homegrown Integration = 5
      • 1.2.2 Point-to-Point Integration = 6
      • 1.2.3 Hub-and-Spoke Integration = 10
      • 1.2.4 Process-Based Integration = 12
      • 1.2.5 Naive B2B Integration = 15
      • 1.2.6 ASP Integration = 16
      • 1.2.7 Mature B2B Integration Technology = 17
      • 1.3 Business Need for B2B Integration Technology = 19
      • 1.3.1 Early B2B Integration = 20
      • 1.3.2 Early A2A Integration = 20
      • 1.3.3 Early Combination of A2A and B2B Integration = 22
      • 1.3.4 Hosted Application Integration = 24
      • 1.3.5 Mature B2B Integration Technology = 24
      • 1.4 Summary = 26
      • 2 Introduction to Business-to-Business Integration Technology = 29
      • 2.1 Requirements for Integration Concepts and Functionality = 29
      • 2.1.1 Endpoint = 29
      • 2.1.2 Hosted Trading Partner = 30
      • 2.1.3 Data Format and Event = 30
      • 2.1.4 B2B Protocol = 31
      • 2.1.5 Back-end Application System Adapter and Behavior = 31
      • 2.1.6 Business Process = 32
      • 2.1.7 History = 32
      • 2.1.8 Business Intelligence = 33
      • 2.2 Integration Concepts = 33
      • 2.2.1 Message = 33
      • 2.2.2 Event = 35
      • 2.2.3 Transformation and Translation = 37
      • 2.2.4 Business Event = 40
      • 2.2.5 Business Process and Endpoint Behavior = 46
      • 2.2.6 Advanced Business Process = 55
      • 2.2.7 Trading Partner and Back-end Application System = 57
      • 2.2.8 Endpoint Attribute, Capability and Agreement = 57
      • 2.3 Integration Technology Architecture = 58
      • 2.3.1 User Interface = 60
      • 2.3.2 Integration Logic = 62
      • 2.3.3 Connectivity = 63
      • 2.3.4 Persistence = 65
      • 2.3.5 Layer Component Invocation Model = 66
      • 2.3.6 Summary = 66
      • 2.4 Integration Technology Deployment = 66
      • 3 Types of Integration = 69
      • 3.1 Point-to-Point Back-end Application System Integration = 70
      • 3.2 Multipoint Back-end Application System Integration = 70
      • 3.3 Back-end Application System Metadata Synchronization = 71
      • 3.4 Supply Chain Integration of Two Trading Partners = 72
      • 3.5 Supply Chain Integration of Several Trading Partners = 73
      • 3.6 Remote Back-end Application System = 74
      • 3.7 Marketplace Integration = 75
      • 3.8 Hub = 76
      • 3.9 Interactive Application = 78
      • 3.10 Intra-Enterprise Integration = 79
      • 3.11 Application Service Provider = 81
      • 3.12 ASP Aggregation = 84
      • 3.13 ASP Aggregator Aggregation = 85
      • 3.14 Hosted Integration = 87
      • 3.15 Reverse Hosting = 88
      • 3.16 Business-to-Consumer Integration = 89
      • 3.17 Summary = 90
      • 4 Classification = 91
      • 4.1 A2A, B2B and ASP Integration = 91
      • 4.2 Classification of Integration = 92
      • 4.2.1 Business Data Awareness = 93
      • 4.2.2 Integration Instance Representation = 93
      • 4.2.3 Hosting Paradigm = 93
      • 4.2.4 Definition Paradigm = 94
      • 4.2.5 Endpoint Specificity = 94
      • 4.2.6 Homogeneity = 94
      • 4.2.7 Endpoint State Awareness = 95
      • 4.2.8 Endpoint Behavior Awareness = 95
      • 4.2.9 Invocation Paradigm = 96
      • 4.2.10 Data Integration = 96
      • 4.2.11 Process Integration = 96
      • 4.2.12 User Interface Integration = 97
      • 4.2.13 Batch Integration = 97
      • 4.2.14 Reliability = 97
      • 4.3 Classification of Selected Integration Technologies = 97
      • 4.3.1 Streaming Query = 98
      • 4.3.2 Publish/Subscribe Technology = 99
      • 4.3.3 Remote Procedure Call = 100
      • 4.4 Classification of Mature B2B Integration = 101
      • 4.5 Summary = 102
      • Part Ⅱ Business-to-Business Integration Concepts = 103
      • 5 Preliminaries = 105
      • 5.1 B2B Integration Boundary = 105
      • 5.1.1 Event and Process Boundary = 105
      • 5.1.2 Integration Logic Boundary = 107
      • 5.2 Instance, Type and Metatype = 108
      • 5.2.1 Instance = 109
      • 5.2.2 Type = 109
      • 5.2.3 Metatype = 110
      • 5.2.4 Early and Late Binding = 110
      • 5.2.5 Dynamic Type Change = 111
      • 5.2.6 My Instance is Your Type = 112
      • 5.3 Version, Variant and Configuration = 114
      • 5.3.1 Version = 114
      • 5.3.2 Configuration and Change Propagation = 115
      • 5.3.3 Dynamic Change = 118
      • 5.3.4 Singular Version = 120
      • 5.3.5 Variant = 121
      • 5.4 Public and Private Behavior = 121
      • 5.4.1 Public Process = 121
      • 5.4.2 Private Process = 123
      • 5.4.3 Process Binding = 124
      • 5.4.4 Schematic Overall Process Layout = 125
      • 5.5 Interaction Between Enterprises = 126
      • 5.5.1 Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Invocation and Behavior = 126
      • 5.5.2 Immediate and Delayed Behavior = 127
      • 5.5.3 Conversation = 128
      • 5.5.4 Direct vs. Indirect Communication = 128
      • 5.5.5 Interaction Scope = 128
      • 5.6 Interaction Within Enterprises = 129
      • 5.6.1 Function Integration = 130
      • 5.6.2 Data Integration = 131
      • 5.6.3 Event Integration = 131
      • 5.7 Summary = 131
      • 6 The Ideal Integration = 133
      • 6.1 Single Secure and Reliable Network = 133
      • 6.2 Trusted Communication = 134
      • 6.3 Single Semantic Data Model and Integration Behavior = 134
      • 6.3.1 Data Model = 135
      • 6.3.2 Integration Behavior = 136
      • 6.4 Ideal Integration of World = 137
      • 6.4.1 What's Left to be Done for Integration? = 137
      • 6.4.2 Ideal Integration Concepts = 137
      • 6.5 Characterization of Integration Concepts = 138
      • 6.5.1 Making Networks Reliable and Secure = 138
      • 6.5.2 Establishing Trusted Communication = 138
      • 6.5.3 Bridging Semantic Differences : Uniform Semantics = 139
      • 6.5.4 Achieving Homogeneous Integration = 139
      • 7 Concepts = 141
      • 7.1 Event = 141
      • 7.1.1 Message = 141
      • 7.1.2 Event and Data Type = 144
      • 7.1.3 Event Life Cycle = 146
      • 7.1.4 Event Addressing = 148
      • 7.1.5 Wire Event, Translation and Clear Text Event = 151
      • 7.1.6 Clear Text Event, Transformation and Business Event = 155
      • 7.1.7 Business Event Type Change Management = 165
      • 7.1.8 Event and Vocabulary = 167
      • 7.1.9 Business Event and Business Object = 171
      • 7.1.10 Event Correlation = 174
      • 7.1.11 Event Validation and Data Type Validation = 177
      • 7.1.12 Summary = 180
      • 7.2 Process = 180
      • 7.2.1 Hierarchical Decomposition = 181
      • 7.2.2 Data and Data Flow = 183
      • 7.2.3 Context-Dependent Event Validation Rule = 190
      • 7.2.4 Control Flow = 192
      • 7.2.5 Further Aspects = 195
      • 7.2.6 Static and Dynamic Process = 195
      • 7.2.7 Patterns = 197
      • 7.2.8 Life Cycle and Execution Model = 198
      • 7.2.9 Transactions = 201
      • 7.2.10 Compensation = 202
      • 7.3 Interface Process = 204
      • 7.3.1 Data = 205
      • 7.3.2 Instantiation Model = 205
      • 7.3.3 Data Flow = 208
      • 7.3.4 Interface Process-Specific Process Steps = 211
      • 7.3.5 Execution Model = 215
      • 7.3.6 Batch Processing and Complex Event Relationships = 217
      • 7.3.7 B2B and A2A Protocols = 219
      • 7.4 Business Process = 220
      • 7.4.1 Data = 221
      • 7.4.2 Event Address Resolution = 221
      • 7.4.3 External Execution Logic = 223
      • 7.4.4 User Interactions = 224
      • 7.4.5 Business Rule = 224
      • 7.5 Binding Process = 225
      • 7.5.1 Data and Data Flow = 225
      • 7.5.2 Intermediate Storing of Events = 227
      • 7.5.3 Instantiation Model and Dynamic Process Binding = 227
      • 7.5.4 Behavior Transformation = 229
      • 7.5.5 Concurrent Processes and Process Coordination = 229
      • 7.6 Process Layout Revisited = 230
      • 7.7 Endpoint = 231
      • 7.7.1 Type = 231
      • 7.7.2 Trading Partner Community = 232
      • 7.7.3 Property = 233
      • 7.7.4 Organization Modeling = 234
      • 7.7.5 Endpoint Relationship = 236
      • 7.7.6 Capability = 236
      • 7.7.7 Hosting = 237
      • 7.7.8 Versioning = 238
      • 7.8 Endpoint Agreement = 238
      • 7.8.1 Agreement = 238
      • 7.8.2 Unilateral Agreement = 240
      • 7.8.3 Bilateral Agreement = 240
      • 7.8.4 Multiendpoint Agreement = 241
      • 7.8.5 Trading Partner Community Agreement = 242
      • 7.8.6 Agreement for Anonymous Endpoints = 242
      • 7.8.7 Multi-Interface Process Agreements = 242
      • 7.8.8 Agreement Conflict Resolution = 243
      • 7.8.9 Interface Process Instantiation Revisited = 244
      • 7.9 Error Handling and Compensation = 245
      • 7.9.1 Error Types = 245
      • 7.9.2 Dynamic Instance Modification = 248
      • 7.9.3 Compensation = 249
      • 7.9.4 Abort = 250
      • 7.10 Complete Integration Model = 250
      • 7.10.1 Completeness = 250
      • 7.10.2 Correctness = 251
      • 7.10.3 Semantic Correctness = 251
      • 7.11 Summary = 252
      • 8 Additional Functionality = 253
      • 8.1 History = 253
      • 8.2 Consistency and Reliability = 255
      • 8.3 Security = 256
      • 8.3.1 Requirements = 256
      • 8.3.2 Identification = 256
      • 8.3.3 Authentication = 256
      • 8.3.4 Authorization = 257
      • 8.3.5 Integrity = 257
      • 8.3.6 Confidentiality = 258
      • 8.3.7 Nonrepudiation = 258
      • 9 Recursive Application of Concepts to B2B Integration = 261
      • 9.1 Graphical Notation = 261
      • 9.2 Trading Partner Agreement Negotiation = 261
      • 9.3 Endpoint Identifier Synchronization = 263
      • 9.4 Endpoint Definition Update = 265
      • 9.5 B2B Protocol Change Management = 266
      • Part Ⅲ Business-to-Business Integration Technology Architecture = 267
      • 10 Architecture Overview = 269
      • 10.1 Layered Architecture = 270
      • 10.2 Component Structure = 271
      • 10.2.1 Component Interface = 271
      • 10.2.2 Component Parts = 271
      • 10.3 State-Based Architecture = 272
      • 10.4 Coordinated Architecture = 272
      • 10.4.1 User Interface Invocations = 273
      • 10.4.2 Invocations Processing Incoming Events = 273
      • 10.5 Integration Example = 274
      • 11 User Interface = 275
      • 11.1 Overview = 275
      • 11.2 Modeling Environment = 277
      • 11.2.1 Modeling Component = 277
      • 11.2.2 Testing Component = 277
      • 11.3 Management Environment = 278
      • 11.3.1 Endpoint Management Component = 278
      • 11.3.2 Error-Handling Component = 279
      • 11.3.3 Monitoring Component = 280
      • 11.4 Analysis Environment = 281
      • 11.5 End User Environment = 282
      • 11.6 System Administration Environment = 282
      • 12 Integration Logic = 283
      • 12.1 Overview = 283
      • 12.2 Integration Logic Component Coordinator = 284
      • 12.3 Initiating Event Processing = 285
      • 12.4 Interface Process Execution = 286
      • 12.5 Binding Process Execution = 287
      • 12.6 Business Process Execution = 287
      • 12.7 Outbound Binding and Interface Process Execution = 288
      • 12.8 Outbound Wire Event Processing = 288
      • 12.9 Summary = 289
      • 13 Connectivity = 291
      • 13.1 Overview = 291
      • 13.2 Receiving a Message = 291
      • 13.3 Security Verification = 292
      • 13.4 Endpoint Agreement Verification = 293
      • 13.5 B2B Protocol Execution = 293
      • 13.6 Outgoing Wire Event = 294
      • 13.7 Back-end Application System Adapter Execution = 295
      • 14 Persistence = 297
      • 14.1 Database = 297
      • 14.2 Persistent and Transactional Queues = 298
      • 14.3 Transactions and Distributed Transactions = 298
      • 15 Implementation Principles = 299
      • 15.1 Metamodel and Integration Execution Interpreter = 299
      • 15.1.1 Metamodel = 299
      • 15.1.2 Integration Execution Interpreter = 300
      • 15.2 Centralized and Transactional Interpreter = 300
      • 15.3 Integration Testing and Monitoring = 302
      • 15.4 External Program Integration = 302
      • 15.4.1 Application Adapters = 303
      • 15.4.2 External Data Format Interpreter = 303
      • 15.4.3 And Then There is Integration Reality = 304
      • Part Ⅳ Business-to-Business Integration Technology Deployment = 305
      • 16 Modeling Methodology = 307
      • 16.1 Overview = 308
      • 16.2 Business Behavior = 308
      • 16.2.1 Business Process Modeling = 309
      • 16.2.2 Business Event Definition = 309
      • 16.3 Business Partner and Endpoint Definition = 310
      • 16.3.1 Trading Partner Definition = 310
      • 16.3.2 Back-end Application System Definition = 312
      • 16.3.3 Summary = 313
      • 16.4 Endpoint Agreement Definition = 313
      • 16.5 Modeling Traps = 314
      • 16.5.1 Point-to-Point Integration = 314
      • 16.5.2 Split of Round-trip Behavior = 315
      • 16.5.3 No Business Process = 315
      • 16.5.4 No Real Business Events = 316
      • 16.5.5 Inclusive Interface Processes = 316
      • 16.6 Deployment = 316
      • 16.7 Integration Project Management = 317
      • 17 Advertisement, Discovery and Agreement = 319
      • 17.1 Advertisement = 319
      • 17.2 Discovery = 321
      • 17.3 Agreement = 322
      • 18 Monitoring and Business Intelligence = 323
      • 18.1 Status Monitoring = 323
      • 18.2 Business Intelligence = 324
      • 18.2.1 Querying the Correct Integration Concepts = 325
      • 18.2.2 Taking Event Behavior into Account = 326
      • 19 Change Management = 327
      • 19.1 Reasons for Change = 327
      • 19.1.1 Internally vs. Externally Caused Changes = 327
      • 19.1.2 Compatible and Incompatible Changes = 329
      • 19.2 Business Behavior = 329
      • 19.2.1 Business Process Type Change = 329
      • 19.2.2 Business Event Type Change = 330
      • 19.3 Business Partner and Endpoint Definition = 330
      • 19.3.1 Endpoint Definition Change = 330
      • 19.3.2 Interface Process Type Change = 331
      • 19.3.3 Binding Process Type Change = 332
      • 19.3.4 Connectivity Change = 332
      • 19.4 Endpoint Agreement Definition = 332
      • 19.5 Deployment = 333
      • 19.6 Self-Service Changes = 334
      • Part Ⅴ Integration Standards, Products, Research and the Future of Integration = 337
      • 20 Standards = 339
      • 20.1 Standards in Today's World = 339
      • 20.1.1 Portability and Interoperability Standards = 339
      • 20.1.2 Current Situation in Context of B2B Integration Standards = 340
      • 20.1.3 Elements of Interoperability Standards = 341
      • 20.1.4 Domain-Specific and Domain-Neutral Standards = 342
      • 20.1.5 And Where Does XML fit? = 343
      • 20.1.6 Standards Compliance = 343
      • 20.1.7 Standards Organizations = 344
      • 20.2 Process Standards = 347
      • 20.2.1 BPEL4WS = 347
      • 20.2.2 DAML-S = 347
      • 20.2.3 ebXML BPSS = 348
      • 20.2.4 RosettaNet = 348
      • 20.2.5 Other Process Standards = 349
      • 20.2.6 Future Process Standards? = 349
      • 20.3 Payload and Vocabulary Standards = 349
      • 20.3.1 ACORD = 349
      • 20.3.2 EDI = 350
      • 20.3.3 EPISTLE = 351
      • 20.3.4 HL7 = 352
      • 20.3.5 OAGI = 352
      • 20.3.6 RosettaNet = 353
      • 20.3.7 SWIFT = 353
      • 20.3.8 Other Payload Standards = 354
      • 20.3.9 Vocabulary Standards = 354
      • 20.4 Security Standards = 356
      • 20.4.1 SAML = 356
      • 20.4.2 SSL = 357
      • 20.4.3 XACML = 357
      • 20.4.4 XKMS = 357
      • 20.4.5 XML Encryption = 357
      • 20.4.6 XML Signature = 358
      • 20.5 Endpoint and Agreement Standards = 358
      • 20.5.1 CPP = 358
      • 20.5.2 CPA = 359
      • 20.5.3 ebXML Registry = 359
      • 20.5.4 EDI 838 = 360
      • 20.5.5 UDDI = 360
      • 20.6 Packaging and Transport Standards = 361
      • 20.6.1 ebXML MSS = 361
      • 20.6.2 EDIINT = 362
      • 20.6.3 FTP = 362
      • 20.6.4 HTTP = 363
      • 20.6.5 MIME = 363
      • 20.6.6 SMTP = 363
      • 20.6.7 SOAP = 363
      • 20.6.8 WSDL = 364
      • 20.7 Transaction Standards = 364
      • 20.7.1 BTP = 364
      • 20.7.2 WS-Coordination and WS-Transaction = 365
      • 20.8 Complete Standards = 365
      • 20.8.1 ebXML = 365
      • 20.8.2 RosettaNet = 366
      • 20.8.3 SWIFT = 366
      • 20.8.4 Web Services Architecture = 366
      • 20.9 Adapter Standard J2EE Connector Architecture = 367
      • 20.10 Application of Standards in B2B Integration Architecture = 368
      • 21 Products = 371
      • 21.1 BEA's WebLogic Integration = 372
      • 21.2 IBM's CrossWorlds = 373
      • 21.3 Microsoft's BizTalk Server = 375
      • 21.4 Oracle's 9iAS Integration = 377
      • 21.5 Further Products = 378
      • 22 Research = 379
      • 22.1 Event Definition and Transformation = 379
      • 22.2 Web Services and Web Service Composition = 380
      • 22.3 Quality of Service = 382
      • 22.4 Process = 383
      • 22.5 Adapter = 384
      • 22.6 Ontology = 384
      • 22.7 Integration Architecture = 385
      • 22.8 Business Process Monitoring = 386
      • 22.9 Agreements = 386
      • 23 The Future of Integration = 387
      • 23.1 Why Integration? = 387
      • 23.2 Integration, Quo Vadis? = 388
      • 23.3 The Grand Challenge = 388
      • 23.4 The Grander Challenge : Self-Forming Virtual Enterprises = 390
      • Part Ⅵ References and Index = 393
      • References = 395
      • Index = 403
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