- Source: Enterprise Integration Patterns
Enterprise Integration Patterns is a book by Gregor Hohpe and Bobby Woolf which describes 65 patterns for the use of enterprise application integration and message-oriented middleware in the form of a pattern language.
The integration (messaging) pattern language
The pattern language presented in the book consists of 65 patterns structured into 9 categories, which largely follow the flow of a message from one system to the next through channels, routing, and transformations. The book includes an icon-based pattern language, sometimes nicknamed "GregorGrams" after one of the authors. Excerpts from the book (short pattern descriptions) are available on the supporting website (see External links).
= Integration styles and types
=The book distinguishes four top-level alternatives for integration:
File Transfer
Shared Database
Remote Procedure Invocation
Messaging
The following integration types are introduced:
Information Portal
Data Replication
Shared Business Function
Service Oriented Architecture
Distributed Business Process
Business-to-Business Integration
Tightly Coupled Interaction vs. Loosely Coupled Interaction
The pattern language continues to be relevant as of today, for instance in cloud application development and integration, and in the internet of things. In 2015, the two book authors reunited—for the first time since the publication of the book—for a retrospective and interview in IEEE Software.
Implementation
Enterprise Integration Patterns are implemented in many open source integration solutions. Notable implementations include Spring Integration, Apache Camel, Red Hat Fuse, Mule ESB and Guaraná DSL.
See also
Enterprise messaging system
Loose coupling
Software design pattern
References
External links
Official website
"Table Of Contents". Retrieved 4 June 2014.
"The Add-in for Enterprise Architect extended the capability of this tool to create EIP models". Archived from the original on 27 November 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pola desain
- Mahadata
- Layanan web
- Enterprise Integration Patterns
- Enterprise application integration
- Enterprise integration
- Software design pattern
- Enterprise service bus
- Canonical model
- EIP
- Design Patterns
- Enterprise messaging system
- Messaging pattern