jBPM6 developer guide learn about the components, tooling, and integration points that are part of the JBoss Business Process Management (BPM) framework
If you are a Java developer or architect who needs to have a better understanding of how Business Process Management frameworks behave in real-life implementations, this book is for you. This book assumes that you know the Java language well and are familiar with some widely used frameworks such as...
Otros Autores: | , , , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Birmingham, England :
Packt Publishing
2014.
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Edición: | Third edition |
Colección: | Community experience distilled.
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Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009629749606719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Author; Acknowledgments; About the Author; About the Author; About the Reviewers; www.PacktPub.com; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Why Do We Need Business Process Management?; Theoretical background; Introduction, analysis, and explanations of standard specifications; Technical details and common practices of jBPM6; The conceptual background of BPM; Business processes; Sequence of business activities; Naming our activities; Business users and business applications; Humans and systems behave differently
- Humans and systems - classification strategiesAchieving a business goal; The BPM discipline; BPM stage 1 - discovering your business processes; BPM stage 2 - formalizing your new processes; BPM stage 3 - implementing your technical assets; The business entity model; Coordination and orchestration of activities; BPM stage 4 - runtime; BPM stage 5 - monitoring; BPM stage 6 - improvements; BPM applications in the real world; The BPMS check list; BPM APIs and common practices; BPM - adoption of standards; Summary; Chapter 2: BPM Systems'' Structure; Components of a BPMS; The execution node
- The semantic moduleThe process engine; Node instance structures; Components inside jBPM6; Transactions and persistence; Audit/History logs; Real-time dashboards; Data mining and data analysis tools; The KIE APIs; KIE services; The KIE module; The KIE container; The KIE base; The KIE session; External interactions; The Human task component; Human tasks - life cycle; Human tasks - APIs; The User/Group callback; The BPMS ecosystem; BPM and service-oriented architecture; Service orchestration; Enterprise Service Bus; Rule engines; Classic BPM system and rule engine integration
- Event-driven architecture and complex event processingPredictive analytics and decision management; Summary; Chapter 3: Using BPMN 2.0 to Model Business Scenarios; Introduction to BPMN 2.0; Process modeling compliance; BPMN 2.0 elements; Flow elements; Connecting elements; Data elements; Swimlanes; Artifacts; Task types in jBPM6; Subprocess types in jBPM6; Event subtypes; Boundary events; BPMN 2.0; Modeling business scenarios with BPMN 2.0; Technical perspective; Sprint management technical overview; Adding simple process data; Summary; Chapter 4: Understanding the KIE Workbench
- What you need to start a jBPM6 environmentRunning the KIE Workbench installer; What you will need to create the jBPM6 business processes; Workbench utilities; Process designer; Other knowledge asset editors; What you will need to run the jBPM6 business processes; Process runtime; Process UI; Task lists; Task forms; Summary; Chapter 5: Creating a Process Project in the KIE Workbench; An IDE to our knowledge; A variety of process designers; The BPMN 2.0 Eclipse editor; The Web Process Designer; The jBPM Eclipse plugin; Interacting with the Web Process Designer; Creating new processes
- Implementing our first process