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Process-Driven Applications with BPMN electronic resource by Volker Stiehl.

By: Stiehl, Volker [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XVII, 334 p. 221 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319072180Subject(s): Computer Science | Information systems | Management information systems | Computer Science | Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet) | Business Information Systems | Computer Appl. in Administrative Data ProcessingDDC classification: 005.7 LOC classification: QA76.76.A65Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- Definition of Process-Driven Applications -- Architecture of Process-Driven Applications -- Implementing the Basic Architecture of Process-Driven Applications -- Advanced Concepts for Architecture Support in Process-Driven Applications -- Conclusion and Outlook.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: How can we optimize differentiating business processes and exploit their full potential? Here Volker Stiehl provides answers, utilizing the various options that the BPMN (Business Process Model and Notation) standard offers for planning, implementing, and monitoring processes. The book presents an approach for implementing an architecture for applications that strives to find a balance between development and maintenance costs, sustainability, scalability, and fault tolerance; that meets flexibility requirements without becoming inordinately complex itself; and that keeps the end application as abstract as possible from the system landscape in which it operates. Based on the semantic enhancements found in version 2.0 of the BPMN standard, which have made it possible to execute process models, his approach exploits BPMN to create and run complete application architectures. In this context, BPMN is not just used to model the business processes of the application, as the “B” in BPMN might suggest; but also to model and execute the integration processes between the systems. Throughout the book, the software package SAP Process Orchestration is used to illustrate the implementation of the proposed architecture, yet all recommendations are intentionally kept generic so that they can be implemented on any other comparable platform as well. Software architects, IT managers, software developers and project managers, as well as students of information and business technology will find the book a valuable resource. The proposed application architecture offers them a detailed blueprint, the principles of which they can use to plan and implement process-driven distributed applications.
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Introduction -- Definition of Process-Driven Applications -- Architecture of Process-Driven Applications -- Implementing the Basic Architecture of Process-Driven Applications -- Advanced Concepts for Architecture Support in Process-Driven Applications -- Conclusion and Outlook.

How can we optimize differentiating business processes and exploit their full potential? Here Volker Stiehl provides answers, utilizing the various options that the BPMN (Business Process Model and Notation) standard offers for planning, implementing, and monitoring processes. The book presents an approach for implementing an architecture for applications that strives to find a balance between development and maintenance costs, sustainability, scalability, and fault tolerance; that meets flexibility requirements without becoming inordinately complex itself; and that keeps the end application as abstract as possible from the system landscape in which it operates. Based on the semantic enhancements found in version 2.0 of the BPMN standard, which have made it possible to execute process models, his approach exploits BPMN to create and run complete application architectures. In this context, BPMN is not just used to model the business processes of the application, as the “B” in BPMN might suggest; but also to model and execute the integration processes between the systems. Throughout the book, the software package SAP Process Orchestration is used to illustrate the implementation of the proposed architecture, yet all recommendations are intentionally kept generic so that they can be implemented on any other comparable platform as well. Software architects, IT managers, software developers and project managers, as well as students of information and business technology will find the book a valuable resource. The proposed application architecture offers them a detailed blueprint, the principles of which they can use to plan and implement process-driven distributed applications.

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