July 2006 Archives

Recently I have been involved in some projects that introduce SOA as a means to reduce testing efforts in large organizations. Taking two or three weeks out of the testing phase of a project and lowering the overall software development lifecycle (SDLC) can save millions of dollars for large organizations.

IONA's Professional Services organization has been researching and implementing methods and practices that can leverage the benefits of SOA for integration testing. Many of IONA's larger customers have a plethora of middleware and platforms. Having a consistent and automated approach to testing across these various technologies has been very difficult until now.

Leveraging best practices, testing tools and the unique capabilities of Artix, IONA PS has developed Certification Kits that allow for independent testing of integration end-points by disparate or remote groups. And this can be achieved no matter what the underlying middleware: CORBA, MQ Series, Tuxedo, Tibco, J2EE, Web services, CICS etc. This is achieved by harnessing the unique capabilities of Artix as an Extensible ESB. Artix employees WSDL as the common underlying interface definition or contract between the endpoints. WSDL is employed no matter what the underlying technology.

At one customer, IONA PS were able to take three weeks out of the testing phase. Consider how many lifecycles each application or team has per year and how many teams there are. You can then imagine how the savings add up. And then consider the time to market advantages.

I was a skeptic myself until recently. I saw an impressive demonstration of the capabilities performed by my old buddy Ashwin Karpe. Really great stuff!

Who is IPBabble

William Henry IP Babble is the personal blog of William Henry.

William has 20 years experience in software development and distributed computing and holds a M.Sc from Dublin City University. He is currently working in the office of CTO at Red Hat on the MRG product. This weblog is not funded by Red Hat.

Posts are intended to express independent points of view, but understand that there is probably a bias based on the influence of working with standards based middleware for over a decade. (See disclaimer below)

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Disclaimer

The views expressed in this blog are solely the personal views of the author and DO NOT represent the views of his employer or any third party.

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This page is an archive of entries from July 2006 listed from newest to oldest.

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