Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - II

 

Who should attend

This course is designed for integration developers and other application development specialists.

Prerequisites

Before taking this course, you should successfully complete Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - I (WB860G) or Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - I (ZB860G). You should also have:

  • Basic Java and Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) skills
  • Experience with, or prior education on, WebSphere Application Server, or experience with Rational Application Developer
  • Basic Extensible Markup Language (XML) skills

Product Description

This course is also available as classroom course Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - II (WB860G).

This course continues to build the skills and concepts that are learned in courses Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - I (WB860G) and Developing Applications in IBM Business Process Manager Advanced V8.5.7 - I (ZB860G). Those courses introduced the service-oriented architecture (SOA) approach to business process management (BPM), and covered how to build a basic process integration solution. In this course, you learn how to extend the functionality of that solution to accommodate more process integration scenarios.

Through presentations and hands-on lab exercises, you learn about the Service Component Architecture (SCA) programming model and runtime environment, XML (business object) support, Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) handlers, business state machines, and SCA transactions. You also learn about business process dynamicity and flexibility, relationships, and mediation primitives. Other topics include creating versions of SCA components, test environment capabilities, and approaches to securing SCA applications.

You use the IBM Process Center repository to add process model artifacts in a complete and integrated development solution. You learn how to apply governance to process applications.

In addition, you use IBM Integration Designer to design, develop, and test comprehensive process integration solutions that use the SCA programming model, the Service Data Object (SDO) data model, and the mediation flow programming model. You learn how to deploy these solutions to the IBM Process Server runtime environment, maintain them in the IBM Process Center repository, and test them in the IBM Integration Designer test environment.

The course also covers how to use the tools of IBM Business Process Manager for iterative (model-driven) application development. For example, you learn how to develop a process diagram in IBM Process Designer, store it in the IBM Process Center repository, and associate it with modules and libraries in IBM Integration Designer.

The lab environment for this course uses the Windows 2012 server R2 64-bit platform.

For information about other related courses, see the IBM Training website:

ibm.com/training

If you are enrolling in a Self Paced Virtual Classroom or Web Based Training course, before you enroll, please review the Self-Paced Virtual Classes and Web-Based Training Classes on our Terms and Conditions page, as well as the system requirements, to ensure that your system meets the minimum requirements for this course. http://www.ibm.com/training/terms

Outline

Course introductionIntroduction to IBM Business Process Manager V8.5.7Exercise: Using iterative development to create applicationsCourse business scenarioVersion control and testing of SCA applicationsExercise: Version control for SCA applicationsSCA bindings, the SCA runtime, and SCA quality of service qualifiersExercise: Working with SCA bindings and qualifiersFault handlersExercise: Applying fault handlersWS-BPEL compensation and event handlersExercise: Applying a compensation handler to WS-BPELBusiness state machinesExercise: Working with business state machinesTransactional behavior of SCA applicationsExercise: Defining transactional behavior in SCA applicationsBusiness process flexibilityExercise: Creating flexible business processesRelationshipsExercise: Working with static relationshipsMediation primitivesExercise: Implementing a mediation flowMediation flow controlExercise: Writing a generic error handler for IBM Process ServerSecurityExercise: Implementing securityGovernance of process applicationsExercise: Applying governance to process applicationsIntegrating with IBM Business Process ManagerExercise: Integrating other applications with IBM Integration DesignerCourse summary

Price on request