Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

The SOA generation gap: Enterprise Service Bus products

The options for building enterprise-grade service-oriented architectures
Network/Systems Management Alert By Julie Craig , Network World , 03/22/2006
Sign up for this newsletter now!

Senior Editor Denise Dubie guides you through the latest developments in management tools and services.

  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print

An interesting phenomenon is becoming apparent in the service-oriented architecture products space, and it is related to the growing gap between longtime vendors such as Tibco and Oracle and newer entrants such as Infravio and Reactivity. I've spent the last two months talking to vendors in preparation for an SOA landscape paper and what is becoming increasingly apparent is that the two groups are diverging.

The Oracle and Tibco Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) products, along with those of most other ESB vendors, evolved from the Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) space. This evolution has been a boon for ESB vendors as well as for the industry. Once Web services and SOA became viable, these platforms already included much of the intelligence required for interoperability, including adapters, security and messaging.

This functionality enabled SOA to become practical much earlier than would have been possible otherwise. Today, most production-grade SOA implementations run over ESBs.

During the late 1990s and early 2000s however, Web services began to mature and to drive a new set of solutions. Unlike established solutions that evolved over time, these were smaller, modular products that were standards-based and designed for specific functionality. Instead of building one-stop SOA monoliths, the vendors of this new generation concentrated on doing specific functionality extremely well, and relied on other companies to fill the gaps. For these vendors, standards are in the DNA and partners are of vital importance - without both, SOA implementations aren't possible.

Infravio, founded in 1999, produces XRegistry, an SOA registry and repository. Infravio senior management has been heavily involved in standards development and an Infravio executive is the chair of the OASIS SOA Adoption Blueprints Technical Committee. Reactivity, founded in 1998, produces an XML Message Gateway, among other products. Reactivity is co-author of WS-Security, WS-Trust, WS-Federation and many other standards. The lists of the standards these two vendors support and the products they interoperate with are extensive.

For the new generation of SOA vendors, standards, integration and partnerships are a foundation, not an afterthought. These are key concepts that are architected into the products from day one. This is a luxury that most veteran ESB vendors did not enjoy. Most now have enormous code bases that make it difficult for them to respond with agility to today's very fluid IT landscape. Adding new capabilities is a challenge. Supporting a capability as fundamental as an architecture change, such as SOA brings to the table, is an even bigger one.

Denise Dubie is senior editor with Network World.

  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print
Partner Content

NetScout and analyst Jim Metzler have teamed to deliver a series of IT Briefs on Network and Application Performance Management leveraging research from NetScout’s nGenius & Sniffer users.

www.netscout.com

Metzler on CIO Priorities

The top five CIO priorities based on a survey of NetScout users revealing CIOs' top priorities and what they think they should be. Also includes interviews with CIOs of large organizations.

Read the Report

Metzler on Application Delivery

How to eliminate the stovepiped or siloed nature of application delivery from both an organization and a technological perspective.

Read the Brief

Metzler on Network Troubleshooting

Overview of network troubleshooting that provides an assessment of where we are, and where we need to be relative to the complexities of today's IT challenges.

Read the Brief

Comment
Login
Forgot your account info?
Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed