Jeremy Deane
Director of Research & Architecture
Presentations
Resource-Oriented Concurrent Processing
Traditional concurrent development on the Java Platform requires in depth knowledge of threads, locks, and queues (oh, my!). Fortunately, new functional languages that run on the Java Platform, such as Scala, have made concurrent programming easier.
An alternate approach is to implement concurrent processes using a resource oriented computing (ROC) platform. At the heart of this ROC platform is a microkernel that allows processing to scale linearly as more CPUs are added. Consequently, developers are freed from the complexity of Java concurrency and functional programming.
In this session, I will provide an overview of resource-oriented concurrent programming using 1060 Research’s NetKernel. I will then present examples that compare and contrast this approach against concurrent programming using Java and Scala.
Resource-Oriented Enterprise Service Bus
An Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) provides a platform for service provisioning. The core capabilities that enable provisioning across an enterprise include addressing, routing and transformations. Addressing is the ability to specify the location of a service regardless of transport. Service routing defines a message path across a number of servers or nodes and message content transformations are implemented using XML technologies such as XSLT and proprietary adapters.
Resource Oriented Architecture (ROA) goes beyond RESTful web services and provides a more extensible transport-independent foundation. Furthermore, ROA pushes the integration functionality to the edge of the network (as a URI), translating into better service management and scalability.
In this session, I will explore the convergence of Resource Oriented Architecture and Enterprise Integration Patterns. I will then present a Resource-Oriented ESB and several service examples using 1060 Research’s NetKernel and Apache ActiveMQ.



