<<Most organizations at this point in time have made up their minds
about SOA, such as when and if they will eventually invest in it, and
if so, what tools and vendors are the best fit for the job. Yet as the
ever evolving technology sector should have it, many vendors in the
SOA landscape are now churning a new concept out to existing SOA
customers, that of event-driven architecture (EDA), a seemingly new
term which has at best blurred lines with the more widely used SOA
acronym. So up next we will take a look at what constitutes EDA and
its relevance to the SOA market.

Let's start by exploring what is perhaps the most common thing that
comes to mind when saying "event" in an enterprise software context --
to many it will bring up thoughts of either messaging middleware,
asynchronous communication, publish/subscribe topics, JMS, MSMQ or
whatever other technology can used to establish event notification.
Nothing new there of course, so now let's switch gears to the Web
services standards that cover similar scenarios, here you will likely
come up with Web Services Eventing (WS-Eventing) by the W3C or Web
Services Notification by OASIS, at first glance the use of these
standards will likely spark the thought of the EDA/SOA marriage. After
all, it's service-based architecture with event processing tossed into
the mix, but this would in fact be wishful thinking.

An EDA is a much broader concept -- much like SOA itself is an
approach -- one that has in fact been exploited for many years. If in
times past you've heard of complex event processing (CEP) vendors,
then you were in fact within the confines of an EDA, though you may
not have realized it by this three letter acronym. Still for those not
familiar with the concept, the premise behind CEP and EDA is to
execute business logic upon the presence of certain system events,
which can in fact originate from a wide range of mediums, including
the aforementioned publish/subscribe middleware scenarios to more
elaborate setups like event detection via RFID scanners or even
something as mundane as an event occurring in a database.

In this sense, CEP vendors have carved out niche markets across
several industries, especially in the financial and manufacturing
sectors where event sensitive logic is vital, such as stock order
triggers or fulfillment operations. But in confronting such problem
areas, many a CEP vendor has had to develop ad-hoc approaches for
extracting meaningful events from enterprise systems, creating a
plethora of proprietary engines, adapters, query languages and, of
course, their respective management, monitoring and editing tools.

All of this has led to a certain dichotomy between early SOA
proponents, CEP vendors and the actual validity of EDA as some sort of
SOA 2.0. From a CEP standpoint, one would be hard pressed to admit the
technical justification of SOA or anything related to services in
order to make CEP a reality, given that CEP has succeeded without much
SOA influence as early as 2000 in production type environments.

But let's recap what makes CEP unique to the enterprise. The sell
point to most CEP solutions is that they offer real time event
processing, something which is in stark contrast to the static nature
of most middleware event processing systems, which generally entail
lag times, either related to retrieving archived events or simply
determining courses of action for extremely elaborate event sequences.
So with that said, now take a bird's eye view at the foundations being
set by SOA: loosely coupled interfaces/services based on standards,
accessible across enterprise tiers and platform agnostic sources. Case
in point, simplified access to the majority of an organization's data
with the potential to access events in much the same manner.

Though the need for CEP is still vital to only a handful of
industries, it hasn't taken much for SOA vendors to figure out there
is a business opportunity in leveraging the same infrastructure being
laid out for SOA to fulfill CEP requirements, something which has led
to terms like: Event-Driven SOA, EDA as SOA 2.0, including numerous
engine and product announcements around this same paradigm. As far as
the old guard in the CEP market is concerned -- the non-SOA camp if
you will -- there is a certain reluctance in combining SOA, EDA and
CEP in the same sentence, especially since most have done fine even
before the great SOA frenzy.

The reality is that SOA has a much to gain from CEP, as does CEP from
SOA. In its current state, most every SOA product line lacks the real
time event processing capabilities present in niche CEP engines, on
the other hand, most CEP engines possess fragmented techniques -- read
vendor lock-in -- for executing real time event processing all of
which could greatly benefit from already exposed SOA designs. Whether
the term SOA 2.0 or EDA will be chastised by the media as "buzz" has
yet to pan out, but what will definitely come to fruition sooner than
later, is a reciprocal understanding between the prevalent SOA vendors
and the offerings of niche CEP vendors, no matter what it's called.>>

You can read this at:
http://searchwebservices.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid26_gci1262262,00.html?track=NL-449&ad=595008&asrc=EM_NLT_1672573&uid=5532089

Gervas

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