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MOM and SOA on Linux?

dogmeant asks: "I have yet to see MOM (message oriented middleware) offerings on Linux much less open source projects that address the same. And while we're at it, what about tools that address SOA/BPM (Service oriented architecture/business process modeling) type architectures on Linux? Is the Open Source community ready to take on challenges like this?" If anyone else out there has this particular itch, maybe this will be another niche in which Open Source software can catch some Enterprise mindshare.

2 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Jabber, XMLBlaster and friends by tcopeland · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Like the parent poster said, Jabber is much more useful than just sending IMs around.

    We're using Jabber on Linux to support http://cougaar.org/ administration - to stop/start/configure nodes, check on status, etc, etc. It's pretty sweet, especially when used via Rich Kilmer's Jabber4R Ruby Jabber client. Check out http://www.infoether.com/ruby/jabber4r/ for more info...

    Tom
    Find unused Java code with http://pmd.sf.net/

  2. MOM/SOA/ESB on Linux by ESBdude · · Score: 3, Interesting

    no ...we're not talking alphabet soup. Mind you, in today's TLA craze, you just never know. I just read a max'd out thread on MOM offerigns for Linux and offer this.

    While I'm a big fan of open-sourced solutions, there are plenty of commercial MOM offerings out there that run on Linux. A really solid one that I've worked with is SonicMQ. It runs on Linux and many other platforms. Being built 100% in Java makes that possible.

    As for SOAs, there's another offering from Sonic called SonicXQ that offers a standards-based SOA that includes support for web services, content-based routing, transformation, and itinerary-based process flow, all done using proven standards. They recently added a suite of XML tools from the acquisition of eXcelon that gives them sophisticated XML storage and handling as well as stateful conversational BPM.

    The industry has labeled this new form of SOA that combines MOM, Web services, cbr and transformation as an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB). Lots of talk about the ESB being a more flexible cost-effective integration strategy than the traditional integration brokers approach.

    And this too runs on Linux.