27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference Ad Hoc Software Interfacing: Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) when Middleware is Overkill Dallas, Texas November 03-November 06 ISBN: 0-7695-2020-0
Enterprise application integration (EAI) is cooperation of disparate systems and components to implement business rules in a distributed environment. "Systems and components" can be computer-aided design (CAD) or software engineering (CASE) tools, enterprise databases, COTS applications, or in-house software. Ad hoc software interfacing (AHSI) is a special kind of EAI. A tradeoff analysis classifies an EAI problem as an AHSI problem when middleware solutions are seen as heavy-handed. I.e., the planned EAI is not expected to become broad enough to justify the generality of a middleware solution or the client is unwilling to pay for a unified data model. AHSI seeks to "wire" extant software applications as components in new, larger software applications. We call applications-as-components "appliponents". AHSI seeks to minimize appliponent modification to the greatest extent possible. We demonstrate solutions to AHSI problems using XML toolkits, domain-specific language toolkits, and Microsoft BizTalk Server.
Citation:
Arthur A. Reyes, Jos? R. Espino, Vijai Mohan, Monica Nadkar, "Ad Hoc Software Interfacing: Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) when Middleware is Overkill," compsac, pp.570, 27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference, 2003 Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||