BPEL: Building Standards-Based Business Processes with Web Services
Nickolas KavantzasPrincipal Member, Technical Staff
Oracle Application Server 10g, Orchestration
Mike LehmannPrincipal Product Manager,
Oracle Application Server 10g, Orchestration
Session id: 40024
Web Services Meet Business Processes
Web Service 1
Web Service 2
Web Service 3
Web Service 4
Web Service 5
Web Service n
Example Problem Space
ClientPO Service
Credit Service
Inventory Service
Purchase Order
Credit
Check
ReserveInventory
Credit
Response
InventoryResponse
InvoiceConsolidate
Results
Business Process Challenges
Coordinate asynchronous communication between services
Correlate message exchanges between parties
Implement parallel processing of activities
. . .
Manipulate/transform data between partner interactions
Support for long running business transactions and activities
Provide consistent exception handling
. . .
Recent History of Business Process Standards
2000/05
XLang(Microsoft)
2001/03
BPML(Intallio et al)
2001/05
WSFL(IBM)
2001/06
BPSS(ebXML)
2002/03
BPEL4WS 1.0 (IBM, Microsoft)
BPEL4WS 1.1(OASIS)
2002/06 2003/01
WS-Choreography(W3C)
2003/04
WSCI(Sun et al)
WSCL(HP)
2002/08
Orchestration vs. Choreography
Orchestration Private process Steps of an executable
workflow Process controlled by
one party
Choreography Public (abstract) process Sequence of observable
messages Conversation made up of
equals
Business Process
?
Business Process 1
1. CheckInv
2. Available
3. Place Order ?
Business Process 2
Derivation from Chris Peltz of HP JavaOne 2003 presentation
Business Process Execution Language for Web Services
• Version 1.0 released by IBM, Microsoft and BEA in August 2002
• Accompanied by WS-Coordination, WS-Transaction which remain unsubmitted to standards bodies
• Version 1.1 submitted to OASIS April 2003
• XML language for describing business processes based on Web services
• Convergence of XLANG (Microsoft) and WSFL (IBM)
• Amazing industry “consensus” in the last 6 months• IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Sun, BEA, SAP, Siebel …
Value Proposition
Portable business processes– Built on top of an interoperable infrastructure of
Web services
Industry wide language for business processes– Common skill set and language for developers
Choice of process engines– Standards lead to competitive offerings
Standards Building Blocks of BPEL
HTTP,IIOP, JMS, SMTP
XML,Encoding
SOAP
WSDL
UDDI
Reliable Messaging Security
Coordination
Transport
Messaging
Description
Discovery
Qualityof Service
Transactions
BPEL4WS Processes
BPEL Depends on WSDL and WSDL Extensions
Service Implementation
Definition
Service Interface Definition
Service
Port
Binding
Port types define Operations
Message
Type
BPEL Scenario Structure<process> <!– Definition and roles of process participants -->
<partners> ... </partners> <!- Data/state used within the process --> <variables> ... </variables> <!- Properties that enable conversations --> <correlationSets> ... </correlationSets> <!- Exception handling --> <faultHandlers> ... </faultHandlers>
<!- Error recovery – undoing actions --> <compensationHandlers> ... </compensationHandlers> <!- Concurrent events with process itself --> <eventHandlers> ... </eventHandlers> <!- Business process flow --> (activities)*</process>
BPEL Activities
Primitive Activities <invoke> <receive> <assign> <reply> <throw> <terminate> <wait>
Structured Activities <sequence> <switch> <pick> <flow> <link> <while> <scope>
Partners
Declare the Web services and roles used by the process
Tied to WSDL of the process itself and the participating Web services by service link types
CreditService
Partner 2
InventoryService
Partner 3Partner 1(the process)
PurchaseService
Partners in BPEL
<partners> <partner name=“customer" serviceLinkType=“lns:purchaseSLT”
myRole=“purchaseService”/> <partner name=“inventoryChecker” serviceLinkType=“lns:inventorySLT”
myRole=“inventoryRequestor” partnerRole=“inventoryService”/> <partner name=“creditChecker” serviceLinkType=“lns:creditSLT” myRole=“creditRequestor” partnerRole=“creditService”/></partners>
<slt:serviceLinkType name=“purchaseSLT”> <slt:role name=“purchaseService”> <slt:portType name=“tns:purchasePT”/> </slt:role></slt:serviceLinkType>
Purchase Process WSDL:
BPEL:
<portType name=“purchasePT”> <operation name="sendPurchase"> </operation></portType>
Purchase Process PortType:
Variables
Messages sent and received from partners– Persisted for long running interactions– Defined in WSDL types and messages
CustomerService
Process
<A>
<variable> <activity>
<B>
<activity>
PersistPersist/Retrieve
CustomerService
Persist/Retrieve
Persist/Retrieve
<variable>
Variables in BPEL
<variables> <variable name=“PO” messageType=“lns:POMessage”/> <variable name=“Invoice” messageType=“lns:InvMessage”/> <variable name=“POFault” messageType=“lns:orderFaultType”/></variables>
<message name=“POMessage”> <part name=“customerInfo” type=“sns:customerInfo”/> <part name=“purchaseOrder” type=“sns:purchaseOrder”/></message><message name="InvMessage"> <part name=“IVC” type=“sns:Invoice”/></message><message name=“orderFaultType”> <part name=“problemInfo” type=“xsd:string”/></message>
Purchase Process WSDL:
BPEL:
How is Data Manipulation Done?
Using <assign> and <copy>, data can be copied and manipulated between variables
<copy> supports XPath queries to sub-select data
<assign> <copy> <from variable="PO" part="customerInfo"/> <to variable=“creditRequest” part="customerInfo"/> </copy></assign>
Simple Activities
Receive– Wait for a partner inbound message– Can be the instantiator of the business process
Reply– Synchronous response to a receive activity– Response to the inbound receive from a partner
Invoke– Issue a request synchronously *or* asynchronously
Pick– Specify an inbound set of messages– Can be the instantiator of the business process– Activity completes when one of the messages arrives
Simple Activities Combined with Structured Activities
Invoke <InventoryService> Invoke <CreditService>
Reply <Invoice>
Receive <PO> <sequence>
<flow>
</sequence>
Sample Activities in BPEL<sequence> <receive partner=“customer” portType=“lns:purchaseOrderPT" operation=“sendPurchaseOrder” variable=“PO” createInstance="yes" /> <flow> <invoke partner=“inventoryChecker” portType=“lns:inventoryPT” operation="checkINV" inputVariable="inventoryRequest" outputVariable="inventoryResponse" />
<invoke partner="creditChecker" portType=“lns:creditPT" operation="checkCRED" inputVariable="creditRequest" outputVariable="creditResponse" /> </flow> ... <reply partner=“customer” portType=“lns:purchaseOrderPT” operation=“sendPurchaseOrder” variable=“invoice"/></sequence>
<flow> <links> <link name="XtoY"/> <link name="CtoD"/> </links> <sequence name="X"> <source linkName="XtoY"/> <invoke name="A" .../> <invoke name="B" .../> </sequence> <sequence name"Y"> <target linkName="XtoY"/> <receive name="C"/> <source linkName="CtoD"/> </receive> <invoke name="E" .../> </sequence> <invoke partner="D"> <target linkName="CtoD"/> </invoke></flow>
<flow>
</flow>
<Y>
<C>
<E>
<X>
<A>
<B>
<D>
<link CtoD>
Links – Control Flow
<link XtoY>
Correlation
Customer
• SendPurchase
• ProcessPurchaseResponse
PO
Correlation:<PO_CustId = 10><PO_OrdId = 100>
POResponse
Correlations:<PO_CustId = 10><PO_OrdId = 100>
<Inv_VendId = 20><Inv_InvId = 200>
Seller
• AsynchPurchase
• AsynchPurchaseResponse
initiate=yes
initiate=yes pattern=out
initiate=no pattern=out
initiate=yes
initiate=yes
initiate=no
Correlations in BPEL<correlationSets> <correlationSet name="POCorr" properties="cor:custId cor:ordId"/> <correlationSet name="InvoiceCorr" properties="cor:vendId cor:invId"/></correlationSets> ...
<receive partner=“Customer” portType="SP:PurchaseOrderPT"
operation="AsynchPurchase" variable="PO"> <correlations> <correlation set="POCorr" initiate="yes"> </correlations></receive> ...
<invoke partner=“Customer” portType="SP:CustomerPT"
operation=“ProcessPurchaseResponse" inputVariable="POResponse"> <correlations> <correlation set="POCorr" initiate="no" pattern="out">
<correlation set="InvoiceCorr" initiate="yes" pattern="out"> </correlations></invoke> ...
Scopes in BPEL
Provide a shared context for subset of activities
Can contain – fault handlers– event handlers, – compensation handler
variables– correlation sets
Can serialize concurrentaccess to variables
<scopevariableAccessSerializable="yes|no“ ...>
<variables></variables>
<correlationSets>? ... </correlationSets>
<faultHandlers></faultHandlers>
<compensationHandler>? ... </compensationHandler>
<eventHandlers></eventHandlers> (activities)*
</scope>
Long Running Transactions and Compensation
Undo
ReserveInventory
<scope>
</scope>
• ReserveInventory• CancelReserveInv
InventoryService
• CheckCredit• ChargeHoldFee• CancelHoldFee
CreditService
Undo
ChargeHold Fee
Compensation Handlers in BPEL
<scope> <compensationHandler> <invoke partner="Seller" portType="SP:Purchasing" operation="CancelPurchase" inputVariable="getResponse" outputVariable="getConfirmation"> <correlations> <correlation set="PurchaseOrder" pattern="out"/> </correlations> </invoke> </compensationHandler> <invoke partner="Seller" portType="SP:Purchasing" operation="SyncPurchase" inputVariable="sendPO" outputVariable="getResponse"> <correlations> <correlation set="PurchaseOrder" initiate=“yes” pattern="out"/> </correlations> </invoke></scope>
Exception Handling in BPEL
<faultHandlers> catch exception– Based on WSDL port defining fault
<faultHandlers> can perform activities upon invocation
<faultHandlers> <catch faultName="lns:cannotCompleteOrder"
faultVariable="POFault"> <reply partner="customer" portType="lns:purchaseOrderPT" operation="sendPurchaseOrder" variable="POFault" faultName="cannotCompleteOrder"/> </catch></faultHandlers>
Just Show Me How to Do it!
PartnerWSDL 1
ProcessWSDL
PartnerWSDL n
. . .
BPEL Scenario
<process> <partners> <variables> <sequence> <flow> </sequence></process>
1. Compile2. Package3. Deploy
ApplicationServer
BPEL Runtime
CompiledBPEL Scenario
Tooling Requirements
IDE – build your Web services WSDL authoring – model your interfaces Schema authoring – model your messages Process modeling – model your orchestration Packaging and deployment Debugging Monitoring Analyzing
What Happened to Java?
JSR 207 - Process Definition Language for Java
Make business processes natural for Java programmers
MessagingTransactions PoolingNamingSecurity
Application Server
Servlet EJB
Process Definition for Java
Based on JSR 207 Session at JavaOne 2003
What Happened to J2EE?
JSR 208 – Java Business Integration Make business processes a first class citizen
in J2EE containers
Based on JSR 208 Session at JavaOne 2003
. . .RoutingEngine
TransformEngine
BPELEngine
NormalizedMessage Bus
JSR 208Binding SPIEDI JCA
WebServices
JMS . . .
Binding Framework
JSR 208Machine SPI
Oracle’s Strategy
Oracle Application Server Containers for J2EE – BPEL runtime
Oracle JDeveloper– BPEL design time
Oracle Application Server Integration – Web service, B2B and EAI integration
Remember BPEL Does Not Solve “World Hunger”
No data transformation No data translation (EDI, binary formats …) No human workflow No trading partner agreements Silent on existing business protocols (ebXML,
RosettaNet …) Silent on non Web service interactions (e.g. java to
java)
. . .
But Remember: People Are Trying to Solve “World Hunger”
W3C: WS-Choreography Spec: WS-Transaction Spec: WS-Coordination Spec: WS-Composite Application Framework OASIS: WS-Reliability Spec: ReliableMessaging Spec: WS-Addressing OASIS: WS-Security …
Parting Thoughts
Business process portability?– Java/J2EE is portable across application servers– BPEL is portable independent of Java
Programming language in XML?– Does this hurt?– Vendors, big and small, are busy building
modellers… Is BPEL in 2003/2004 J2EE in 1998?
– Much missing but compelling foundation
Next Steps….
Recommended sessions– 36811 - Application Integration using Web Services– 40053 - Develop, Deploy, and Manage Web Services with Oracle
Application Server 10g Recommended demos and/or hands-on labs
– DemoGrounds: See the Web Services Booth – Hands On: Developing and Deploying Enterprise Web Services with
Oracle Application Server 10g See Your Business in Our Software
– Visit the DEMOgrounds for a customized architectural review, see a customized demo with Solutions Factory, or receive a personalized proposal. Visit the DEMOgrounds for more information.
Relevant web sites to visit for more information– http://otn.oracle.com/tech/webservices
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