by community-syndication | Sep 22, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Windows Azure Storage med Bj%u00f6rn Eriksen.
Thursday, September 29, 2011 from 5:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Windows Azure Storage %u00e4r en tj%u00e4nst i Windows Azure som r%u00f6r olika typer av lagring. Blobs, Queues, Tables och %u00e4r begrepp som m%u00e5nga garanterat k%u00e4nner till, och s%u00e4kert har en uppfattning om hur de ska bete sig, men finns det mer %u00e4n det som syns p%u00e5 ytan? Utvecklare %u00e4r vana att jobba med filsystem, databaser och k%u00f6hanterare s%u00e5 varf%u00f6r skapa en ny modell? Skalbarhet och p%u00e5litlighet %u00e4r det korta svaret!
Register here.
Join Sweden Windows Azure Group (SWAG)here.
by community-syndication | Sep 22, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Back in the days when I was working with BizTalk 2004 I always had the book ‘Microsoft BizTalk Server 2004 Unleashed‘ close by on my desk. Later on, when BizTalk 2006 was released the same was the case for the book ‘Professional BizTalk Server 2006‘. It is not my intention to fail other good BizTalk […]
Blog Post by: Randal van Splunteren
by community-syndication | Sep 21, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
I’ve added a third walkthrough to the AppFabric Walkthrough series.
“The following walkthrough will show how topics and subscriptions can be used to implement a simple publish-subscribe messaging channel. The next walkthrough will build on this sample and explore the use of filters on subscriptions.”
Introducing Topics and Subscriptions
The other two walkthroughs are here.
Simple Brokered Messaging
Creating a Simple Queue Management Tool
At present there are no charges for using the new brokered messaging capabilities in AppFabric, so I have been taking advantage of this to explore the new functionality. This free offer will not last forever, so now is a great time to take a look at the new capabilities.
by community-syndication | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Hi folks we’re delivering Azure sessions on behalf of Microsoft over the next coming
weeks
Here’s the official timetable, come along they’re free for you!!
(All times are in Australian Eastern Standard Time)
Blog Post by: Mick Badran
by community-syndication | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
I’ve added a second AppFabric Walkthrough based on the Azure AppFabric Service Bus September 2011 release. The second one looks at using the NamespaceManager class to create, list, get and delete queues in an AppFabric service bus namespace using a simple C# console application. Feel free to expand on this scenario to create more sophisticated management consoles.
As with the first walkthrough there have been a lot of changes in the classes used to interact with the service bus, so don’t expect this code to work against the May or June CTP releases.
The two walkthroughs are here.
AppFabric Walkthrough: Simple Brokered Messaging
AppFabric Walkthrough: Creating a Simple Queue Management Tool
by community-syndication | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
One benefit of my recent experience on a BA flight was that I got plenty of time to read through “Microsoft BizTalk 2010 Line of Business Systems Integration”. I’d promised the publisher weeks ago that I would take a look and publish some comments, but August has been such a busy month for me, and they have had to be patient. I should point out that, for the sake of transparency, that with another BizTalk book about to be released (next week) which I helped co-author, I have an urgent and obvious need to make good on this promise before I start to blog on other stuff.
BTS10LoBI is a really welcome addition to the corpus of BizTalk Server books and fills a conspicuous gap in the market. BizTalk Server offers a wide-ranging library of adapters. The ’native’ (built-in) adapters understandably get a lot of attention, as do the WCF adapters, but other adapters, such as the LoB adapters and HIS adapters, are often overlooked. I came to the book with the mistaken assumption that its chief focus was on the BizTalk Adapter Pack. This is a pack of adapters built with the WCF-based LoB SDK. In fact, the book follows a much broader path. It is a book about LoB integration in a general sense, and not about one specific suite of adapters. Indeed, it is not simply about adapters. It focuses on integration with various LoB systems, and explains how adapters and other tools are used to achieve this.
This makes for a more interesting read. For example, one, possibly unintended, consequence (given that it represents collaboration between five different authors) is that it illustrates very effectively the spectrum of approaches and techniques that end up being employed in real-world integration. In some cases developers use adapters that offer focused support for metadata harvesting and other features, exploited through tools such as the ’Consume Adapter Service’ UI. In other cases, they use native adapters with hand-crafted schemas, or they create fa%u00e7ade services. The book covers additional scenarios where third-party LoB tools and cloud services (specifically SalesForce) are used in conjunction with BizTalk Server. Coupled with lots of practical examples, the book serves to provide insight into the ’feel’ of real-world integration which is so often a messy and multi-faceted experience.
The book does not cover the BizTalk Adapter Pack comprehensively. There is no chapter on the Oracle adapters (not a significant issue because they are very similar to the SQL Server adapter) or the Siebel adapter. On the other hand, it provides two chapters on the SAP adapter looking at both IDOC and RFC/BAPI approaches. I particularly welcome the inclusion of chapters on integration with both Dynamics CRM 2011 and Dynamics AX 2009. I learned a lot about Dynamics CRM which I haven’t had occasion personally to integrate with in its latest version. The chapter on SalesForce mentions, but does not describe in any detail, the TwoConnect SalesForce adapter which we have used very effectively on previous projects. Rather, it concentrates on direct HTTP/SOAP interaction with SalesForce.com and, very usefully, advocates the use of Azure AppFabric for secure exchange of data across the internet.
The book provides two chapters on integration with SharePoint 2010. The first explores the use of the native adapter to communicate with form and document libraries, and provides illustrated examples of working with InfoPath forms. It would have been reasonable to stop there, but instead, the second chapter goes on to describe how to integrate more fulsomely with SharePoint via its web service interface, and specifically how to interact with SharePoint lists.
Increasingly, the BizTalk community is waking up to the implications of Windows Azure and AppFabric. This is an important step for developers to take. Future versions of BizTalk Server will essentially join and extend the on-premise AppFabric world. As Microsoft progressively melds their on/off premise worlds, BizTalk developers will increasingly have to grapple with integration of cloud based services, and integration of on-premise services via the cloud. The book is careful to address this emerging field through the inclusion of a chapter on integration via the Azure AppFabric service bus. As I mentioned above, this is applied specifically to SalesForce integration in a later chapter. The AppFabric Service Bus is a rapidly-evolving part of the Azure platform, and is set to introduce a raft on new features in the coming months which will greatly extend the possibilities. Eventually we will see cloud-based integration services appear in this space. So, the inclusion of this chapter points out the direction of major future evolution of Microsoft’s capabilities and offerings in the integration space.
The book is not shy about providing guidance on practical problems and potential areas of confusion that developers may encounter. The content is clearly based on real-world experience and benefits from ’war stories’. The value of such content cannot be underestimated, and can save developers hours of pain and frustration when tackling new problems. All in all, I thoroughly welcome this book. My thanks to the authors, Kent Waere, Richard Seroter, Sergei Moukhnitski, Thiago Almeida and Carl Darski.
by community-syndication | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
For the BizTalk Portuguese Community, I will present a session about maps: “BizTalk Mapper: How maps work in BizTalk Server 2010“ in the next NetPonto community event that will occur on September 24 in Lisbon. No dia 24 de Setembro (pr%u00f3ximo S%u00e1bado) a Comunidade NetPonto comemora o seu segundo anivers%u00e1rio, e convida todos os seus […]
Blog Post by: Sandro Pereira
by community-syndication | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Last week during the BUILD conference a developer preview of Both Windows 8 and Windows Server 8 was released. Once released I’ve decided to give it a go and install and perform a basic configuration (without BAM / EDI) of… Read more ›
Blog Post by: Ren%u00e9 Brauwers
by Rene Brauwers | Sep 19, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Last week during the BUILD conference a developer preview of Both Windows 8 and Windows Server 8 was released. Once released I’ve decided to give it a go and install and perform a basic configuration (without BAM / EDI) of BizTalk Server 2010 on Windows 8 (note: not Windows Server 8).
Below a list of issues I encountered and how to resolve these issues.
Prerequisites
Obtain the Windows 8 developer preview build
Obtain Microsoft BizTalk Server 2010
Ensure that you have a dedicated server available with SQL Server 2008R2.
Hook up your Windows 8 to machine to your Active Directory (this way you can use your AD BizTalk service accounts etc.)
Environment
Encountered Issues while installing
Well to be perfectly honest the only issue I encountered during installation of BizTalk Server 2010 was the fact that I got about 10+ windows update screens which all prompted me to go and install the .Net Framework 3.5.1 Features; well I closed all the windows except for one and let windows update continue.
Note: For the BizTalk pre-requisites I simple pointed to the cab file , which I already downloaded previously.
Encountered Issues while configuring
Configuring BizTalk Server 2010 was a bit more of a challenge although everything up to ‘Configuring the BizTalk Server Runtime’ went off without any problems.
However once it was time to configure the runtime it gave me a an exception informing me that the server could not communicate with the SSO and that it might have to do with the Distributed Transaction Coordinator; Well this was not the issue, as I had configured it on both servers (on the SQL Server box and on the BizTalk Box).
So next stop was looking into the windows services and then especially the Enterprise Single Sign On Service; well the service was up and running. So I stopped and started it and tried to configure the BizTalk Server Runtime once again; however I still got the same error.
Next stop going back to the windows services and this time
I tried an elevated account on the Enterprise Single Sign On Service; but hey you guessed it; still got the same error.
So; not giving up I went back to the Enterprise Single Sign On service and put everything back to it’s original state (that is use the dedicated sso service account). Well once I tried to start the service again it suddenly gave me an error indicating that there were some RPC issues… Hmmm, so I went and had a look at that particular service and noticed that it was up and running. Restarting it did not throw any other exceptions and that’s when I noticed that the service ‘RpcLocator Service’ was not running. Bingo! Enabling this service resolved the SSO issue and I was able to further configure BizTalk Server 2010.
Conclusion
BizTalk 2010 can be installed and configured on the Windows 8 Developer Preview Release; however before installing and configuring ensure that
You’ve configured the Distributed Transaction Coordinator on both the SQL Server Box as well as the Windows 8 Box
Ensure that the ‘RpcLocator Service’ is up and running.
Please note: So far I’ve only installed and configured BizTalk 2010 on Windows 8. I’ve not actually played around with sample applications etc.
Screenshots:
BizTalk Administrator ‘Pinned’ to Metro
BizTalk Server Configuration
BizTalk Administrator Console
Cheers
René
by community-syndication | Sep 18, 2011 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
I’m sitting is a nice new hotel in Redmond – the Hotel Sierra is well worth considering if you are staying in the area. I’m sleep-deprived and jet-lagged, and it’s raining hard outside, but hey, I just got to play with one of the Samsung tablets they handed out at Build, and was not disappointed. Microsoft is doing something trully remarkable with Win8 Metro.
On the other hand, I am deeply disappointed with the UK flag carrier, British Airways. Indeed, I’ve lost patience with them big-time. So forgive me for getting this off my chest. I am very much in the mood to do as much reputational damage to them as I can.
When I checked in on-line, they had booked me into one seat but I could see another with more legroom (a front row). Because of repeated experience over the last few years with defective headsets (I always carry my own earphones these days after one flight here we went through three different headsets before finding one in which one of the earphones actually worked) and bad headset connections (having to constantly twiddle the jack to try to hear anything), I spent a little while consciously debating with myself the intangible risks of changing my seat – i.e., I could easily be swapping a ’working’ seat for a broken ’one’. Of course, there was no way to know, so I opted for the seat with more legroom.
MISTAKE! Forget about dodgy headsets. Nothing worked. Not even the reading light! Certainly not the inflight entertainment. They failed to show me the safety video (the steward did panic a little when he realised they had failed to comply with their legal obligations). So I sat for 9.5 hours in a grubby, worn-out cabin with nothing!
To be fair, they did offer to try to find me another seat (the plane was very full), but I opted for the legroom because I wanted to try to get some sleep. So I could probably have got in-flight entertainment. The point is, though, that this is now more than just an unfortunate couple of co-incidences over the last two or three years. I am reasonably fair-minded and understand that sometimes, with the best will in the world, things just go wrong. In any case, I was bought up to put-up or shut-up (as my mother would say – it’s part of the culture). However, I am forced to conclude that this is now a repeated trend that I experience regularly to the point where I am consciously suspicious of the seats they give me, and clearly with good reason. BA simply fails to maintain its cabins to anything like a reasonable or acceptable standard (I must trust they do a better job in maintaining the engines). I used to feel some patriotic pride in BA. Not now. It’s so sad to see the British flag carrier consistently deliver such an embarrasingly poor and second-rate service. I will be asking SolidSoft in future to, where possible, book me onto a different carrier and will do what I can to convince the company to use other carriers by default.
Personally, I think the UK government should give flag carrier status to someone else (Virgin, I guess).