Its would be great help if you could explain it a bit more. I am now planning to use JBossMQ as my MOM. I do need to write gateways to communicate between the ESBs, don't I ? If yes I presume these have to be intelligent to know which other services are on the same ESB as them.
Regards, Ashish James.Strachan wrote: > > On 3/2/07, Ashish Rajhansha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> >> My company has several heterogeneous applications deployed at different >> sites around the globe and we are aiming at integrating these using ESB. >> The >> architecture will involve ESBs at each site running on clustered >> Application >> Servers with proper MOM implementation. The sites will need to >> communicate >> between the ESBs in order to achieve complete integration(Current >> proposal >> is to use custom gateways - any other suggestions are more than welcome). >> The architecture is aims at supporting any future applications added as >> services. The new services will be ESB aware and hence will be just plug >> into the ESBs. Please find the architecture as attachment. >> >> >> Question - What is the most efficient way to integrate JBossESBs > > For questions on JBoss, you'd best try the JBoss site :) > > >> on >> different sites (only communication available is TCP/IP) so that >> applications plugged into any of them can provide services to any other >> application anywhere on the infrastructure preferably without exposing >> the >> JNDI globally. > > Wherever possible I'd recommend some MOM as the messaging backbone on > which to deploy ESBs and other services. Most MOMs (such as Apache > ActiveMQ) communicate over TCP. > > If some other TCP based protocol is required (whether HTTP, FTP, XMPP > or some other custom protocol) they can be plugged into the ESBs too. > > -- > > James > ------- > http://radio.weblogs.com/0112098/ > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/ServiceMixESB-clusters-over-TCP-IP-tf3332637s12049.html#a9310044 Sent from the ServiceMix - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
