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Description
Monitoring workflow today can involve orchestrating massive systems. Business Process Management (BPM) helps developers design, code, run, administer, and monitor enterprise business processes. This guide explains BPM concepts, architecture and specifications, and then teaches you how to develop process-oriented applications using free tools.
Full Description
Table of Contents
  1. Concepts

    1. Chapter One Introduction to Business Process Modeling

      1. The Benefits of BPM
      2. BPM Acid Test: The Process-Oriented Application
      3. The Morass of BPM
      4. Workflow
      5. Roadmap
      6. Summary
      7. References
    2. Chapter Two Prescription for a Good BPM Architecture

      1. Designing a Solution
      2. Components of the Design
      3. Standards
      4. Summary
      5. Reference
    3. Chapter Three The Scenic Tour of Process Theory

      1. Family Tree
      2. The Pi-Calculus
      3. Petri Nets
      4. State Machines and Activity Diagrams
      5. Summary
      6. References
    4. Chapter Four Process Design Patterns

      1. Design Patterns and the GoF
      2. Process Patterns and the P4
      3. Yet Another Workflow Language (YAWL)
      4. Additional Patterns
      5. Process Coding Standards
      6. Summary
      7. References
  2. Standards

    1. Chapter Five Business Process Execution Language (BPEL)

      1. Anatomy of a Process
      2. BPEL Example
      3. BPEL in a Nutshell
      4. BPELJ
      5. BPEL and Patterns
      6. Summary
      7. References
    2. Chapter Six BPMI Standards: BPMN and BPML

      1. BPMN
      2. BPML
      3. Summary
      4. Reference
    3. Chapter Seven The Workflow Management Coalition (WfMC)

      1. The Reference Model
      2. XPDL
      3. WAPI
      4. WfXML
      5. Summary
      6. References
    4. Chapter Eight World Wide Web Consortium (W3C): Choreography

      1. About the W3C
      2. Choreography and Orchestration
      3. WS-CDL
      4. WSCI
      5. WSCL
      6. Summary
      7. References
    5. Chapter Nine Other BPM Models

      1. OMG: Model-Driven BPM
      2. ebXML BPSS: Collaboration
      3. Microsoft XLANG: BPEL Forerunner
      4. IBM WSFL: BPEL Forerunner
      5. BPEL, XLANG, and WSFL
      6. Summary
      7. References
  3. Examples

    1. Chapter Ten Example: Human Workflow in Insurance Claims Processing

      1. Oracle BPEL Process Manager
      2. Setting Up the Environment
      3. Developing the Example
      4. Testing the Example
      5. Summary
      6. References
    2. Chapter Eleven Example: Enterprise Message Broker

      1. What Is a Message Broker?
      2. Example: Employee Benefits Message Broker
      3. Summary
  1. Key BPM Acronymns

  2. Colophon

View Full Table of Contents
Product Details
Title:
Essential Business Process Modeling
By:
Michael Havey
Publisher:
O'Reilly Media
Formats:
  • Print
  • Ebook
  • Safari Books Online
Print Release:
August 2005
Ebook Release:
February 2009
Pages:
352
Print ISBN:
978-0-596-00843-7
| ISBN 10:
0-596-00843-0
Ebook ISBN:
978-0-596-15930-6
| ISBN 10:
0-596-15930-7
Customer Reviews
About the Author
  1. Michael Havey

    Michael Harvey is an architect of several major BPM applications and author of magazine articles on BPM and process-oriented applications. In addition to being interested in the foundational concepts of BPM, Michael has spent much of his career working for companies that sell BPM product solutions (BEA with Weblogic Integration and IBM with Websphere Business Integration).

    View Michael Havey's full profile page.

Colophon

Our look is the result of reader comments, our own experimentation, and feedback from distribution channels. Distinctive covers complement our distinctive approach to technical topics, breathing personality and life into potentially dry subjects.

Mary Anne Weeks Mayo was the production editor and Nancy Kotary was the copyeditor for Essential Business Process Modeling. Colleen Gorman and Claire Cloutier provided quality control. Lucie Haskins wrote the index.

Michele Wetherbee is the creative director for the Theory in Practice book series. MendeDesign designed the cover and created the cover artwork of this book. Karen Montgomery produced the cover layout in Adobe InDesign CS using Akzidenz Grotesk and Orator fonts.

Marcia Friedman designed the interior layout. Melanie Wang designed the template; Phyllis McKee adapted the template. The book was converted by Keith Fahlgren to FrameMaker 5.5.6 with a format conversion tool created by Erik Ray, Jason McIntosh, Neil Walls, and Mike Sierra that uses Perl and XML technologies. The text font is Adobe's Meridien; the heading font is ITC Bailey. The illustrations that appear in the book were produced by Robert Romano, Jessamyn Read, and Lesley Borash using Macromedia FreeHand MX and Adobe Photoshop CS.

  • Book cover of Essential Business Process Modeling