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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

Tag Archives: API

Oracle SOA Cloud

29 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by mp3monster in Oracle, Technology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"SOA CS", API, API Management, Cloud, JCS, Oracle, OUG, SOA, SOA Suite

It has been a while coming but the Oracle SOA Cloud was announced yesterday. Surprisingly, the fanfare for this key product hasn’t been held back for Oracle Open World which is only a few weeks away now. So no more building SOA on top of the Java Cloud Service. Along with SOA CS (Cloud Service) is API Management. But the release of information with yesterday’s announcement is coming quickly – for example UKOUG are running an innovation day which has had SOA Cloud session included in it.  Here are a few resources that I’ve seen so far :

  • SOA Cloud Service by Simon Haslam
  • Oracle Blog
  • Overview Video & Overview Playlist Videos
  • Data Sheet

It looks like from the details available that SOA Cloud includes the core composites, BPEL and OSB pieces, but BAM, Scheduling, B2B are yet to be released.

The Oracle Customer Advisory Board on the end of Open World should be a very interesting day.

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API catalogues

30 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by mp3monster in General, Oracle, Technology

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Tags

API, catalog, catalogue, management, Oracle

I have been looking at API catalogue tools to help facilitate reuse particularly given we use a lot of 3rd party vendors and System Integrators where having a tool that can be used to easily pickup integration points. We don’t monetise the interfaces but having a means to harvest the interfaces and generate documentation that can be published.

It is interesting that a lot of the tooling requires manual loading of the interface information and focuses on monetisation and security (Apigee, 3Scale etc). Oracle provides these capabilities through the API Management product. But the API catalogue offers the documentation, publication and critically the harvesting capabilities. The only downside is the API Catalogue can only describe SOAP and REST interfaces today.  It would be great to be able to describe other interfaces such as XML over JMS as well. The one advantage that 3Scale and Apigee have at present is the fact they are cloud solutions, Oracle’s API tools are presently not offered as discreet solutions, that said I’d not bet against Oracle launching API Management and API Catalogue as cloud services.

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Microservices in a COTs and SaaS world

15 Monday Jun 2015

Posted by mp3monster in General, Technology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

API, enterprise, ESB, Microservices, MSA, SOA, SOI

Moving my recent blogs on Microservices (Microservices & UI, Microservices) forward a bit further as a result of discussing the ins and outs of using the paradigm. Microservices as the very name suggests is the polar opposite of most COTs and particularly ERP solutions which are pretty much modularised monoliths.

It raises the question of can Microservice Architecture (MSA) deliver any benefit in this situation where buy dominates over build. I believe the answer is to an extend yes. Many consider MSA to be SOA++ although I’m not sold on this MSA does exhibit what has been referred to as Service Oriented Integration (SOI) characteristics. That is the key is not the pure service ideas that you would get if you applied the recommendations of Thomas Erl.

The difference between SOI and SOA is that SOI focuses on things like interface contracts and pulling components together (regardless of whether they embody SOA ideals). Where as SOA focuses more on the business process and capability composition. How components are pulled together is an area where MSA has a strong position.

Where SOA and to an extent SOI would need an ESB (or ESB like) platform to perform the business rules and decisioning we should be keeping the intelligence out of the ESB. You will probably still want an ESB or event registration framework so that all services can register to receive events and react as necessary – I.e. Pure pub-sub model.

One of the SOA patterns for dealing with monoliths was to promote the idea of wrapping such services with a SOA abstraction tier so that you can replace the ERP, build out custom capabilities etc.  does this hold true friends a MSA approach. I would suggest yes, but rather than the purity of SOA the abstraction should be aiming for the goals of SOI and simplification both in the ERP interaction, but also moving orchestration intelligence out of an ESB into the services.  You can seen a Genesis of this potential with Oracle’s Cloud Adapters whose base framework aims to simplify the integration.

So what might be he benefit of building the Microservice layer?  We know MSA exchanges code complexity in the service for agility in service delivery. But when there is a monolith behind the services do you gain anything?  The answer is potentially, but will be very dependent on the monolith and ESB. For example if you can actually patch your monolith quickly and easily I.e it doesn’t have  huge dependency chains and deployment capabilities such as Oracle EBZ 12.2 includes improved deployment framework that reduces or removes downtime. Like wise if the middleware is exploiting the best of SCA (as offered by Oracle SOA Suite) and or an OSGi container such as Apache Karaf then the benefits start to become more marginal. It becomes more a devil you know style of debate.

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Sending Push Notifications Without Your Own App

24 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by mp3monster in General, Java Cloud, NodeJS Cloud, Oracle, Technology

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

android, API, app, growl, ios, NMA, prowl, Prowl App, push notifications

So in my opening blog entry I talked about creating mobile push notifications. So before we start playing with cloud solutions and developing anything, the best place to start is be able to push a notification.

We’re going to do this with the use of Prowl. Prowl offers both a mobile application and a cloud service with an API. So setting up an account on Prowl you can connect you mobile Prowl App to then through another app – for example Growl (which is how I came across Prowl) which can be extended by a plugin framework to use Prowl so potentially all your desktop alert can become push notifications if you want.

So if you hadn’t already noticed Prowl is presently an IOS only solution – however there is an Android equivalent called Notify My Android (NMA). I should also be upfront the Prowl App does cost a couple of pounds or dollars (depending upon your App Store).  But this is a small price to pay to avoid having to build an app (which needs to you to be a fully paid up IOS Developer Account holder to play with push notifications as we do).

So I will concentrate primarily on working from a Windows platform to an Apple device – but I will loop back to Android at points as well.  For those who bulk at the idea of Windows and swear only to live with Mac or a proper OS as many Linux fans will say – I will point out where to get the info you need and hack your Linux flavour into appropriate shape. Our goal is to see Oracle cloud in use.

Just as an aside quick detour – Growl is a Mac based notification consolidation tool, which has a Windows implementation as well called Growl For Windows.  The idea is all your applications and system notifications go via Growl which allows your to customise the notifications and route them to lots of different channels such as to browser plugin, push notifications and so on.

So lets get the first steps called out:

  1. Create an account on Prowl or NMA
  2. Install the Prowl App on your IOS device
  3. From the Prowl web app or NMA web send a message to your device

So we have proven notifications to our device from a central device. We are going to go one step further and use a local client to prove we can safely send events to the Prowl or NMA servers. We can do this several different ways – on the Prowl site are several browser plugins that you could use or combine prowl with Growl or Growl for Windows plus the Growl notifier.

So I assume that you have installed Growl or Growl for Windows as previously mentioned. Then the Growl notifier extension needs to be installed from http://www.growlforwindows.com/gfw/help/growlnotify.aspx. With the extension installed we need to make sure Growl sends its notifications to Prowl and send the notifications from a command line.

To do this you need to create a API Key on the Prowl website. Then in settings part of the app setup the key details as shown below (note I’ve hidden my account and key):
Prowl API Config
So this links the credentials of the account. You could impose local security constraints so the local notification is only accepted by Growl with good credentials.

Then you you need to configure the notifier to use the configured key as you can see below:

In The Network part of Growl's configuration you need to establish the Key

In The Network part of Growl’s configuration you need to establish the Key

The Plus key you can see provides a dialogue like the following where you select the type of notification and then complete the necessary details i.e.  copy in the API Key from the website:

In The Network part of Growl's configuration you need to establish the Key

In The Network part of Growl’s configuration you need to establish the Key

GrowlConfig- forward NotificationsGrowl-setKey

You’ll may have noticed – that the key name carries through from the website – this is more to make it convenient to track the key rather than a necessity.

With the API Key setup we can link the notification side of things via the Notifications section.  You’ll note the App extension is selected and in the notification type I have gone to the Choices menu which provides a popup

Selecting Notification

 

Selecting the key:

Selecting the Destination KeyThe final step is to then run a command line, which would look something like:

 

Growl Notifier Script

You’ll notice the command line is very simple as we’ve not setup an security in Growl the only security is around the API Key.

Then we get the pay off of the pushed notification and you can see your notification history as well in the Prowl app – as this shows:

IMG_1944

Prowl App View

 

So the steps just performed:

  • Created the API key on the ProwlAPI site
  • made sure we’ve got Growl and Growl Notifier installed
  • Established the link from Growl to Growl Web App via the API Key
  • Configured the notifications for GrowlNotifier to go through Growl and get pushed onto the Prowl API
  • Run the command line script
  • Seen the command line message go from the desktop shell through Growl onto the Prowl API and arrive on your smart phone.

 

Summary
So we have shown we can create push notifications without the distraction of building our own app. Not very exciting as we haven’t created anything but does show the art of the possible.

Next post we’ll cut some code to perform the same process using the Prowl API directly.

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    I work for Oracle, all opinions here are my own & do not necessarily reflect the views of Oracle

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