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Apache Camel is an open source framework for message-oriented middleware with a rule-based routing and mediation engine that provides a Java object-based implementation of the Enterprise Integration Patterns using an application programming interface (or declarative Java domain-specific language) to configure routing and mediation rules.
Calcite: dynamic data management framework; Camel: declarative routing and mediation rules engine which implements the Enterprise Integration Patterns using a Java-based domain specific language; CarbonData: an indexed columnar data format for fast analytics on big data platform, e.g., Apache Hadoop, Apache Spark, etc
The pattern language presented in the book consists of 65 patterns structured into 9 categories, which largely follow the flow of a message from one system to the next through channels, routing, and transformations. The book includes an icon-based pattern language, sometimes nicknamed "GregorGrams" after one of the authors.
Java network application framework. MINA can be used to create scalable, high performance network applications. Apache OODT: Data management system framework Apache Oozie: Server-based workflow scheduling system to manage Hadoop jobs. Apache OpenNLP: Java machine learning toolkit for natural language processing (NLP). Apache PDFBox
Apache Camel: Apache Software Foundation: 2.23.3 2018-11-29 Free/Commercial support available Yes Apache Software License: Apache Kafka: Apache Software Foundation: 0.10.20 2017-02 Free / Commercial support available Yes Apache Software License: Apache ServiceMix Apache Software Foundation: 7.0 2017-01 Free / Commercial support available Yes
CAMEL Phase 1 defined only very basic call control services, but introduced the concept of a CAMEL Basic call state model (BCSM) to the Intelligent Network (IN). Phase 1 gave the gsmSCF the ability to bar calls (release the call prior to connection), allow a call to continue unchanged, or to modify a limited number of call parameters before allowing it to continue.
The choice of a variable name should be mnemonic — that is, designed to indicate to the casual observer the intent of its use. One-character variable names should be avoided except for temporary "throwaway" variables. Common names for temporary variables are i, j, k, m, and n for integers; c, d, and e for characters. int i;
Data-source agnostic No Built-in Schema comparison tool and UDF editor ACL-based, replaceable Implementation-specific; helper functions and theme templates available APC, Memcache Yes Interactive code generator Yes Dedicated mobile and tablet layouts, landscape-portrait transformation Kajona PHP >= 7 [87] Any Yes Push Yes Yes