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IBM WebSphere DataPower SOA Appliances is a family of pre-built, pre-configured rack-mountable network devices (XML appliances) designed to accelerate XML and Web Services deployments while extending SOA infrastructure. Originally these devices were created by DataPower Technology Inc., which was acquired by IBM in October 2005. [1]
IBM API Connect enables users to create, assemble, manage, secure and socialize web application programming interfaces (APIs). It runs as a Virtual appliance on a Virtual machine and uses the IBM WebSphere DataPower SOA Appliances as gateways. It provides a developer portal for application developers and to view published APIs.
An XML appliance is a special-purpose network device used to secure, manage and mediate XML traffic. They are most popularly implemented in service-oriented architectures (SOA) to control XML-based web services traffic, and increasingly in cloud-oriented computing to help enterprises integrate on premises applications with off-premises cloud-hosted applications.
2.3.0 2010-05 Free Community Edition, and Enterprise licenses No Proprietary: Fuse – Enterprise Camel Red Hat: 7.0 2018 Yes based on Apache Software License: IBM Integration Bus (formerly WebSphere Message Broker) IBM: 10.0 2015-03 [2] Varies between approximately 100 and 850 per Value Unit [3] No Proprietary: Enterprise Service Bus ...
IBM WebSphere refers to a brand of proprietary computer software products in the genre of enterprise software known as "application and integration middleware". These software products are used by end-users to create and integrate applications with other applications.
Commercial software products (including tools and platforms) that support service-oriented architecture (SOA). Pages in category "Service-oriented architecture-related products" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total.
IBM App Connect message flows can be used in a service-oriented architecture, and if properly designed by Middleware Analysts, integrated into event-driven SOA schemas, sometimes referred to as SOA 2.0 and/or deployed as micro-services in container native deployments. Businesses rely on the processing of events, which might be part of a ...
IBM MQ is a family of message-oriented middleware products that IBM launched in December 1993. It was originally called MQSeries, and was renamed WebSphere MQ in 2002 to join the suite of WebSphere products.