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Oracle SOA and BPM
A track record of serving Government, Healthcare, Utilities mid to large sized businesses with Enterprise Application Integration This includes integration of legacy application with Oracle 11i/ R12; Salesforce.com; Workday; B2B EDI X12 solutions.

- SOA Infrastructure: The common runtime environment for executing composites and in which the service engines plugin.
- Service Engines:
- BPEL: The service engine in charge of orchestration.
- Mediator: The service engine that provides filtering, routing, and transformation capabilities.
- Business Rules: An inference-based rules engine responsible for providing decision services.
- Human Workflow: A workflow engine that provides human workflow services.
- Metadata Store (MDS): A central metadata repository that holds all runtime artifacts of all deployed applications and composites, as well as generic artifacts like security and management policies.
- Oracle Service Bus (OSB): A high-performance service bus that provides service virtualization, protocol translation, request routing, traffic shaping, and so on.
- Enterprise Manager: A web-based console that provides a single, integrated management console for all Fusion Middleware components.
- Web Service Manager: An integrated policy management and enforcement service, which is part of the Oracle Portability Layer on which the SOA Infrastructure runs.
- B2B: A multi-protocol engine that provides business-to-business communication services over a variety of protocols and formats, such as EDI, RosettaNet, ebXML, HL7, and so on.
- Adapter Framework: A Java Component Architecture (JCA)-based adapter framework that provides standards-based access to non‑service‑oriented enterprise information systems. Database adapter, FTP adapter, JMS adapter, and eBusiness Suite adapter are some examples of adapters leveraging the adapter framework.
- JDeveloper and the composite editor provide a single, integrated development environment.
- Oracle Business Activity Monitoring (BAM) is an activity monitoring tool that, unlike Enterprise Manager, is geared towards business users. It uses push techniques to offer real-time business dashboards, leveraging data captured as part of a composite's execution flow.
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