Posted Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005 by joe

elemenope release 4.2rc2


createTank elemenope 4.2rc2 is now available.
elemenopeâ„¢ is an Enterprise Application Integration [EAI], Service Oriented Architecture [SOA], and general messaging framework.

4.2rc2 includes the following new features:

  • Synchronous JMS Connector family implementation.
    1. Allows one to configure synchronous communication via JMS queues.
    2. Offers generic persistent messaging in place of other synchronous communications.
  • Web application download.
    1. We’ve included a webapp download for easy deployment of elemenope on your application server.

This is a release candidate issuance, and as such should not be considered stable. Some portions of the code within this release have not been completely tested.

Benefits and features provided by elemenopeâ„¢ framework:

  • Transport abstraction – provides nearly unlimited scalability, as components may be connected in unexpected ways at a later date with no changes to code.
  • Functional abstraction
    • Provides uniformity of functional code or business logic across the application or integration effort.
    • Provides for simplicity of interaction with subject matter experts [SME].
    • Provides ability to dynamically change the combinations of functional code units exposed as services under different transport protocols.
  • Fault Tolerant/Fault Resilient messaging – Dispatcher Failover [DFO] provides ability to transparently failover from one transport protocol to another upon failure with no changes to the functional code or business logic.

Please check the main project site [elemenope.org] and/or the developer’s page for more details.



Comments are closed.

latest news

Web Service Description for REST

Much has been written concerning the potential need for a description language for REST based web services.

No to SQL/RDBMS
JavaFX, Android, and J2ME
IBM says Vista the best recruiter for Linux
FOSS full stack framework comparison
What is Oracle to do with MySQL?
Intro to Terracotta
Memory Based Architecture and Clouds

Good discussion on the effect of Clouds and Memory based architecture on data access.

97 Things Every Software Architect Should Know

New from O'Reilly.

Apple, Google, and more over Microsoft