Slow start to the cross country season

October 7th, 2006

The Hampshire Cross Country season kicked off today at a sunny Farley Mount. As is traditional, my legs were still pretty knackered from last weekend’s exertions. I decided to try a new tactic: rather than starting near the front and hanging on for dear life, I started further back, intending to pick up the pace on each of the three laps.

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Eight whole years

October 6th, 2006

Not to be outdone by Andy and Richard, today is the eigth anniversary of my joining IBM. Eight whole years… that’s longer than I was at secondary school for! Here goes with a little jaunt down memory lane…

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Messaging engine file store

October 6th, 2006

Here’s my first post of a series looking at some of the new functionality in WebSphere Application Server Version 6.1 that has come out of the Hursley Development Lab, in particular in the area of the service integration bus.

One of the most of obvious change is the addition of a new persistence mechanism: the file store. In Version 6.0, the messaging engine data store used JDBC to store persistent messages and transactional data (amongst other things) in to a database. There were a couple of issues with this. Firstly, even for non-transactional, non-persistent messaging, it meant configuring a database and, secondly, the out-of-the-box performance with the default Cloudscape database was not great.

In Version 6.1, the default is to use a proprietary flat file in much the same way as WebSphere MQ. Although almost three times faster than using Cloudscape, the best performance can still be obtained by offloading processing to a remote DB2 instance. It may also be preferable to still use a database for other reasons such as high availability and backup and recovery.

Wilde night out at the Nuffield

October 6th, 2006

Went to the preview night of Oscar Wilde’s Salome at the Nuffield Theatre yesterday. It’s 100 years since this play, based on story of King Herod’s step daughter and John the Baptist, was first performed in Britain. Although originally written in French, the play was intended to debue in London but was banned due to its portrayal of biblical characters. According to the programme, although performed widely abroad, it is 20 years since it was last seen in Britain.

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WebSphere Application Server Version 6.1

October 5th, 2006

Having posted on WebSphere Service Registry and Repository yesterday, I thought it was a little unfair that, despite being out for a while now, I haven’t mentioned Version 6.1 of WebSphere Application Server. Robby Peterson has a developerWorks article providing an overview of the new features so I shan’t list them all here. I will, however, pick out a few that I think are important/interesting and then blog again on some of the new functionality brought to you by my development colleagues in Hursley.

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IBM supports products in VMware

October 5th, 2006

I use VMware Workstation extensively as I typically need access to numerous different incompatible versions of our products (some of which I don’t want to pollute my host with) and across multiple operating systems. I have, however, come across a couple of customers this year looking to deploy to VMware ESX, generally to reduce hardware and administration overheads. It’s therefore good to see that IBM will now support any of the software group products in this environment.

Introducing WebSphere Service Registry and Repository

October 4th, 2006

I have spent the past few weeks educating myself on WebSphere Service Registry and Repository which became generally available last Friday. This is one of the new products forming part of the today’s SOA launch. The launch has focused on how the product can be used to enforce the governance of services (through the use of a state machine to define the service lifecycle) but, given my focus on all things ESB, my main interest is in the use of the WebSphere Service Registry and Repository to support dynamic allocation of service endpoints.

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IBM Client Application Tool for JMS

October 4th, 2006

For a while now, Martin Smithson’s JMS client application has been an essential part of my WebSphere ESB and service integration bus toolbox. I’m therefore glad to see that it’s now available to all on alphaWorks. It runs inside a J2EE client container and provides a Swing or SWT interface to browse JNDI, locate JMS resources, and then send, receive or browse messages. Simple but effective. Best of all, in the past Martin has been very responsive to making enhancements.