Petals ESB

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Petals ESB
Developer(s)Linagora
Stable release
5.2.0 / October 1, 2018 (2018-10-01)
Written inJava
Operating systemCross-platform
Typeenterprise service bus
LicenseLGPL 2.0
Websitehttp://petals.ow2.org

Petals ESB is an open-source ESB developed by Linagora. It is a tool for implementing a service-oriented architecture (SOA). It is standard, modular, and physically distributed, to adapt to large-scale infrastructures.

Petals ESB is based on JBI (JSR 208) industry specification. It was the first ESB certified by Sun Microsystems under the JSR 208 TCK.[1] Based on standards, it also supports SOA standards such as BPMN and Enterprise Integration Patterns capabilities.

Fractal deployment framework,[2] JBI pluggable components, and open source licensing make it modular and customizable.

The originality of Petals is to implement a highly distributed topology.[3] The first stable version of Petals ESB, called PEtALS, was released on September 21, 2006.[4]

Features[edit]

PEtALS main technical features :

  • Scalable for large architectures, due to distributed topology
  • JBI certified by Sun Microsystems
  • Development tools: JBI component framework, Eclipse configuration plugin,
  • Operating tools: Petals CLI, Petals Cockpit
  • Quality of service: High availability (load balancing), Persistence, Security,
  • Adaptable: Fractal modular framework, JBI plugins
  • Connectors: SOAP (Web services), Rest, Local File, FTP/SFTP, HTTP, Quartz, JMS, SMTP/POP/IMAP, JDBC/SQL, EJB. Compatible with JBI plugins.
  • Processing components : BPMN (Flowable), EIP (Apache Camel), XSLT, XSD validation, POJO/JSR181, RMI.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "(2008), Christophe Hamerling, PEtALS Certified JSR-208 by SUN Microsystem". Archived from the original on 2018-10-24. Retrieved 2008-09-10.
  2. ^ "Fractal Deployment Framework, open source extensible component-based framework to deploy distributed and heterogeneous software systems". Archived from the original on 2008-12-06. Retrieved 2008-09-10.
  3. ^ (2008) Adrien Louis, ESB Topology alternatives, InfoQ
  4. ^ (2006) Adrien Louis, PEtALS 1.0 community announcement, OW2 mailing list archive[permanent dead link]

External links[edit]