Chapter 1. Introducing SOA governance
Figure 1.1. The various views of SOA combine to provide a product to a customer.
Figure 1.2. Failed projects in 1995, 2004, 2006, and 2009
Figure 1.3. A basic implementation showing how you can make sure all the calls to the publicly provided service are done over a secure channel
Figure 1.4. The information a SOA governance solution should provide to the various actors
Figure 1.5. In this SOA repository you can register services, policies, and other structured and unstructured content.
Figure 1.6. An example of reactive monitoring. With this information the IT department or business can determine whether the service complies with the policies set out for it.
Figure 1.7. Open source software in its early days focused on offering technical functionality and low-level services. In recent years open source software has been offering products that also offer lots of business and end-user functionality.
Chapter 2. Setting up the SOA governance environment
Figure 2.1. This high-level overview of the complete SOA governance environment shows the services providing information to the various tools in this environment.
Figure 2.2. This is the basic architecture for the example services in this book. It’s a basic three-layered architecture.
Figure 2.3. The New Repository Location button, which can be used to add a new SVN repository location
Figure 2.4. The services to check out for the examples in chapter 2