IBM WebSphere DataPower SOA Appliances Part I: Overview and Getting Started
An IBM Redpaper publication
Note: This is publication is now archived. For reference only.
IBM® WebSphere® DataPower® SOA Appliances represent an important element in the holistic approach of IBM to service-oriented architecture (SOA). IBM SOA appliances are purpose-built, easy-to-deploy network devices that simplify, secure, and accelerate your XML and Web services deployments while extending your SOA infrastructure. These appliances offer an innovative, pragmatic approach to harness the power of SOA. By using them, you can simultaneously use the value of your existing application, security, and networking infrastructure investments.
This series of IBM Redbooks publications is written for architects and administrators who need to understand the implemented architecture in WebSphere DataPower appliances to successfully deploy it as a secure and efficient enterprise service bus (ESB) product. These papers give a broad understanding of the new architecture and traditional deployment scenarios. They cover details about the implementation to help you identify the circumstances under which you should deploy DataPower appliances. They also provide a sample implementation and architectural best practices for an SOA message-oriented architecture in an existing production ESB environment.
Part 1 of the series, this part, provides a general overview of DataPower SOA appliances and a primer to using the appliances in common scenarios. The entire IBM WebSphere DataPower SOA Appliances series includes the following papers:
Chapter 1. Introduction to DataPower SOA appliances
Chapter 2. Getting started
Chapter 3. Enabling existing applications
Chapter 4. Securing communication channels with SSL
Chapter 5. Logging capabilities in the DataPower appliance
Chapter 6. XSLT programming
Chapter 7. Web 2.0 support
Appendix A. XSL programming issues
Appendix B. Additional material