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Implementing Oracle Integration Cloud Service

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786460721
Length 506 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Robert van Molken Robert van Molken
Author Profile Icon Robert van Molken
Robert van Molken
Philip Wilkins Philip Wilkins
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Philip Wilkins
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing the Concepts and Terminology FREE CHAPTER 2. Integrating Our First Two Applications 3. Distribute Messages Using the Pub-Sub Model 4. Integrations between SaaS Applications 5. Going Social with Twitter and Google 6. Creating Complex Transformations 7. Routing and Filtering 8. Publish and Subscribe with External Applications 9. Managed File Transfer with Scheduling 10. Advanced Orchestration with Branching and Asynchronous Flows 11. Calling an On-Premises API 12. Are My Integrations Running Fine, and What If They Are Not? 13. Where Can I Go from Here?

When can an agent help?

There are a few reasons why we may need an agent, covering one or more factors, ranging from technical, security, commercial and legal compliance perspectives, and we will look at these in turn.

From a technical perspective, an agent may be needed to come into play for several reasons. Some connection techniques and technologies are sensitive (relatively speaking) to the time it can take for a call to be made and responded to. This call and response time challenge, or latency, comes from the fact that, regardless of how good the connections are, data takes time to travel, even over fiber optics. For example, for light to travel from London to Sydney takes 5ms. In reality, we do not have fiber from every location directly to every other location by the shortest path. Even the best parts of the Internet backbone are convoluted and involve moving between servers and network infrastructure as the data works its way across the world, and then will need to go through...

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