Enterprise Service Bus (ESB): Difference between revisions
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WendyGeller (talk | contribs) (Created page with "EBS is an integration architecture defined by the concept of a communication bus that sits between applications and allows the applications to talk to each other. This architecture fosters decoupling of systems and relieves the inefficiencies and problems of point-to-point integration. To learn more about ESBs, see the full article from Wikipedia here: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_service_bus].") |
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EBS is an integration architecture defined by the concept of a communication bus that sits between applications and allows the applications to talk to each other. This architecture fosters decoupling of systems and relieves the inefficiencies and problems of point-to-point integration. To learn more about ESBs, see | EBS is an integration architecture defined by the concept of a communication bus that sits between applications and allows the applications to talk to each other. This architecture fosters decoupling of systems and relieves the inefficiencies and problems of point-to-point integration. To learn more about ESBs, see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_service_bus the full article from Wikipedia here]. |
Latest revision as of 15:27, 7 March 2023
EBS is an integration architecture defined by the concept of a communication bus that sits between applications and allows the applications to talk to each other. This architecture fosters decoupling of systems and relieves the inefficiencies and problems of point-to-point integration. To learn more about ESBs, see the full article from Wikipedia here.