Technical Articles
These technical articles were originally published in the Architects Corner section of our customer magazine, the LANSA Review. The articles are written by key LANSA staff and cover development strategies and new product trends.
Combine .NET and IBM i Applications
What is iFusion.net?
The iFusion.net software development platform combines IBM i and Microsoft
Windows technologies to form a unified architecture that enables organizations
to fuse their IBM i systems with Microsoft solutions like Office, SharePoint and
SQL Server, or with applications built with the .NET framework. Achieving fusion
means going beyond the limits of previous interoperability solutions – like
calling programs, replicating databases or transferring files – to create true
composite applications that deliver real-time enterprise data and functionality
to people as they need it.
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Leveraging IBM i resources with LANSA Open for .NET
Once upon a time there was the IBM AS/400 and there was
Microsoft Windows – two worlds and worlds apart. After having the two platforms
running side-by-side for over two decades, many IT managers are still challenged
managing the platform divide. What we need is an effective mechanism for mixed
development environments to share resources. Companies that need to develop with
.NET tools and incorporate resources from the IBM i can do so with LANSA Open
for .NET.
Read the full article
Leveraging Microsoft .NET technologies with LANSA
LANSA has long used Microsoft's core technologies to drive
advances in its application development and integration tools, so an obvious
question to ask is, "What is LANSA doing about leveraging .NET?" LANSA is
advancing its tools along the .NET 'evolutionary tree' on several fronts.
Read the full article
Business Integration and SOA
Transaction Document Processing with LANSA Composer Version 3.0
LANSA Composer's transport, transformation and process orchestration features provide a very flexible and code-free framework that can be used to solve almost any type of Business Process Integration (BPI) challenge. LANSA Composer Version 3 further simplifies the task of building processes with the addition of ready-made transaction document processes. Read the full article
LANSA Composer: Code-free Business Process Integration
LANSA Composer brings the power of BPI technology to
enterprises that want to automate and integrate business processes with external
trading partners or between internal applications. LANSA Composer is a highly
visual environment for designers and business analysts rather than developers,
which provides a simple way for non-programmers to make use of core LANSA
Integrator services.
Read the full article
Implementing SOAP Web Services with LANSA Integrator
This is a brief outline of how to implement Web services using
LANSA Integrator. Web services are just one of the many "Java services" you can
rapidly integrate into your System i, Windows or UNIX business applications with
LANSA Integrator.
Read the full article
LANSA Integrator Remote Function Invocation
LANSA Integrator Remote Function Invocation (RFI) is
middleware that makes remote integration as easy as coding with local objects.
The Java client developer creates and works with local objects and then sends
these objects to the remote LANSA Java Service Manager (JSM) server, the remote
service uses a local copy of these objects to supply data to the host program.
The host program can also create new objects and return a copy to the Java
client program for local processing.
Read the full article
The Challenge of Interconnecting Business Networks
A2A, B2B, Web Services, Dynamic Data Interchange and Supplier
Enablement are the latest industry buzzwords. Although they sound dissimilar,
they are all really terms for dynamic transaction exchange, between trading
partners, using Internet technologies such as XML and HTTP.
Read the full article
Extending User Interfaces with LANSA Integrator
In this second article on LANSA's Java Services Framework, we
discuss three different ways of using LANSA Integrator to expand the user
interface possibilities of your applications. Firstly, we examine the new ‘Order
Upload' feature in Commerce Edition Version 3 to show how an existing Web
application user interface can be enhanced with LANSA Integrator.
Read the full article
Application Modernization
Rapid Windows and Web Development with Visual LANSA Framework
The Visual LANSA Framework is a design framework that empowers
your business focused developers to create highly graphical Windows and Web
applications. The learning curve is short, productivity is high and the
applications are world class. Until now, many developers have found Windows
development complex and hard to deploy. Many of you have told us that you find
it difficult to migrate your existing 5250 applications to Windows or the Web
successfully.
Read the full article
Stepping up to LANSA Version 11 Modernize at your own pace
We have laid out five simple steps that chart a course for a
staged and controlled adoption of LANSA Version 11. Each step details the
benefits you will gain, things you need to know and other supporting materials
to ensure you get the most out of Version 11. Obviously, the first step is to
install LANSA Version 11, but you do not have to complete all the steps or use
all the new features and techniques.
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LANSA Repository Based Architecture
Protect your data once and for all
Managing data is easier when the data definitions and
business rules are centrally defined outside the program code. If any of the
definitions or rules need to be changed, you only have to make that change
in one place! LANSA provides tools, collectively called the LANSA
Repository, that describe, store and deploy data definitions and their
related business rules.
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LANSA and Current Modeler Strategies
Emerging trends are creating a dramatic increase in the use of
modeling tools. This contrasts with the impression of modelers many experienced
IT professionals gained from over-ambitious Enterprise Modeling projects during
the era of Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE) in late '80s. Then,
modeling often took a long time and produced little or no Return On Investment.
Today's modeling approach is different, producing much better returns.
Read the full article