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Archive for the ‘SOA’ Category



[Podcast] REST + Messaging = Enterprise Solutions

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

In this podcast we revisit the topic of REST and how to make it work for process-centric enterprise systems. After describing the basic advantages and pitfalls of plain resource thinking, we’ll look at how mapping messaging concepts to resources provides solutions for transactional, multi-resource processing.

 

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Additional References

Want more?

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Interested in SOA Training Videos?

Friday, February 8th, 2008

This past 2 weeks I was in Australia doing some in-depth training on Service Oriented Architecture, Enterprise Development, and nServiceBus implementation. We managed to record one full week of sessions and are in the process of compressing, editing, and other video whatever stuff.

I was wondering if any of my loyal subscribers would be interested in getting a set of DVDs containing Udi talking for hours and hours about how to identify services, map out cross-service business processes, zero in on business fracture points to further decompose services into business components, and decompose those into autonomous components by analyzing non-functional message properties,  summing up with using all that information for choosing cost-effective technologies for each autonomous component.

In other words, get 5 days of training you can pause, think about, and replay as many times as you need. There’s something for almost every phase of an enterprise project, from top level architecture, through coding, testing, to deployment tips and monitoring tactics, so you can pick up what you need – right when you need it.

Please bear with me as I get the processes in place for getting this out.

I’m wondering – how valuable do you think it would be to have weekly live online Q&A sessions as opposed to the more asynchronous (and scalable) simple forum thing?

Just so I can see what I need to be preparing myself for, please leave a comment below expressing your interest. If you also know someone else who might benefit from this, drop them a link. The last thing I want to have happen is for this to take months and months to get out because I didn’t prepare things in advance that I could have.

And a big thanks to Simon and the gang in Australia for helping make this happen. It was a great two weeks and I thank you for that.



NServiceBus implements Erlang Concurrency

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Going over the concurrency features of Erlang, the language famed for nine 9’s of uptime, I find that nServiceBus covers almost every single one.

Here’s the core list from Joe Armstrong’s book, Programming Erlang:

“In Erlang:

  • Creating and destroying processes is very fast.
  • Sending messages between processes is very fast.
  • Processess behave the same way on all operating systems.
  • We can have very large numbers of processes.
  • Processes share no memory and are completely independent.
  • The only way for processes to interact is through message passing.”

In nServiceBus, we don’t create or destroy processes – that’s a Windows issue. Instead, we just do messaging with endpoints. If there’s a process behind that endpoint, and it responds, then other interesting things can occur.

In the continued list:

  • Message passing is asynchronous.
  • Processes can monitor each other.
  • It is possible to selectively receive messages.
  • Remote processes appear largely the same as local processes.

All of this is part of the design philosophy of nServiceBus. While I have yet to see a carrier-grade implementation of nServiceBus, we are enjoying very impressive system-wide uptimes in production. Oh, and the programming model is still plain-old .NET, so you don’t have to learn any new languages or environments (even though I think that you might learn something – I know I did).



Sagas and Unit Testing – Business Process Verification Made Easy

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Sagas have always been designed with unit testing in mind. By keeping them disconnected from any communications or persistence technology, it was my belief that it should be fairly easy to use mock objects to test them. I’ve heard back from projects using nServiceBus this way that they were pleased with their ability to test them, and thought all was well.

Not so.

The other day I sat down to implement and test a non-trivial business process, and the testing was far from easy. Now as developers go, I’m not great, or an expert on unit testing or TDD, but I’m above average. It should not have been this hard. And I tried doing it with Rhino.Mocks, TypeMock, and finally Moq. It seemed like I was in a no-mans-land, between trying to do state-based testing, and setting expectations on the messages being sent (as well as correct values in those messages), nothing flowed.

Until I finally stopped trying to figure out how to test, and focused on what needed to be tested. I mean, it’s not like I was trying to build a generic mocking framework like Daniel.

Here’s an example business process, or actually, part of one, and then we’ll see how that can be tested. By the way, there will be a post coming soon which describes how we go about analysing a system, coming up with these message types, and how these sagas come into being, so stay tuned. Either that, or just come to my tutorial at QCon.

On with the process:

1. When we receive a CreateOrderMessage, whose “Completed” flag is true, we’ll send 2 AuthorizationRequestMessages to internal systems (for managers to authorize the order), one OrderStatusUpdatedMessage to the caller with a status “Received”, and a TimeoutMessage to the TimeoutManager requesting to be notified – so that the process doesn’t get stuck if one or both messages don’t get a response.

2. When we receive the first AuthorizationResponseMessage, we notify the initiator of the Order by sending them a OrderStatusUpdatedMessage with a status “Authorized1”.

3. When we get “timed out” from the TimeoutManager, we check if at least one AuthorizationResponseMessage has arrived, and if so, publish an OrderAcceptedMessage, and notify the initator (again via the OrderStatusUpdatedMessage) this time with a status of “Accepted”.

And here’s the test:

    public class OrderSagaTests 
    { 
        private OrderSaga orderSaga = null; 
        private string timeoutAddress; 
        private Saga Saga;     

        [SetUp] 
        public void Setup() 
        { 
            timeoutAddress = "timeout"; 
            Saga = Saga.Test(out orderSaga, timeoutAddress); 
        }     

        [Test] 
        public void OrderProcessingShouldCompleteAfterOneAuthorizationAndOneTimeout() 
        { 
            Guid externalOrderId = Guid.NewGuid(); 
            Guid customerId = Guid.NewGuid(); 
            string clientAddress = "client";     

            CreateOrderMessage createOrderMsg = new CreateOrderMessage(); 
            createOrderMsg.OrderId = externalOrderId; 
            createOrderMsg.CustomerId = customerId; 
            createOrderMsg.Products = new List<Guid>(new Guid[] { Guid.NewGuid() }); 
            createOrderMsg.Amounts = new List<float>(new float[] { 10.0F }); 
            createOrderMsg.Completed = true;     

            TimeoutMessage timeoutMessage = null;     

            Saga.WhenReceivesMessageFrom(clientAddress) 
                .ExpectSend<AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage>( 
                    delegate(AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return m.SagaId == orderSaga.Id; 
                    }) 
                .ExpectSend<AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage>( 
                    delegate(AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return m.SagaId == orderSaga.Id; 
                    }) 
                .ExpectSendToDestination<OrderStatusUpdatedMessage>( 
                    delegate(string destination, OrderStatusUpdatedMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return m.OrderId == externalOrderId && destination == clientAddress; 
                    }) 
                .ExpectSendToDestination<TimeoutMessage>( 
                    delegate(string destination, TimeoutMessage m) 
                    { 
                        timeoutMessage = m; 
                        return m.SagaId == orderSaga.Id && destination == timeoutAddress; 
                    }) 
                .When(delegate { orderSaga.Handle(createOrderMsg); });     

            Assert.IsFalse(orderSaga.Completed);     

            AuthorizeOrderResponseMessage response = new AuthorizeOrderResponseMessage(); 
            response.ManagerId = Guid.NewGuid(); 
            response.Authorized = true; 
            response.SagaId = orderSaga.Id;     

            Saga.ExpectSendToDestination<OrderStatusUpdatedMessage>( 
                    delegate(string destination, OrderStatusUpdatedMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return (destination == clientAddress && 
                                m.OrderId == externalOrderId && 
                                m.Status == OrderStatus.Authorized1); 
                    }) 
                .When(delegate { orderSaga.Handle(response); });     

            Assert.IsFalse(orderSaga.Completed);     

            Saga.ExpectSendToDestination<OrderStatusUpdatedMessage>( 
                    delegate(string destination, OrderStatusUpdatedMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return (destination == clientAddress && 
                                m.OrderId == externalOrderId && 
                                m.Status == OrderStatus.Accepted); 
                    }) 
                .ExpectPublish<OrderAcceptedMessage>( 
                    delegate(OrderAcceptedMessage m) 
                    { 
                        return (m.CustomerId == customerId); 
                    }) 
                .When(delegate { orderSaga.Timeout(timeoutMessage.State); });     

            Assert.IsTrue(orderSaga.Completed); 
        } 
    }

You might notice that this style is a bit similar to the fluent testing found in Rhino Mocks. That’s not coincidence. It actually makes use of Rhino Mocks internally. The thing that I discovered was that in order to test these sagas, you don’t need to actually see a mocking framework. All you should have to do is express how messages get sent, and under what criteria those messages are valid.

If you’re wondering what the OrderSaga looks like, you can find the code right here. It’s not a complete business process implementation, but its enough to understand how one would look like:

using System; 
using System.Collections.Generic; 
using ExternalOrderMessages; 
using NServiceBus.Saga; 
using NServiceBus; 
using InternalOrderMessages;     

namespace ProcessingLogic 
{ 
    [Serializable] 
    public class OrderSaga : ISaga<CreateOrderMessage>, 
        ISaga<AuthorizeOrderResponseMessage>, 
        ISaga<CancelOrderMessage> 
    { 
        #region config info     

        [NonSerialized] 
        private IBus bus; 
        public IBus Bus 
        { 
            set { this.bus = value; } 
        }     

        [NonSerialized] 
        private Reminder reminder; 
        public Reminder Reminder 
        { 
            set { this.reminder = value; } 
        }     

        #endregion     

        private Guid id; 
        private bool completed; 
        public string clientAddress; 
        public Guid externalOrderId; 
        public int numberOfPendingAuthorizations = 2; 
        public List<CreateOrderMessage> orderItems = new List<CreateOrderMessage>();     

        public void Handle(CreateOrderMessage message) 
        { 
            this.clientAddress = this.bus.SourceOfMessageBeingHandled; 
            this.externalOrderId = message.OrderId;     

            this.orderItems.Add(message);     

            if (message.Completed) 
            { 
                for (int i = 0; i < this.numberOfPendingAuthorizations; i++) 
                { 
                    AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage req = new AuthorizeOrderRequestMessage(); 
                    req.SagaId = this.id; 
                    req.OrderData = orderItems;     

                    this.bus.Send(req); 
                } 
            }     

            this.SendUpdate(OrderStatus.Recieved);     

            this.reminder.ExpireIn(message.ProvideBy - DateTime.Now, this, null); 
        }     

        public void Timeout(object state) 
        { 
            if (this.numberOfPendingAuthorizations <= 1) 
                this.Complete(); 
        }     

        public Guid Id 
        { 
            get { return id; } 
            set { id = value; } 
        }     

        public bool Completed 
        { 
            get { return completed; } 
        }     

        public void Handle(AuthorizeOrderResponseMessage message) 
        { 
            if (message.Authorized) 
            { 
                this.numberOfPendingAuthorizations--;     

                if (this.numberOfPendingAuthorizations == 1) 
                    this.SendUpdate(OrderStatus.Authorized1); 
                else 
                { 
                    this.SendUpdate(OrderStatus.Authorized2); 
                    this.Complete(); 
                } 
            } 
            else 
            { 
                this.SendUpdate(OrderStatus.Rejected); 
                this.Complete(); 
            } 
        }     

        public void Handle(CancelOrderMessage message) 
        {     

        }     

        private void SendUpdate(OrderStatus status) 
        { 
            OrderStatusUpdatedMessage update = new OrderStatusUpdatedMessage(); 
            update.OrderId = this.externalOrderId; 
            update.Status = status;     

            this.bus.Send(this.clientAddress, update); 
        }     

        private void Complete() 
        { 
            this.completed = true;     

            this.SendUpdate(OrderStatus.Accepted);     

            OrderAcceptedMessage accepted = new OrderAcceptedMessage(); 
            accepted.Products = new List<Guid>(this.orderItems.Count); 
            accepted.Amounts = new List<float>(this.orderItems.Count);     

            this.orderItems.ForEach(delegate(CreateOrderMessage m) 
                                        { 
                                            accepted.Products.AddRange(m.Products); 
                                            accepted.Amounts.AddRange(m.Amounts); 
                                            accepted.CustomerId = m.CustomerId; 
                                        });     

            this.bus.Publish(accepted); 
        } 
    } 
}

All this code is online in the subversion repository under /Samples/Saga.

Questions, comments, and general thoughts are always appreciated.



Durable Messaging Is Not Enough

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

I’ve been sitting on this post for a while, waiting, before outlining all the kinds of problems durable messaging doesn’t solve, I wanted to have a solution handy. Harry Pierson begins to outline the goodness that durable messaging brings to SOA, and in a later post on idempotence describes in general terms how it ties back into durable messaging and transaction – in essence describing a saga. Let’s do this in story form.

Since you’re concerned that maybe your shipping company’s servers may be down for some kind of planned (or unplanned) maintenance just as you’re trying to fulfill orders, you use a durable messaging solution there. What happens is that messages get written to disk on your end, and later the messaging tries to transfer the messages until it succeeds. So what’s wrong with that?

Well, let’s say that the shipping company’s servers went up in smoke (true story – broken down air conditioners + poor ventilation, you get the picture). Those servers aren’t going to be coming back online any second now. So, you have all these order messages buffering on your disk. Taking into account all the data, meta-data, XML, SOAP, encryption and everything, we may get up to 1MB per message.

And now’s holiday season and your company’s selling hand over fist, hundreds of orders per second from all over the world. So that means we’re eating up 100MB of disk per second, that’s 6GB a minute, and in under an hour of our shipping company’s servers going down – so do ours.

Durable messaging – yay? We don’t want to lose those orders, right? In short, durable messaging is an important part of the solution, but it’s not the whole solution.

[Continued next time…]

If you’re impatient and just want the solution, yes, nServiceBus give you all the tools you need.



[Podcast] Message Ordering: Is it Cost Effective?

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

In this podcast we’ll be discussing the issues around multi-threaded processing of messages by a service, specifically that the processing of message received second may be finished before that of the first. This scenario tends to rear its ugly head at higher levels of load and is critical for correctness in high-scalability environments.

Our long time listener Bill asks:

Hi Udi,

I have a question around processing of messages in proper order. When leveraging multiple threads to process messages in a message queue, it is possible for the second message in the queue to get processed before the first – especially if the first message is considerably larger than the second. I have taken a lot of care to make sure that messages are sent in the correct order, only to find that the receiving system can process them out of order anyway.

Consider a Policy Created notification, which must come before a Policy Approved notification. If both messages are sitting in the queue when the receiving service starts up, the approval message can be processed before the creation message. How can I make sure that message ordering is respected by the receiving system? I am using WCF/MSMQ as the underlying transport by the way. The only way I have found so far is to limit the receiving service to a single thread, which is by no means desirable.

Best Regards,

Bill

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Additional References

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Got a question?

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BizTalk Blogs and UdiDahan.com, strange bedfellows?

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

So, it turns out that Microsoft has quietly launched a new community-style site.

Titled "BizTalk Blogs", I wasn’t quite sure what my blog was doing there. It’s not that I never write about BizTalk – every once in a while I even find something nice to say about it 🙂 My quick post on BizTalk and Performance is one such example. But, let’s face it, a lot of the work I do is to provide BizTalk-like features like routing, transaction-management, and choreography (orchestration) without the actual product.

Apparently, I’m not the only non-BizTalk-only blogger there.

Including such names as Christian Weyer and Michelle Leroux Bustamante , there is a veritable who’s who in the Microsoft Connected Systems ecosystem and, quite frankly, I’m surprised the bouncer let me in the door.

So, this post is for my readers who, like me, have pretty much ignored anything looking like BizTalk for the past few years. Don’t let the name fool you. BizTalk Blogs is a valuable resource even for people who don’t care about BizTalk – and hey, you might even like what you start hearing about the future directions Microsoft is taking it.

But that’s enough of that. We’ll be back with your regularly scheduled BizTalk bashing right after this break…



No more workflow for nServiceBus – please welcome the Saga

Monday, December 17th, 2007

As a part of my efforts to make clearer what place nServiceBus has in the Microsoft .NET ecosystem, I’ve decided to retire the term “workflow”. Almost every conversation about nServiceBus where the term “workflow” was brought up, the reaction was almost identical:

“What’s wrong with Workflow Foundation? Why aren’t you using it like you use WCF?”

There’s nothing wrong with Workflow Foundation. The thing is that nServiceBus doesn’t really need workflow in the general sense of the term. An older term that’s been used in the DBMS community might make more sense – “long-lived transactions”. You see, nServiceBus requires state management over many messaging interactions, and thus, some kind of long-lived transaction to maintain consistency.

In 1987, a different model was introduced for handling these scenarios – the Saga [GARCIA-MOLINA 87], and was further expanded in 1992 [CHRYSANTHIS 92] to allow the saga to commit if a non-vital subset of the sub-transactions abort. This is what is used in nServiceBus.

When used in distributed manner on top of one-way messaging, this results in a solution where each service runs its own “mini-workflow”, and coordinates its actions with other services via messages. This integration style is different from the traditional broker, man-in-the-middle approach found in products like Biztalk; and is known as “choreography”, and is in the process of standardization in the WS-* specs, known as WS-Choreography.

So, the bottom line is that the source, examples, and documentation of nServiceBus is being moved in this direction. The source and examples on the sourceforge site have already been brought forward. This is a breaking change.

I hope that this will make it clearer that nServiceBus is a higher-level set of abstractions than WCF/WF – limiting the generality found in these frameworks to enable one cohesive way of working that will result in a solution that is both scalable and robust. On the other hand, nServiceBus is not a fully integrated product like Biztalk and intends to tackle different kinds of problems.

Bigger than a WCF/WF, smaller than a breadbox Biztalk.



SOA Rollup

Monday, December 10th, 2007

What with all the new subscribers that have joined, I wanted to make sure that everyone could easily find any of the older SOA-related information I’d posted over the past few years.

Anyway, my hope is that if you’re tasked with architecting, designing, or implementing a Service-Oriented Architecture then the resources below should help you get to the bottom line of all the theory and get you going in terms of actual development.

Podcasts:

If you’d like to more of these kinds of podcasts, check out the “Ask Udi” podcast.

I’ve also be interviewed on SOA on several other podcasts:

Webcasts:

  • SOA Distilled for UML China [PDF] [Audio – 90MB via EMule]
  • Why you can’t do SOA without Message [TechEd USA 2005]

Books:

Full-length Articles:

Open Source Frameworks:

  • nServiceBus – communications framework for making enterprise .NET systems easier to build


[Podcast] Migrating from N-Tier to SOA

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

In this podcast we’ll be discussing certain methodologies for migrating an architecture from N-Tier to SOA. We’ll see what parts can be used almost unchanged, and which N-Tier concepts have no place in this new, service-oriented world.

Ketan asks:

Hello Udi,

I am Ketan, working as Analyst Programmer in India. I want some information regarding SOA Architecture. I have visited several blogs and sites and I do have enough knowledge regarding technical terms of SOA. I have worked a lot in 3-tier mechanism a lot and now want to switch on SOA Architecture in Visual Studio 2005.

I read your blog post How to migrate to SOA and liked the contents and am interested in doing it. Can you please be more precise about how to migrate from 3-tier to SOA? Actually, I have read whole content of above link and you have explained enough. But, still I want you to keep me out from dark. You have described it functionally, but I want some technical description of this process. Please help me in this.

If you can provide me some example/application (in which SOA Architecture has been implemented), then it will be very helpful to me.

Thanks in advance. Waiting for your favorable reply.

Ketan

Download

Download directly here.

Additional References

Want more?

Check out the “Ask Udi” archives.

Got a question?

Send Udi your question to answer on the show.



   


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Udi Dahan is the real deal.

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With Udi's attention to details, and knowledge we avoided pit falls that would cost us dearly.”

Børge Hansen Børge Hansen, Architect Advisor at Microsoft
“Udi delivered a 5 hour long workshop on SOA for aspiring architects in Norway. While keeping everyone awake and excited Udi gave us some great insights and really delivered on making complex software challenges simple. Truly the software simplist.”

Motty Cohen, SW Manager at KorenTec Technologies
“I know Udi very well from our mutual work at KorenTec. During the analysis and design of a complex, distributed C4I system - where the basic concepts of NServiceBus start to emerge - I gained a lot of "Udi's hours" so I can surely say that he is a professional, skilled architect with fresh ideas and unique perspective for solving complex architecture challenges. His ideas, concepts and parts of the artifacts are the basis of several state-of-the-art C4I systems that I was involved in their architecture design.”

Aaron Jensen Aaron Jensen, VP of Engineering at Eleutian Technology
Awesome. Just awesome.

We’d been meaning to delve into messaging at Eleutian after multiple discussions with and blog posts from Greg Young and Udi Dahan in the past. We weren’t entirely sure where to start, how to start, what tools to use, how to use them, etc. Being able to sit in a room with Udi for an entire week while he described exactly how, why and what he does to tackle a massive enterprise system was invaluable to say the least.

We now have a much better direction and, more importantly, have the confidence we need to start introducing these powerful concepts into production at Eleutian.”

Gad Rosenthal Gad Rosenthal, Department Manager at Retalix
“A thinking person. Brought fresh and valuable ideas that helped us in architecting our product. When recommending a solution he supports it with evidence and detail so you can successfully act based on it. Udi's support "comes on all levels" - As the solution architect through to the detailed class design. Trustworthy!”

Chris Bilson Chris Bilson, Developer at Russell Investment Group
“I had the pleasure of attending a workshop Udi led at the Seattle ALT.NET conference in February 2009. I have been reading Udi's articles and listening to his podcasts for a long time and have always looked to him as a source of advice on software architecture.
When I actually met him and talked to him I was even more impressed. Not only is Udi an extremely likable person, he's got that rare gift of being able to explain complex concepts and ideas in a way that is easy to understand.
All the attendees of the workshop greatly appreciate the time he spent with us and the amazing insights into service oriented architecture he shared with us.”

Alexey Shestialtynov Alexey Shestialtynov, Senior .Net Developer at Candidate Manager
“I met Udi at Candidate Manager where he was brought in part-time as a consultant to help the company make its flagship product more scalable. For me, even after 30 years in software development, working with Udi was a great learning experience. I simply love his fresh ideas and architecture insights.
As we all know it is not enough to be armed with best tools and technologies to be successful in software - there is still human factor involved. When, as it happens, the project got in trouble, management asked Udi to step into a leadership role and bring it back on track. This he did in the span of a month. I can only wish that things had been done this way from the very beginning.
I look forward to working with Udi again in the future.”

Christopher Bennage Christopher Bennage, President at Blue Spire Consulting, Inc.
“My company was hired to be the primary development team for a large scale and highly distributed application. Since these are not necessarily everyday requirements, we wanted to bring in some additional expertise. We chose Udi because of his blogging, podcasting, and speaking. We asked him to to review our architectural strategy as well as the overall viability of project.
I was very impressed, as Udi demonstrated a broad understanding of the sorts of problems we would face. His advice was honest and unbiased and very pragmatic. Whenever I questioned him on particular points, he was able to backup his opinion with real life examples. I was also impressed with his clarity and precision. He was very careful to untangle the meaning of words that might be overloaded or otherwise confusing. While Udi's hourly rate may not be the cheapest, the ROI is undoubtedly a deal. I would highly recommend consulting with Udi.”

Robert Lewkovich, Product / Development Manager at Eggs Overnight
“Udi's advice and consulting were a huge time saver for the project I'm responsible for. The $ spent were well worth it and provided me with a more complete understanding of nServiceBus and most importantly in helping make the correct architectural decisions earlier thereby reducing later, and more expensive, rework.”

Ray Houston Ray Houston, Director of Development at TOPAZ Technologies
“Udi's SOA class made me smart - it was awesome.

The class was very well put together. The materials were clear and concise and Udi did a fantastic job presenting it. It was a good mixture of lecture, coding, and question and answer. I fully expected that I would be taking notes like crazy, but it was so well laid out that the only thing I wrote down the entire course was what I wanted for lunch. Udi provided us with all the lecture materials and everyone has access to all of the samples which are in the nServiceBus trunk.

Now I know why Udi is the "Software Simplist." I was amazed to find that all the code and solutions were indeed very simple. The patterns that Udi presented keep things simple by isolating complexity so that it doesn't creep into your day to day code. The domain code looks the same if it's running in a single process or if it's running in 100 processes.”

Ian Cooper Ian Cooper, Team Lead at Beazley
“Udi is one of the leaders in the .Net development community, one of the truly smart guys who do not just get best architectural practice well enough to educate others but drives innovation. Udi consistently challenges my thinking in ways that make me better at what I do.”

Liron Levy, Team Leader at Rafael
“I've met Udi when I worked as a team leader in Rafael. One of the most senior managers there knew Udi because he was doing superb architecture job in another Rafael project and he recommended bringing him on board to help the project I was leading.
Udi brought with him fresh solutions and invaluable deep architecture insights. He is an authority on SOA (service oriented architecture) and this was a tremendous help in our project.
On the personal level - Udi is a great communicator and can persuade even the most difficult audiences (I was part of such an audience myself..) by bringing sound explanations that draw on his extensive knowledge in the software business. Working with Udi was a great learning experience for me, and I'll be happy to work with him again in the future.”

Adam Dymitruk Adam Dymitruk, Director of IT at Apara Systems
“I met Udi for the first time at DevTeach in Montreal back in early 2007. While Udi is usually involved in SOA subjects, his knowledge spans all of a software development company's concerns. I would not hesitate to recommend Udi for any company that needs excellent leadership, mentoring, problem solving, application of patterns, implementation of methodologies and straight out solution development.
There are very few people in the world that are as dedicated to their craft as Udi is to his. At ALT.NET Seattle, Udi explained many core ideas about SOA. The team that I brought with me found his workshop and other talks the highlight of the event and provided the most value to us and our organization. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to recommend him.”

Eytan Michaeli Eytan Michaeli, CTO Korentec
“Udi was responsible for a major project in the company, and as a chief architect designed a complex multi server C4I system with many innovations and excellent performance.”


Carl Kenne Carl Kenne, .Net Consultant at Dotway AB
“Udi's session "DDD in Enterprise apps" was truly an eye opener. Udi has a great ability to explain complex enterprise designs in a very comprehensive and inspiring way. I've seen several sessions on both DDD and SOA in the past, but Udi puts it in a completly new perspective and makes us understand what it's all really about. If you ever have a chance to see any of Udi's sessions in the future, take it!”

Avi Nehama, R&D Project Manager at Retalix
“Not only that Udi is a briliant software architecture consultant, he also has remarkable abilities to present complex ideas in a simple and concise manner, and...
always with a smile. Udi is indeed a top-league professional!”

Ben Scheirman Ben Scheirman, Lead Developer at CenterPoint Energy
“Udi is one of those rare people who not only deeply understands SOA and domain driven design, but also eloquently conveys that in an easy to grasp way. He is patient, polite, and easy to talk to. I'm extremely glad I came to his workshop on SOA.”

Scott C. Reynolds Scott C. Reynolds, Director of Software Engineering at CBLPath
“Udi is consistently advancing the state of thought in software architecture, service orientation, and domain modeling.
His mastery of the technologies and techniques is second to none, but he pairs that with a singular ability to listen and communicate effectively with all parties, technical and non, to help people arrive at context-appropriate solutions. Every time I have worked with Udi, or attended a talk of his, or just had a conversation with him I have come away from it enriched with new understanding about the ideas discussed.”

Evgeny-Hen Osipow, Head of R&D at PCLine
“Udi has helped PCLine on projects by implementing architectural blueprints demonstrating the value of simple design and code.”

Rhys Campbell Rhys Campbell, Owner at Artemis West
“For many years I have been following the works of Udi. His explanation of often complex design and architectural concepts are so cleanly broken down that even the most junior of architects can begin to understand these concepts. These concepts however tend to typify the "real world" problems we face daily so even the most experienced software expert will find himself in an "Aha!" moment when following Udi teachings.
It was a pleasure to finally meet Udi in Seattle Alt.Net OpenSpaces 2008, where I was pleasantly surprised at how down-to-earth and approachable he was. His depth and breadth of software knowledge also became apparent when discussion with his peers quickly dove deep in to the problems we current face. If given the opportunity to work with or recommend Udi I would quickly take that chance. When I think .Net Architecture, I think Udi.”

Sverre Hundeide Sverre Hundeide, Senior Consultant at Objectware
“Udi had been hired to present the third LEAP master class in Oslo. He is an well known international expert on enterprise software architecture and design, and is the author of the open source messaging framework nServiceBus. The entire class was based on discussion and interaction with the audience, and the only Power Point slide used was the one showing the agenda.
He started out with sketching a naive traditional n-tier application (big ball of mud), and based on suggestions from the audience we explored different solutions which might improve the solution. Whatever suggestions we threw at him, he always had a thoroughly considered answer describing pros and cons with the suggested solution. He obviously has a lot of experience with real world enterprise SOA applications.”

Raphaël Wouters Raphaël Wouters, Owner/Managing Partner at Medinternals
“I attended Udi's excellent course 'Advanced Distributed System Design with SOA and DDD' at Skillsmatter. Few people can truly claim such a high skill and expertise level, present it using a pragmatic, concrete no-nonsense approach and still stay reachable.”

Nimrod Peleg Nimrod Peleg, Lab Engineer at Technion IIT
“One of the best programmers and software engineer I've ever met, creative, knows how to design and implemet, very collaborative and finally - the applications he designed implemeted work for many years without any problems!

Jose Manuel Beas
“When I attended Udi's SOA Workshop, then it suddenly changed my view of what Service Oriented Architectures were all about. Udi explained complex concepts very clearly and created a very productive discussion environment where all the attendees could learn a lot. I strongly recommend hiring Udi.”

Daniel Jin Daniel Jin, Senior Lead Developer at PJM Interconnection
“Udi is one of the top SOA guru in the .NET space. He is always eager to help others by sharing his knowledge and experiences. His blog articles often offer deep insights and is a invaluable resource. I highly recommend him.”

Pasi Taive Pasi Taive, Chief Architect at Tieto
“I attended both of Udi's "UI Composition Key to SOA Success" and "DDD in Enterprise Apps" sessions and they were exceptionally good. I will definitely participate in his sessions again. Udi is a great presenter and has the ability to explain complex issues in a manner that everyone understands.”

Eran Sagi, Software Architect at HP
“So far, I heard about Service Oriented architecture all over. Everyone mentions it – the big buzz word. But, when I actually asked someone for what does it really mean, no one managed to give me a complete satisfied answer. Finally in his excellent course “Advanced Distributed Systems”, I got the answers I was looking for. Udi went over the different motivations (principles) of Services Oriented, explained them well one by one, and showed how each one could be technically addressed using NService bus. In his course, Udi also explain the way of thinking when coming to design a Service Oriented system. What are the questions you need to ask yourself in order to shape your system, place the logic in the right places for best Service Oriented system.

I would recommend this course for any architect or developer who deals with distributed system, but not only. In my work we do not have a real distributed system, but one PC which host both the UI application and the different services inside, all communicating via WCF. I found that many of the architecture principles and motivations of SOA apply for our system as well. Enough that you have SW partitioned into components and most of the principles becomes relevant to you as well. Bottom line – an excellent course recommended to any SW Architect, or any developer dealing with distributed system.”

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