By
Martin LaMonica
Tuesday, September 20 2005 09:18 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39255883,00.htm
With the forthcoming release of its application server, Oracle is warming
up to open-source software and IBM's middleware products.
The company, at its Oracle OpenWorld customer conference in San Francisco,
detailed enhancements to its Oracle Application Server 10g release 3, which is
due for completion before next May.
Oracle and IBM also announced a partnership
to ensure that Oracle's packaged applications run natively--that is, without
modification or special translators--on the majority of IBM's WebSphere-branded
middleware, including its application server and portal, plus Big Blue's
recently announced Process
Server.
"Oracle views the IBM-Oracle project as one of the most important
customer-focused projects underway at our company," Charles Phillips, one of
Oracle's co-presidents, said in a statement.
Oracle's application server--the back-end software that runs Java and Web
services programs--is the anchor to the company's Fusion
Middleware, the infrastructure software the company eventually will use to
underpin its disparate packaged application product lines.
Oracle, in fact, is expected to announce this week that J.D. Edwards
applications, which the database giant gained through its acquisition of
PeopleSoft last year, will be certified to run on Oracle's Application Server
10g release 2.
Release 3 of its application server will be designed to more smoothly operate
with third-party products, including open-source development "frameworks" such
as Apache Spring and Hibernate, said Rick Shultz, vice president of Oracle
Fusion Middleware.
Ties to commercial products, including IBM's WebSphere software, and its MQ
messaging software and systems management products, will also be built in,
Shultz said.
The update will bring the software current with the more recent Web services
specifications. These changes are meant to make Oracle's infrastructure software
a more attractive choice for building a modular system called a service-oriented
architecture, Schultz said.
For developers, Oracle plans to improve its own development tools to simplify
server-side Java development and support the REST-style of programming, which
relies on XML and HTTP rather than Web services protocols.
Oracle Application Sever 10g release 3 will have a so-called rules engine,
which will allows companies to make changes to applications by configuring
business rules rather than by writing Java code, said Schultz.