更新时间:2021-09-03 10:04:22
封面
版权页
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Support files eBooks discount offers and more
Preface
What this book covers
What you need for this book
Who this book is for
Conventions
Reader feedback
Customer support
Chapter 1. Why Do We Need Business Process Management?
Theoretical background
Introduction analysis and explanations of standard specifications
Technical details and common practices of jBPM6
The conceptual background of BPM
The BPM discipline
BPM applications in the real world
Summary
Chapter 2. BPM Systems' Structure
Components of a BPMS
Node instance structures
External interactions
Predictive analytics and decision management
Chapter 3. Using BPMN 2.0 to Model Business Scenarios
Introduction to BPMN 2.0
Modeling business scenarios with BPMN 2.0
Technical perspective
Chapter 4. Understanding the KIE Workbench
What you need to start a jBPM6 environment
Chapter 5. Creating a Process Project in the KIE Workbench
An IDE to our knowledge
Implementing our first process
Sprint management process design
The Web Process Designer advanced topics
Providing a runtime for our process
Chapter 6. Human Interactions
Understanding human interactions
jBPM6 Human task component's overview
Chapter 7. Defining Your Environment with the Runtime Manager
Understanding the role of the runtime manager
The different implementations available
The UI configuration of runtime managers
Creating your own runtime manager
Chapter 8. Implementing Persistence and Transactions
Why do we need persistence and transactions?
Persistence in jBPM6
Other persistence mechanisms
Chapter 9. Integration with Other Knowledge Definitions
What is a rule?
Old-fashioned integration
The Drools rule engine
Temporal reasoning and processes
Chapter 10. Integrating KIE Workbench with External Systems
Defining your architecture
Extending the KIE Workbench architecture
Remote engine invocations
Deploying the KIE Workbench in the cloud
Appendix A. The UberFire Framework
UberFire
Extending and reusing the UberFire UI components
Index