Microsofts Strategy for the Internet
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Transcript Microsofts Strategy for the Internet
Windows DNA 2000
Microsoft Strategy For Developers In The Internet Era
Peg Souders
[email protected]
425-705-1877
Microsoft Corporation
Vision
Empower people
through great software
any time, any place,
and on any device
Developers: Key To Microsoft
PC Hardware
OS abstraction (Windows)
Graphical User
Interface
Rapid development (VB)
Object-oriented
Programming
Components (COM)
The Internet
Today’s discussion
Agenda
Developer Roadmap
Review WinDNA
DNA 2000
Developer Roadmap
Developer Base
(50% VB,
20% VC)
Tools
Strength
Website
Usage
Now
’99/’00
’00/’01
Windows
DNA
Today
Windows
DNA
2000
Windows
DNA
Enhanced
1. Better (Web)
Apps with
mature,
comprehensive
“suite”
2. Enhance
“Web
Services”
support
1. Deep support for
“Web Services”
architecture
2. Comprehensive
“Web Services”
Platform
3. Break-through
tools for “Web
Services”
Windows DNA
Microsoft’s Enterprise Application Platform
Databases
Legacy Systems
Thin
Client
External
Applications
Rich
Client
Microsoft’s enterprise application platform is composed of three tiers Presentation, Business Logic, and Data along with System Services and Tools.
Windows DNA
Presentation
Business Logic
Data
Windows NT Servers
COM Transaction
Integrator
IBM OS/390 Mainframe
CICS / COBOL
Business Logic
DB2
OLE DB
SNA Server
IBM AS/400
business
objects
Web Clients
OLE DB
Transaction
Server
HTTP
AS/400
Files
Sun Enterprise Server
DCOM
.asp
files
Internet
Information Server
Oracle 8
OLE DB
Windows NT Server
SQL Server 7
DNA 2000
Part 1
Enhance support for Web Services:
XML processing and messaging
First Megaservices
Part 2
Comprehensive suite with new versions of
key products
History of Standards Evolution
Messaging
Distributed Objects
Networking
SMTP
XML
???
TCP/IP
?
?
?
x.400
cc:Mail
COM+
Banyan
LanMan
CORBA
Netware
MHS
EJB
SNA
Observations
Vendor-independent standards
eventually win
Proprietary solutions either develop
compatible interfaces to VIS or
vanish
Those with strongest technology
and tools are the best bets
Microsoft is in a better position with
XML than we were for messaging or
networking
Evolution To Web Services
Standard
Connectivity
Presentation Programmability
“Browse
the Web”
“Program
the Web”
1st & 2nd Generation Web
Apps
File
DB
In-house
systems
File
Web Server
Web Server
Browser
Browser
1-1 correspondence
of page to file
“Dynamic Pages”
3rd Generation Web
Web
Web
service
site
File
Web
Web
service
site
Web
Web
service
site
Tomorrow, external
Web sites become
building blocks using
XML
•Web Services
•Megaservices
“The Firewall”
Accessing another
site today = HTML
“screen scraping”
or “your architect
calls my architect”
In-house
systems
DB
Web Server
Browser
“Dynamic Pages”
Examples of Web Services
Location
Services
Maps, routing, nearby
locations…
Shopping
Services
Order tracking, supply
chain, auctions,
coupons…
Information
Services
Communication
Services
Headlines, weather,
horoscopes, TV times…
Email, instant
messages…
Some Web Service Scenarios
Search engine enables you to
program it without a browser
Travel site enables you to compare
against other travel sites
Web customer relationship
management software extended to
search online White Pages
Traffic monitoring site
communicates with PIM to calculate
how long it will take you between
meetings
Combining Web Services
Calendar
SOAP
White
Pages
Mapping
SOAP
(Location)
SOAP
SOAP
Alerting
Billing
Authentication
SOAP
SOAP
Traffic
What SOAP Is
Designed to perform Web method
invocations
OS, object model, language
agnostic
HTTP + XML on the wire
Works over existing Internet
infrastructure
OS, language, and object model
agnostic interoperability
SOAP Message Structure
SOAP Message
The complete SOAP Message
HTTP Headers
Standard HTTP and SOAP HTTP Headers
SOAP Envelope
<Envelope> encloses payload
SOAP Header
Headers
SOAP Body
Method Call & Data
<Header> encloses headers
Individual headers
<Body> contains SOAP Method Call
XML Encoded SOAP Method Call & Data
SOAP Sample Call
POST /StockQuote HTTP/1.1
Host: www.stockquoteserver.com
Content-Type: text/xml
Content-Length: nnnn
SOAPMethodName: Some-Namespace-URI#GetLastTradePrice
<SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="urn:schemas-xmlsoaporg:soap.v1”>
<SOAP:Body>
<m:GetLastTradePrice
xmlns:m="Some-Namespace-URI”>
<symbol>DIS</symbol>
</m:GetLastTradePrice>
</SOAP:Body>
</SOAP:Envelope>
Security
Builds on HTTP security
HTTPS
X.509 certificates
Firewalls can filter easily
Does not pass application code
Developers/IT choose which
methods to expose explicitly
SOAP and Standards
Builds on
W3C XML standards
IETF HTTP standard
SOAP Spec v1.0 to IETF
http://www.ietf.org/internetdrafts/draft-box-http-soap-01.txt
Industry Support
IBM
Lotus
DevelopMentor Inc.
Digital Creations
IONA Technologies PLC
Jetform
ObjectSpace Inc
Rockwell Software Inc.
Rogue Wave Software Inc.
Scriptics Corp.
Secret Labs AB
UserLand Software Inc
Zveno Pty. Ltd.
…
DNA 2000
Part 1
Enhance support for Web Services:
XML processing and messaging
First Megaservices
Part 2
Comprehensive suite with new versions of
key products
Windows DNA 2000
Megaservices
Web Service building blocks
Commerce Server
Next-generation e-commerce
BizTalk Server
Business process integration
Host Integration
Works with what you have
AppCenter Server
Server farm management
SQL Server 2000
RDBMS with XML store
Windows 2000
Built-in application services
what’s new? – mts
integration
Windows
NT4
Windows
2000
Component
Framework
Type
Integration
MSJAVA.DLL
VBVM600.DLL
ATL.DLL
MSJAVA.DLL
VBVM600.DLL
ATL.DLL
Context
Concurrency
Transactions
MTXEX.DLL
OLE32.DLL
OLE32.DLL
Class Loading
Remoting
OLE32.DLL
Post
W2K
The Integrated Platform
Time-To-Market
COM+
COM
DCOM
MTS/MSMQ
DTC
Transactions Security AsyncCalls Events
Object Pooling CRM CLB
System Services
Directory
Security
WMI
MSI
Windows DNA Scalability
Application Servers
TPC-C Performance
3,441
OS / Database
3500
Dynamic Pages Served per Second
3000
COMPAQ Pentium III/Win NT 4 Server
4 Application Servers
1 SQL Server 7.0 Database Server
($170,000)
2500
SUN SPARC/Solaris
3 SUN Application Servers
1 Oracle 8i Database Server
($430,000)
2000
1,981
1,363
1500
1,013
1,039
tpmC
Price/
tpmC
1
Microsoft Windows
2000 / SQL 2000,
12 node
227,079 $19.12
2
Microsoft Windows
2000/ SQL 2000, 8
node
152,207 $18.93
3
IBM AIX/Oracle 8i
135,815 $52.70
4
IBM AIX/Oracle 8i
135,461
5
Sun Solaris / Oracle
8i
135,815 $54.94
6
Sun Solaris / Oracle
8i
115,395 $105.63
7
IBM AIX/Oracle 8.0
110,434 $122.44
8
Digital Unix/Oracle
8.0
102,541 $133.49
9
HP HP-UX/Sybase
ASE12
102,023 $63.21
10
Microsoft Windows
NT / Oracle 8i
101,657 $35.68
$97.10
845
787
1000
373
500
Haht
SUN iPlanet
HahtSite (Netscape
App Server)
BlueStone Sybase
Sapphire
App
Web
Server
SUN
Progress
Net-Net
Aptivity
Dynam ics
5
Microsoft
VB/
IIS/ASP
Microsoft
VC++/
IIS/ISAPI
Source: DocuLabs/ZDLabs App Server Shootout 7/99; Transaction Processing Performance Council
Performance
Windows NT 4.0 vs. Windows 2000
FMStocks 1.0 on Windows NT 4.0
7500 concurrent VUs
5 second delay between pages
FMStocks 2000 on Windows 2000 AS
12,000 to 14,000 VUs
sub-second response time
~3B dynamic pages served per day
(35k pages / sec) * (86,400 sec / day)
No image download – 100% ASP
Windows DNA 2000
Megaservices
Web Service building blocks
Commerce Server
Next-generation e-commerce
BizTalk Server
Business process integration
Host Integration
Works with what you have
AppCenter Server
Server farm management
SQL Server 2000
RDBMS with XML store
Windows 2000
Built-in application services
Problem Statement
Businesses exchange information
Printed documents via FAX (most)
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) (<1%)
Objects (few)
Businesses of all sizes need to
exchange information electronically
Large businesses use EDI today
Many small and medium size
businesses don’t use EDI today (csv ad hoc)
BizTalk: Framework / Server
BizTalk Framework
Industry Initiative
www.biztalk.org
Jump Start Download
BizTalk Server
Microsoft Server and Tools Product
Expected to ship CY’00
BizTalk Steering Committee
Ariba
SAP
Merrill Lynch
CommerceOne
Baan
Boeing
Concur
Peoplesoft
UPS
Clarus
J.D. Edwards
US DoD
Pivotal
Data Interchange Standards Association
American Petroleum Institute
Open Applications Group
RosettaNet
What is BizTalk Server?
A Windows 2000 Service and a set of
related tools
Allows the creation, integration, and
execution of business processes
based on reliable and loosely-coupled
business document exchange.
Based on XML
Natively uses BizTalk schema and
protocol
Also supports EDI
Scenarios
Scenarios
Trading
Partner
Integration
Customer Value
Proposition
Enable information
interchange among trading
partners
Business
Process
Integration
Enable businesses to link
their multiple business
processes
Automated
Procurement
Enable businesses to
source goods and services
with one-one or one- many
vendors
B2B Portals
Enable B2B intermediaries
to automate content
aggregation and
management
Sub Scenarios
Internet EDI
Supply chain integration
Order management
Invoicing
Shipping coordination
Commerce – ERP integration
Commerce – Legacy integration
ERP – ERP integration
MRO pricing
MRO purchasing
Order tracking
Government procurement
Enterprise portals/Extranets
Trading communities/Portals
Electronic catalog management
Content syndication
Post sale customer management
Terminology
Organization – document exchange
endpoint (source and/or target).
Document – structured business data
(PO, invoice, etc.) Has corresponding
XML-data schema.
Agreement – binding between
organizations. Rules for processing
the document exchange.
Map – XSL stylesheet for translating
source document format to target
document format.
BizTalk: Key Benefits
Easily Establish and Manage Internet
Trading Relationships
Quickly Automate Document Interchange
with Anybody, Anywhere
Easy-to-use “Business Desk and Tools”
Out-of-the-box support for the widest range of data
formats and communications protocols
Cost Effective Integration of business
processes
Schema and Mapping tools to enable, one-on-one
integration with virtually any back-end or legacy system
Key Features
Trading Partner Management
Document Mapping and Translation
Business Desk (Proposals, Agreements, etc.)
XML Schema and Mapping Tools
EDI Interoperability (ANSI X12, UN EDIFACT)
Reliable Document Routing and Delivery
Synch and Asynch Communication
Content-Based Routing
Multiple Documents per Envelope (Batch)
Reliable Delivery over any Transport
Architecture & Flow Example
BizDesk - Trading Partner Management
Tools
BizTalk
Editor
BizTalk
Mapper
Agreement
EDI
EDI
EDI
EDI
EDI
Sequence
Editor
Data
Storage
EDIXSL
IDOC
SpecMapSpec
WebDAV
Admin
Work Items
SAP
EDI IDOC
Tracking
MSMQ
Sequence
EngineSAP
MSMQ
DCOM
IDOCXML
DCOM
DCOM
HTTP
EDI to XML EDI
EDI
HTTPConvert
BizTalk
BizTalk
Server
Server
Transform
Group
SAP Group
EDI
ADO
ADO
Trading
Partner
EDI
IDOC
EDI
XML
SAP
Convert XML to IDOCFile
File
IDOC
IDOC
SAP Integration
Component
EDI
EDI
Exchange
SMTP
SMTP
EDI
XML
FTP
IDOC
EDI
SNA
Server
System
System
SAP
IDOC
SAP
IDOC
SAP
R/3
BizTalk Mapper
BizTalk Editor
Windows DNA 2000
Megaservices
Web Service building blocks
Commerce Server
Next-generation e-commerce
BizTalk Server
Business process integration
Host Integration
Works with what you have
AppCenter Server
Server farm management
SQL Server 2000
RDBMS with XML store
Windows 2000
Built-in application services
SQL 2000
Enhancement Release to SQL Server 7.0
Win TPC-H/R on Windows NT SMP configurations
XML support
Expand Analysis Services
Materialized Views, Parallelism, and Tuning
Internet Enhancements
Performance, reliability, availability and features
Scalability (SS and Plato)
Data Mining
Integration (repository)
Great on the Desktop
Improve performance, footprint, startup time
Queued Replication and Easier deployment
Data Mining Overview
Data Mining Definition
Deducing Knowledge by Examining Data
“Knowledge” = patterns, clusters, rules,
decision trees, association rules
“Examining data” = scanning samples of
known facts about “cases”
Once the “Knowledge” Is Extracted, It Is
Used To
Make predictions about new data
Explain existing data
Visualize data to aid humans
Data Mining Overview
Mining Process
Training Data
DM
Engine
Mining Model
Mining Model
Data
Mining Model To Predict
DM
Engine
Predicted Data
XML in SQL Server 2000
Business Scenarios
Web Applications with Dynamic Data
Browser-based applications that require
data from a database
Business-to-Business Data Processing
Data interchange using XML as a
Ubiquitous
Extensible
Platform-independent data transport
mechanism
Database Publishing
Setting Up HTTP Access
Example
User sends HTTP request to retrieve SQL
Server 2000 data
3 ISAPI Filter
4 OLE DB
Customer
1
2
5
Internet
9
8
IIS
6
7
SQL
Then Data Goes
Back to Customer
HTTP Access – URL Types
URL Query
Direct Query
http://server/vroot/dbobject/xpath
Template
http://server/vroot?sql=“…”
http://server/vroot/vname?params
XML Schema
http://server/vroot/vname/xpath?params
URL Query
DBObject Query
http://localhost/Northwind/products/Products[@ProductID='
1']/@ProductName
Template Query
http://localhost/Northwind?sql=select CustomerID,
ContactName FROM Customers FOR XML Auto, Elements
http://localhost/Northwind/templates/customernoxsl.xml
Schema Query
http://localhost/northwind/schemas/BtsOrders.xml/Orders[
@OrderID="10643"]
Building DNA2000 Applications on
Microsoft Platform
Great Starting Places on MSDN
http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/scale
•
•
•
http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml
•
•
Complete XML Developer Center, with toolkits, samples
Illustrates using XML to integrate back end systems
http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/interop
•
•
Design pattern for end-to-end Web application
Complete design and tuning documents
Recent scalability benchmarks
Enterprise Interoperability Center with sample ecommerce
application
Illustrates use of Microsoft technologies to easily integrate
with SAP R/3, Oracle 8, IBM DB/2, IBM CICS and AS400
http://msdn.microsoft.com/voices/sampleapp.asp
•
Duwamish Books, sample ecommerce app and design docs