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Mick's Breeze Blogs - Biztalk/Sharepoint/... - March, 2007
Things hard and not so hard....
 Thursday, March 29, 2007

Eric (MS) has been working hard in providing us (loving your work Eric!) with updated BizTalk documentation.
The folks are doing a great job over all of this. This is a massive PDF - a single one which encompasses a great deal of things within it.

Here's the email I got earlier.

------
Hello,
We have provided a new, updated Monster PDF of the BizTalk Server 2006 documentation set.  It is also available off of a link on the BizTalk Server 2006 Developer Center at http://msdn.microsoft.com/biztalk.  Highlights include:

·         The PDF is in a self-extracting zip file that is approximately 57megs.
·         The PDF tips the scales at  117 megabytes and includes almost 20,000 pages.
·         Links are rendered in blue with underlines but do not work. This may be addressed in a future enhancement.
·         Searching may be slow due to the size of the document.
·         Feedback, banners, and other content items have been removed to improve the PDF experience.

If you have any comments including ideas for PDF subset collections or for other content, please send them along.  
Thanks,
Eric

Thursday, March 29, 2007 2:34:29 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | Insights | Training  | 
 Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Any day now.....it'll be making it's way to the download area and then refreshed by the web front end servers and then.....viola!!! It will appear as a download.

Some great improvements around EDI (6000+ schemas out of the box)
- WCF + WCF adapters.
- there's a new LOB Adapter SDK that allows us to develop Adapters WITHOUT the need for BizTalk. So your one adapter has legs in many different apps.
- lots more.....

Stay tuned......there's some great WCF channel examples being called by BizTalk in the pipelines.

Should see it under http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/biztalk/2006/default.mspx I guess sometime in the *very* near future.

We're supporting some clients through the R2 TAP program which is always an adventure :)

Wednesday, March 28, 2007 8:49:34 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | Insights | Tips  | 
 Tuesday, March 27, 2007

I ran across this great article if you're looking embark on customising your Sharepoint 2007 menus...from Site Settings through to drop down Actions menus, then here is a great MSDN article to start.

http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms473643.aspx

--- snip ---

How to: Add Actions to the User Interface 

Using Features makes it easy to add actions to menus of the user interface in Windows SharePoint Services. This example shows how to add actions to various menus through a Feature and how to activate it within the deployment.

Location and Group ID

To define a custom action for a particular menu, you must identify the menu by setting the location to the appropriate Windows SharePoint Services namespace, and by using the ID that Windows SharePoint Services uses to identify the specific location.

For example, to add a custom action to the Site Settings page, set the Location attribute of the CustomAction element to Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings.and specify a particular area within the page through the GroupId attribute.

The following table shows Location and GroupId values that are possible.

Area

Location

GroupId

Display form toolbar

DisplayFormToolbar

n/a

Edit form toolbar

EditFormToolbar

n/a

New form toolbar

NewFormToolbar

n/a

List view toolbar

ViewToolbar

n/a

Edit control block menu (per item)

EditControlBlock

n/a

New menu for list and document library view toolbars

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu

NewMenu

Actions menu for list and document library view toolbars

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu

ActionsMenu

Settings menu for list and document library view toolbars

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu

SettingsMenu

Upload documents menu for document libraries

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu

UploadMenu

Site Actions menu

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu

SiteActions

Site Settings Site Collection Administration links

Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings

SiteCollectionAdmin

Site Settings Site Administration links

Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings

SiteAdministration

Site Settings Galleries Links

Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings

Galleries

Site Settings Look and Feel links

Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings

Customization

Site Settings Users and Permissions links

Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings

UsersAndPermissions

Site Actions menu for surveys

Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu


Different actions may require using different CustomAction attributes to identify the menu in which to place a custom menu item. But you may also need to specify other parameters for the action, for example, to specify a version, user permissions required to perform the action, or placement in relation to existing actions in the menu. The custom actions of the following example show a variety of attributes.

URL Tokens

Windows SharePoint Services supports the following tokens with which to start a relative URL:

~site - Web site (SPWeb) relative link.

~sitecollection - site collection (SPSite) relative link.

In addition, you can use the following tokens within a URL:

{ItemId} - Integer ID that represents the item within a list.

{ItemUrl} - URL of the item being acted upon. Only work for documents in libraries. [Not functional in Beta 2]

{ListId} - GUID that represents the list.

{SiteUrl} - URL of the Web site (SPWeb).

{RecurrenceId} - Recurrence index.

Procedures

To add actions to the user interface in a site collection
  1. Create a UserInterfaceLightUp folder within the setup directory at the following location: C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\web server extensions\12\TEMPLATE\FEATURES.

  2. Create a Feature.xml file in the new UserInterfaceLightUp folder to provide the manifest for the feature, such as the following.

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    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
    <Feature Id="GUID" 
        Title="Light Up"
        Description="This example shows how you can light up various areas inside Windows SharePoint Services."
        Version="1.0.0.0"
        Scope="Site"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/">
      <ElementManifests>
        <ElementManifest Location="Lightup.xml" />
      </ElementManifests>
    </Feature>
  3. To replace the GUID placeholder in the previous Id attribute, generate a GUID by running guidgen.exe located in the Local_Drive:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 8\Common7\Tools directory.

  4. Create a Lightup.xml file to define elements for the various actions included within the feature. For the sake of example, the URL for each action points to an .aspx file and passes it a value that identifies the source of the request, as follows:

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    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
    <Elements xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/">
    <!-- Document Library Toolbar New Menu Dropdown -->
      <CustomAction Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.DocLibNewToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        GroupId="NewMenu"
        Rights="ManagePermissions"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu"
        Sequence="1000"
        Title="MY DOCLIB NEW MENU TOOLBAR BUTTON">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?NewMenu"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Document Library Toolbar Upload Menu Dropdown -->
      <CustomAction Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.DocLibUploadToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        GroupId="UploadMenu"
        Rights="ManagePermissions"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu"
        Sequence="1000"
        Title="MY DOCLIB UPLOAD MENU TOOLBAR BUTTON">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?UploadMenu"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Document Library Toolbar Actions Menu Dropdown -->
      <CustomAction Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.DocLibActionsToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        GroupId="ActionsMenu"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu"
        Sequence="1000"
        Title="MY DOCLIB ACTIONS MENU TOOLBAR BUTTON">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?ActionsMenu"/>
    </CustomAction>
    <!-- Document Library Toolbar Settings Menu Dropdown -->
      <CustomAction Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.DocLibSettingsToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        GroupId="SettingsMenu"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu"
        Sequence="1000"
        Title="MY DOCLIB SETTINGS MENU TOOLBAR BUTTON">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?SettingsMenu"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Site Actions Dropdown -->
      <CustomAction Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.SiteActionsToolbar"
        GroupId="SiteActions"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.StandardMenu"
        Sequence="1000"
        Title="MY SITE ACTIONS BUTTON">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?SiteActions"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Per Item Dropdown (ECB)-->
      <CustomAction 
        Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.ECBItemToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        Type="ECBItem" 
        Location="EditControlBlock"
        Sequence="106"
        Title="MY ECB ITEM">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?ECBItem"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Display Form Toolbar -->
      <CustomAction 
        Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.DisplayFormToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        Location="DisplayFormToolbar"
        Sequence="106"
        Title="MY DISPLAY FORM TOOLBAR">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?DisplayFormToolbar"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Edit Form Toolbar -->
      <CustomAction 
        Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.EditFormToolbar"
        RegistrationType="List"
        RegistrationId="101"
        Location="EditFormToolbar"
        Sequence="106"
        Title="MY EDIT FORM TOOLBAR">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?EditFormToolbar"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Site Settings -->
      <CustomAction 
        Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.SiteSettings"
        GroupId="Customization"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.SiteSettings"
        Sequence="106"
        Title="MY SITE SETTINGS LINK">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?Customization"/>
      </CustomAction>
    <!-- Content Type Settings -->
      <CustomAction 
        Id="UserInterfaceLightUp.ContentTypeSettings"
        GroupId="General"
        Location="Microsoft.SharePoint.ContentTypeSettings"
        Sequence="106"
        Title="MY CONTENT TYPE SETTINGS LINK">
        <UrlAction Url="/_layouts/LightupHello.aspx?General"/>
      </CustomAction>
    </Elements>

    Other common GroupId values that can be used include ViewToolbar, ViewSelectorMenu, and PersonalActions (Welcome menu)

  5. Add a LightupHello.aspx file such as the following in the \TEMPLATE\LAYOUTS directory to serve as target for the links created in the previous step.

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    <%@ Page Language="C#"  Inherits="System.Web.UI.Page"%>
    <%
    string clientQuery = Page.ClientQueryString;
    if (clientQuery == "NewMenu")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the new document menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "UploadMenu")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the upload menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "ActionsMenu")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the actions menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "SettingsMenu")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the settings menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "SiteActions")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the Site Actions menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "ECBItem")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the document's context menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "DisplayFormToolbar")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the display item properties form.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "EditFormToolbar")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the edit item properties form.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery == "Customization")
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the Site Settings menu.");
    }
    else if (clientQuery.StartsWith("General"))
    {
        Response.Write("You came from the Content Type Settings menu.");
    }
    %>
  6. At a command prompt, type the following commands to install the Feature in the deployment, activate the Feature on a specified subsite, and then reset Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) so that the changes can take effect.

    Copy Code

       a. stsadm -o installfeature -filename UserInterfaceLightUp\feature.xml
       b. stsadm -o activatefeature -filename UserInterfaceLightUp\feature.xml -url http://Server/Site/Subsite
       c. iisreset
  7. To see the various custom actions that you have added, navigate to the following locations from the home page of a Web site in the site collection:

    1. Click Site Actions to see the new action on the Site Actions menu.

    2. Click Site Settings on the Site Actions menu to see a new action in the Look and Feel section of the Site Settings page.

    3. Navigate to a document library and open each menu on the toolbar to see a new action on each menu.

    4. In a document library that contains items, click the down arrow for an item to see the new action on the edit control block menu.

    5. On the edit control block menu for an item, click View Properties and Edit Properties to see new actions on the Display form and Edit form toolbars.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007 10:52:23 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [3]   MOSS  | 
 Monday, March 26, 2007

Walkthroughs and webcast demonstrations on how the new Search works.

Enjoy

SharePoint Server 2007 Presentations: Enterprise Search Deep Dives

Monday, March 26, 2007 9:07:10 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [0]   MOSS  | 

yeah baby :)
I wrote before Christmas how these were coming out....grab them here.....


http://www.microsoft.com/technet/windowsserver/sharepoint/wssapps/templates/default.mspx
--- snip ---
Application Templates Available for Download
All forty application templates are available in English. The twenty server admin templates are also available in ten additional languages: French, Italian, German, Spanish, Portuguese (BR), Japanese, Korean, Hebrew, Chinese (simplified), and Chinese (traditional).

Package Downloads

In addition to the following individual download links, you can get the Application Templates for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 in these three convenient packages. Registration is required for package downloads.

Site Admin Templates: Get all 20 Site Admin templates as a single package download. Available in English only.

Server Admin Templates: Get all 20 Server Admin templates as a single package download. Multiple languages available.

All 40 Application Templates : Get all 40 Application Templates for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 as a single package download. Package only includes English versions.

Site Admin Templates

arrow
Board of Directors

arrow
Business Performance Reporting

arrow
Case Management for Government Agencies

arrow
Classroom Management

arrow
Clinical Trial Initiation and Management

arrow
Competitive Analysis Site

arrow
Discussion Database

arrow
Disputed Invoice Management

arrow
Employee Activities Site

arrow
Employee Self-Service Benefits

arrow
Employee Training Scheduling and Materials

arrow
Equity Research

arrow
Integrated Marketing Campaign Tracking

arrow
Manufacturing Process Management

arrow
New Store Opening

arrow
Product and Marketing Requirements Planning

arrow
Request for Proposal

arrow
Sports League

arrow
Team Work Site

arrow
Timecard Management

Server Admin Templates

arrow
Absence Request and Vacation Schedule Management

arrow
Budgeting and Tracking Multiple Projects

arrow
Bug Database

arrow
Call Center

arrow
Change Request Management

arrow
Compliance Process Support Site

arrow
Contacts Management

arrow
Document Library and Review

arrow
Event Planning

arrow
Expense Reimbursement and Approval

arrow
Help Desk

arrow
Inventory Tracking

arrow
IT Team Workspace

arrow
Job Requisition and Interview Management

arrow
Knowledge Base

arrow
Lending Library

arrow
Physical Asset Tracking and Management

arrow
Project Tracking Workspace

arrow
Room and Equipment Reservations

arrow
Sales Lead Pipeline

Monday, March 26, 2007 9:02:37 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [0]   MOSS  | 
 Sunday, March 18, 2007

Hey folks - just when you wondering what to do MOSS and when should you jump on board and get cracking....

Microsoft has this great event in Sydney.

Angus Logan is chief organiser and doing a great job....here's a snippet from his blog

--------------------snip-----------------

The Conference

This exclusive Microsoft event is the third and final of three global SharePoint Conferences, following Seattle and Berlin. This world-class, two-day conference, to be held at the Hilton Hotel in Sydney from May 15-16, will showcase the latest innovations, features and functionality for the 2007 SharePoint products and technologies.

The conference will provide an unprecedented opportunity for customers and partners in the Asia Pacific region to meet and network with Microsoft Office System product development teams, fellow IT professionals and architects, and partners.

With only 500 places available, this event is not to be missed!

Expert Presenters

SharePoint experts from the Asia Pacific region and members of the SharePoint product group such as Derek Burney (General Manager), Mike Fitzmaurice and Joel Oleson (both Senior Technical Product Managers), will provide attendees with technical information and demos for the latest release of SharePoint products and technologies: Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007, Windows SharePoint Services 3.0, and Office SharePoint Designer 2007.

And for the first time in Australia, information on Microsoft Office PerformancePoint Server 2007 will be presented.

Brand New Deep Dive Content

Multiple tracks focused on specific solution technologies including Collaboration, Enterprise Search and Portals, Business Intelligence and Enterprise Content Management will be offered. Plus, there will be additional opportunities for attendees to learn about, and get hands on experience with, SharePoint products and technologies.

Technical “how to” breakout sessions covering subjects such as architecture, security, integration, deployment, migration, management and scalability, will help attendees develop, customise, integrate and build powerful, enterprise-ready solutions with SharePoint products and technologies.

** UPDATE - Plug about the Cabana Sessions **

Instead of just the normal "break out" sessions we will be running cabana sessions during the lunch break. These will typically be run by Microsoft partners about solutions or problems they have overcome - hopefully really cool stuff in good 30 minute sessions.

Event Details

Dates: 15-16 May 2007
Venue: Hilton Hotel in Sydney, Australia
Cost: $549.00 for two days (includes registration, Welcome Night, conference sessions, and evening entertainment event)

Save the Date

Registrations for this conference will open soon (look for an announcement on this blog), and seats will be strictly limited. Block off May 15-16 on your calendar right now, so you won’t miss out!

What about Partner Sponsorship?

** UPDATE FROM Nick Mayhew ***

"If you are an Australian Gold/Cert partner then you can contact your account manager. If you are a partner HQ'd outside Australia, and interested in hearing about sponsorship packages, then you should contact one of my team, Tina Thalmeier. Tina dot Thalmeier AT the usual microsoft.com"

Sunday, March 18, 2007 8:03:31 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [2]   Events | Office  | 
 Friday, March 16, 2007

Well I'm making my way back from the MVP Summit and we got to spend nearly 2 days bending the ears of the BizTalk product team - the correct term now is The Connected Services Division (CSD) which includes todays technologies of: BizTalk, WF, WCF, .NET Framework and Orcas - so all these things are just 'going' to work going forward.

Here's the things that I'm allowed to talk about....

MVP Summit Day 1 - Registration

  • for the previous 4 days I had been skiing up and around Whistler in some fantastic snow with my cousin. What an experience!!! First time there.
  • Seattle, cold and raining but it's fantastic to be here as there's a buzz in the air. A thought did cross my mind of "How are we going to have a conversation at this Summit if there are more than 1 MVP in the room?" - if you've ever been 'lucky' enough to have 3 or more MVPs in a room....I'm sure you'd be able to finish all your lunch before you could get a word in edgeways.
  • Met up with some great fellow BizTalk MVPs (Alan Smith and Charles Young). Charles and I worked together when I was back in the UK and it's great to hear that he's stalking his 12 yr old daughter boyfriend and the deeply troubled when the words "I love you" came out during a phone call he was listening in on. :) - looks like I've got all that ahead of me :)
  • Caught up with MVP Borty and the crew and we went to our APAC regional dinner that evening.
  • One of the highlights of dinner was all the Korean MVPs did a Taekwondo demonstration (I'm sure it's on YouTube by now) of breaking boards. There was also some karaoke going on in Japanese (I think) - this one guy was great. It was sort of a 'Red Faces' night. We then crashed the Windows Mobile MVP Party at Gamesworks.....get's fuzzy from there

MVP Summit Day 2 - KeyNote + Joint Sessions

  • what an experience! Bill Gates gives a keynote on MS and all things, then opens up the keynote to 1 hour of Q&A to all the MVPs.
  • Bill copped a couple of Salvos from MVPs (who I reckon wouldnt be MVPs next year :) but in true Bill style put his poker face on and smiled and answered the questions. Not flustered at all.
  • The group all called him "Bill", some called him "Mr Gates" and the Japanese MVPs called him "Mr. Bill" during all the Q&A.
  • He fielded questions like "What's your favourite product?", "What hasnt performed...". Something that sticks out in my mind is when a guy came to the microphone and thanked Bill for enabling him to have a career in computers so he could provide for his family (I'm thinking where's the question..). He then says "while cleaning out the garage he came across a computer manual that his dad had when he was 8" - the manual as it turned out was the very first manual for the pre-cursor to MSDos that Bill's then company had created. You could even get Bill on a support number in there! (I'm thinking that's gotta be worth a fair bit) The MVP then ASKED BILL TO SIGN his book!!!! Bill couldnt refuse and $$ just turned into $$$$$ for the book - very funny.
  • For the next session I attended the Developer Division Roadmap delivered by the Program Group VP - S Somasegar (Soma). Soma spoke about Orcas, .NET 3.5 and additional plans for TFS capturing more business data/information within the process.
    Soma then talked about WPF/e and the Friction free deployment capabilities. Brian Goldfarb then jumped up and did a great demo on WPF/e with inking and working with rich content within WPF all delivered down via the browser. Some very cool things in the future are instore. One thing I will say - regardless of how it's delivered and what you do with it.....you still need good original content in the first place. Videos, Images etc. They can be manipulated easily, but originally it needs to be there.
    All in all a great session filling in alot of the medium-long term visions.
  • I then caught a session on LINQ with Anders Hejlsberg. Anders then showed us some of the up and coming XML features with C# and VB.NET 9.0 - autogenerating LINQ code from XML! All very nice.
  • We all then went to the Museum of Flight that night where we got to play in flight simulators and go for a walk back in time. I spent some time getting to know a fellow BTS MVP Alan Smith - he's based in the UK and does a fair bit of travel spreading the news in the land of BizTalk.

MVP Summit Day 3 - Deep Dive Sessions around BizTalk and Connected Systems

  • For this day we were off the Microsoft Campus and for the most part I was based in the Adams room within building 43. We setup camp there for the day.
  • The first session was delivered by Sonu Arora and Jesus Rodriguez talking about the new LOB Adapter SDK based of WCF Services. Essentially creating 'adapters' had been an exercise repeated in multiple application environments.....but!! not anymore. The adapter creation process has been pushed down into the .NET Framework and 'adapters' are available for all applications......this means.....using the LOB Adapter SDK you dont even need BizTalk to use it!!! Sonu demonstrated some great demos and one of the major differences I picked up here from a traditional WCF Service is that these new adapters have the capability to perform dynamic schema lookups. Essentially have one WCF Service that is able to return multiple contracts (many hundreds in some cases). A very good session.
  • The next session was delivered by Gruia Pitigoi-Aron. He focused on extending this new adapter framework with a couple of Custom WCF Channels that BizTalk communicates to throughthe WCF Custom Adapter in R2. By controlling the WCF Channel (c.f. to a pipeline where we have an entry...then an exit) we are able to loop, correlate and send out multiple request/responses within one channel. All while BTS is calling an Adapter. I'll have to start looking into this 'out in the wild' to get the true gist of what's going on. It's a step closer for BTS to play harmoniously with WCF. One thing I do remember from the way WCF Channels are called through the custom WCF Adapter is that BTS will call the Async Channel methods of BeginRequest, EndRequest + the sync of ProcessRequest.
  • The next session was given by Marty Wasznicky and advanced DR for BizTalk. He had a great setup on his laptop, 5 servers, 2 biztalk, 2 sql and an SSO. Through the demo he stopped and started various services to simulate the failing of various components within BizTalk.  At this point in the game, SQL 2005 database mirroring is not supported as this doesnt play nicely with distributed MSDTC transactions native to BTS. Some good indepth stuff on messageboxdb, how instances are locked by a MessageAgent running in various instances.
  • Lunch :)
  • We then had a session from Tapas Nayak demonstrating a real life implementation of the SAP Adapter based on the LOB Adapter SDK. The main take away from this was that there was over 300 different contracts that the SAP adapter could return for consumption from the client. Dynamic contract lookups and caching services came to be the focus for better flexibility and performance. Very cool adapter framework.
  • Then Pravin Indurkar gave us an insight into the next Gen WF and WCF which will be part of .NET 3.5. The integration between these two technologies is made seemless now. There is a WorkflowHostService and things just get easier from there. WorkflowInstanceID is now part of the native WCF Operation Context that gets passed between the two worlds.....makes life very easy. This allows for 'conversations' to be had between WCF Services and WF workflows. Also long running WFs can find a return path back out of the service even if the channel/connection is closed. If I was a betting man I'd be saying that alot of the underlying functionality here, has been modelled off BizTalk
  • Next my good friend was Paul Andrew was up, a MS product manager, spoke about WF vs BTS. It's always and either/or type message, never a 'you know what, these two technologies can live in harmony!'
  • Next session was delivered by Brad Paris and Tiho Tarnavski - "WCF and WF BAM interceptor extensions in R2". The essence behind the new interceptors is that they piggyback off the WF tracking infrastructure. Which is similar to BTS and the TDDS Service controlling the movement and population of BAM information from within BizTalk. Once again to use these interceptors we dont need BizTalk. When creating a BAM EventStream using the BAM Client APIs, we usually pass a connect string to the MessageBoxDB. With these new interceptors we pass a connect string to the BAM Primary Import Database. The streams that WCF and WF use are DirectStreams and not buffered Event Streams. At this point there is no support from the TPE (or equivalent tool) so we have to hand craft a large XML file to get the Interceptor configured. I look at it and think....I reckon I'll just use the BAM APIs directly......but I suppose that's not the point :)
  • When I was preparing RFID bits for the BPM Conference last year in October I got well timed help from Anush Kumar. I met Anush for the first time face to face - genuinly a great guy! He gave a great presentation on RFID and the new Microsoft RFID Services framework. He also told me that fish in Malaysia may be RFID tagged!!
  • That evening I went to the MS Company Store and cash in some chips - very nice. Then we had dinner with the product team which was great to kick some tyres with the crew. Great to see all you guys.

     

Friday, March 16, 2007 3:56:57 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | Insights | Events  | 

The future is bright - setting up Tokens that are visible across 'The Cloud' is already done!

http://sts.labs.live