Not logged in : Login

About: Enterprise messaging system     Goto   Sponge   Distinct   Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbpedia-owl:MusicGenre, within Data Space : ods-qa.openlinksw.com:8896 associated with source document(s)

An enterprise messaging system (EMS) or messaging system in brief is a set of published enterprise-wide standards that allows organizations to send semantically precise messages between computer systems. EMS systems promote loosely coupled architectures that allow changes in the formats of messages to have minimum impact on message subscribers. EMS systems are facilitated by the use of structured messages (such as using XML or JSON), and appropriate protocols, such as DDS, MSMQ, AMQP or SOAP with web services. EMS usually takes into account the following considerations:

AttributesValues
type
sameAs
wasDerivedFrom
dbpedia-owl:abstract
  • An enterprise messaging system (EMS) or messaging system in brief is a set of published enterprise-wide standards that allows organizations to send semantically precise messages between computer systems. EMS systems promote loosely coupled architectures that allow changes in the formats of messages to have minimum impact on message subscribers. EMS systems are facilitated by the use of structured messages (such as using XML or JSON), and appropriate protocols, such as DDS, MSMQ, AMQP or SOAP with web services. EMS usually takes into account the following considerations: 1. * Security: Messages must be encrypted if they travel over public interfaces. Messages must be authenticated or digitally signed if the receiver is to have confidence that the messages have not been tampered with in transit. 2. * Routing: Messages need to be routed efficiently from the sender to the receiver. Intermediate nodes may need to route the messages if the body of the message is encrypted. 3. * Metadata: The body of the document contains information that must be unambiguously interpreted. Metadata registries should be used to create precise definitions for each data element. 4. * Subscription: Systems should be able to subscribe to all messages that match a specific pattern. Messages with a specific content may be routed differently. For example, some messages may have different priority or security policies. 5. * Policy: Enterprise messaging systems should provide some consideration for a centralized policy of messages such as what classes or roles of users can access different fields of any message. EMS are also known as Message-Oriented Middleware (MOM)
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageExternalLink
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageID
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageRevisionID
comment
  • An enterprise messaging system (EMS) or messaging system in brief is a set of published enterprise-wide standards that allows organizations to send semantically precise messages between computer systems. EMS systems promote loosely coupled architectures that allow changes in the formats of messages to have minimum impact on message subscribers. EMS systems are facilitated by the use of structured messages (such as using XML or JSON), and appropriate protocols, such as DDS, MSMQ, AMQP or SOAP with web services. EMS usually takes into account the following considerations:
label
  • Enterprise messaging system
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
described by
topic
http://purl.org/li...ics/gold/hypernym
Subject
is primary topic of
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageLength
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageWikiLink
is sameAs of
is topic of
is dbpedia-owl:wikiPageDisambiguates of
is dbpedia-owl:wikiPageRedirects of
is primary topic of
is dbpedia-owl:wikiPageWikiLink of
is inDataset of
is dbpedia-owl:genre of
Faceted Search & Find service v1.17_git55 as of Mar 01 2021


Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:       RDF       ODATA       Microdata      About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 08.03.3322 as of Mar 14 2022, on Linux (x86_64-generic-linux-glibc25), Single-Server Edition (7 GB total memory)
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2024 OpenLink Software