SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Supply Chain Management (SCM)

CA's Wily tool tracks SOA, Web services transactions

CA's Wily tool tracks SOA, Web services transactions

By:  Denise Dubie  On: 26 Apr 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

CA has added software to its service oriented architecture (SOA) management arsenal that company officials say will let IT operations staff track the performance of loosely coupled SOA applications across production networks.

COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

CA has added software to its service oriented architecture (SOA) management arsenal that company officials say will let IT operations staff track the performance of loosely coupled SOA applications across production networks.

CA Wily SOA Manager software monitors the performance and availability of Web services and other components in an SOA environment. The software is an extension to Wily Technology’s Introscope, a product that CA picked up when it acquired the company. It enables the auto discovery of SOA components, such as enterprise service buses, portals and Web services.

According to the company, the software can map SOA transactions, dependencies among the various components in the SOA environment and alert IT operations staff when performance degrades.

“A lot of our customers are looking for a full audit trail of Web services transactions, and despite their best efforts in the design phase, transactions never flow as cleanly as they were planned to,” said Karen Jaworski, product manager for CA Wily’s SOA and Web services management products.

“We are able to report on entire services, the steps that have been completed and the steps that have yet to be completed and may not be completed due to performance issues.”

CA and competitors such as Amberpoint, HP and IBM have been stepping up their SOA management games of late, according to industry watchers, because the nature of a SOA environment demands automation and dynamic management capabilities, not present in traditional application management software.

“With SOA, management isn’t like traditional run-time management asking if the service is up or down,” said Ron Schmelzer, a senior analyst at ZapThink. “The nature of the environment is so dynamic, operations staff needs to know if these changes to the services will or will not break the components making up the service.” Software to manage SOA applications and transactions needs to be able to track change as quickly as the components comprising the services change.

“Customers in some cases have postponed their SOA applications from going into production for close to a year because they are concerned they can’t manage the overhead of all the components and dependencies,” Jaworski said. “They fear becoming consumed with this additional processing.”

For instance, CA Wily SOA Manager will monitor “detailed transaction stacks” from multiple machines and pull that data together into a consolidated view and correlate for IT operations staff how transaction performance translates into overall end-to-end service performance. The company says that process could be too manual to scale with products unable to automatically track SOA components at the transaction layer.

Introscope includes server software and distributed software agents. SOA Manager would deploy as an extension to the agent software on managed servers.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 2012   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Denise Dubie Denise Dubie is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Info-Tech Research Group
Info-Tech Research GroupWhile software agents that track specific servers, network hardware and other devices have been around for decades, several vendors have recently developed more sophisticated systems that can trace the root cause of specific problems. Choose the right one for you
Thin clients and open source the green IT winners
Thin clients and open source the green IT winnersGartner estimates that IT contributes two percent of global carbon dioxide emissions and predicts by 2010, environment-related issues will be among the top five IT management concerns
Self-managing data centres – the new HP focus
Self-managing data centres – the new HP focus HP is taking a whole new approach to how you build data centres says Ann Livermore, executive vice-president of the Technology Solutions Group at HP. In this exclusive interview Livermore outlines how software can automate IT to create data centres that are a lot easier to manage.
Me and my digital shadow
it managers are about as eager to hear future data growth projections as canadians are to hear about another snowfall.emc this week published the results of an idc study it commissioned that says the so-called
blog comments powered by Disqus