Oracle Fusion Architecture
Oracle Fusion Architecture is a technology reference architecture or blueprint from Oracle Corporation for building applications.[1] Oracle Fusion Applications is build on top of the Oracle Fusion Middleware technology stack using Oracle's Fusion Architecture as blueprint.
Oracle Fusion Architecture is not a product, and can be used without licensing it from Oracle.
Details
Oracle Fusion Architecture provides an open architecture ecosystem, which is service- & event-enabled.[1] Many enterprises use this open, pluggable architecture ecosystem to write Oracle Fusion Applications, or even third-party applications on top of Oracle Fusion Middleware.[2][3]
Oracle Fusion Architecture is based on the following core principles:
- Model Driven: For applications, business processes and business information
- Service & Event- enabled: For extensible, modular, flexible applications and processes
- Information Centric: For complete and consistent, actionable, real-time intelligence
- Grid-Ready: Must be scalable, available, secure, manageable on low-cost hardware
- Standards-based: Must be open, pluggable in a heterogeneous environment
Oracle Fusion Applications that can be written on Oracle Fusion Middleware using the Oracle Fusion Architecture ecosystem,[4] were released in September, 2010.[5][6]
See also
- Oracle Fusion Middleware
- Oracle Fusion Applications
- Interface (computing)
- Enterprise service bus
- Fusion CRM
References
- ^ a b "Oracle Fusion Middleware and Oracle Fusion Applications : Overview". Retrieved 10 March 2012.
- ^ "Oracle Fusion Architecture and Oracle Fusion Applications" (PDF). Oracle. Retrieved 28 June 2012. An Oracle Technical White Paper 2006
- ^ "Oracle Fusion Applications: Changing the Game Oracle's next-generation applications will set new standards for business". middleware.org. Retrieved 28 June 2012.by Alan Joch, November 2010
- ^ "Enterprise Service Bus/Service Oriented Architecture". middleware.org. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
- ^ "Oracle officially launches its Fusion apps". 20 September 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ^ Kanaracus, Chris (5 October 2011). "Oracle Fusion Applications Are Finally Generally Available". pcworld.com. Retrieved 7 October 2011.