function readOnly(count){ }
Starting November 20, the site will be set to read-only. On December 4, 2023,
forum discussions will move to the Trailblazer Community.
+ Start a Discussion
SFDC kidsSFDC kids 

ESB in Integration

Hi All,

I don't understand about ESB Integration in salesforce, can you  please explain about this

Thanks
Best Answer chosen by SFDC kids
mukesh guptamukesh gupta
Hi ,

An Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) :-

is fundamentally an architecture. It is a set of rules and principles for integrating numerous applications together over a bus-like infrastructure. ESB products enable users to build this type of architecture, but vary in the way that they do it and the capabilities that they offer. The core concept of the ESB architecture is that you integrate different applications by putting a communication bus between them and then enable each application to talk to the bus. This decouples systems from each other, allowing them to communicate without dependency on or knowledge of other systems on the bus. The concept of ESB was born out of the need to move away from point-to-point integration, which becomes brittle and hard to manage over time. Point-to-point integration results in custom integration code being spread among applications with no central way to monitor or troubleshoot. This is often referred to as "spaghetti code" and does not scale because it creates tight dependencies between applications.


User-added image
if you need any assistanse, Please let me know!!


Kindly mark my solution as the best answer if it helps you.

Thanks
Mukesh

All Answers

mukesh guptamukesh gupta
Hi ,

An Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) :-

is fundamentally an architecture. It is a set of rules and principles for integrating numerous applications together over a bus-like infrastructure. ESB products enable users to build this type of architecture, but vary in the way that they do it and the capabilities that they offer. The core concept of the ESB architecture is that you integrate different applications by putting a communication bus between them and then enable each application to talk to the bus. This decouples systems from each other, allowing them to communicate without dependency on or knowledge of other systems on the bus. The concept of ESB was born out of the need to move away from point-to-point integration, which becomes brittle and hard to manage over time. Point-to-point integration results in custom integration code being spread among applications with no central way to monitor or troubleshoot. This is often referred to as "spaghetti code" and does not scale because it creates tight dependencies between applications.


User-added image
if you need any assistanse, Please let me know!!


Kindly mark my solution as the best answer if it helps you.

Thanks
Mukesh
This was selected as the best answer
SFDC kidsSFDC kids
Thanks mukesh , this infomation is really very helpful