Event Processing for Business Organizing the Real Time Enterprise

By David C. Luckham
John Wiley & Sons November 2011

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780470534854
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Publication
November 2011
Format
Hardback , 288 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

Find out how Events Processing (EP) works and how it can work for you

Business Event Processing: An Introduction and Strategy Guide thoroughly describes what EP is, how to use it, and how it relates to other popular information technology architectures such as Service Oriented Architecture.

  • Explains how sense and response architectures are being applied with tremendous results to businesses throughout the world and shows businesses how they can get started implementing EP
  • Shows how to choose business event processing technology to suit your specific business needs and how to keep costs of adopting it down
  • Provides practical guidance on how EP is best integrated into an overall IT strategy and how its architectural styles differ from more conventional approaches

This book reveals how to make the most advantageous use of event processing technology to develop real time actionable management information from the events flowing through your company's networks or resulting from your business activities. It explains to managers and executives what it means for a business enterprise to be event-driven, what business event processing technology is, and how to use it.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1: Event Processing and the Survival of the Modern Enterprise

Four Basic Questions about Events

What are Events and Which Ones Are Important?

Why Invest in Event Processing?

Know How Well You're Doing

Use All Event Sources

Detect When What You Need to Know Happens

Event Processing in Use

The Human Element and Other Sources of Errors

Extract What You Want to Know

Getting Started

Chapter 2: Sixty Years of Event Processing

Event-Driven Simulation

Networks

Active Databases

Middleware

The Enterprise Service Bus

Chaos in the Marketing of Information Systems

Service Oriented Architecture

Event-Driven Architecture

Summary: Event Processing 1950–2010

Chapter 3: First Concepts in Event Processing

New Technology Begets New Problems

What Is an Event?

Event Clouds

Levels of Events and Event Analysis

Remark on Standards for Business Events

Event Streams

Processing the Event Cloud

Complex Event Processing and Systems that Use It

Discussion: Immutability of Events

Summary

Chapter 4: The Rise of Commercial Event Processing

The Dawn of CEP

Four Stages of CEP

Simple CEP (1999 – 2007)

CEP versus Custom Coding

Creeping CEP (2004 - 2012)

Business Activity Monitoring

Awareness and Education in Event Processing

Languages for Event Processing

Dashboards and Human-Computer Interfaces

Human-Computer Interfaces

CEP Becomes a Recognized Information Technology (2009 – 2020)

Event Processing Standards

Ubiquitous CEP

Chapter 5: Markets and Emerging Markets for CEP

Market Areas

Financial Systems, Operations, and Services

Fraud Detection

Transportation

Security and Command and Control

Command and Control for Security

Healthcare

Energy

Summary

Chapter 6: Patterns of Events

Events and Event Objects

Overloading Two Meanings

Patterns and Pattern Matching

Single Event Patterns

Processing Patterns by Machine

Patterns of Multiple Events using Operators

Event Patterns and State

Event Patterns and Time

Causality between Events

Repetitive and Unbounded Behavior

Requirements for an Event Pattern Language

Correctness and Other Questions

Chapter 7: Making Sense of Chaos in Real Time: Part 1

Event Type Spaces

Restricting the Types of Event Inputs May not be an Option

The Expanding Input Principle: Always Plan for New Types of Event Inputs and Event Outputs

Architecting Event Processing Strategies

Gross Filters

Prioritization: Split Streaming, Topics, Sentiments, and Other Attributes

Complex Filtering and Prioritization Using Event Patterns

Summary

Chapter 8: Making Sense of Chaos in Real Time: Part 2

Abstract Events and Views

Levels of Abstraction and Views

Organizing Views

Computing Abstractions by Event Pattern Maps

Computable Event Hierarchies

Flexibility of Hierarchy Definitions

Drill Down and Event Analysis

Summary: Dealing with Information Overload

Chapter 9: The Future of Event Processing

Taking Stock

The Evolution of Holistic Event Processing Systems

Crossing Boundaries

The Beginnings of Holistic Event Processing Systems

Future Air Travel Management Systems

Monitoring Human Activities

Pandemic Watch Systems

Monitoring the Consequences

Solving Gridlock in the Metropolis

Monitoring Your Personal Information Footprint

Summary: The Future of Complex Event Processing

Appendix: Glossary of Terminology: Event Processing Technical Society
(Event Processing Glossary – Version 2.0)

About the Author

Index

About the Author

David Luckham is a Research Professor (emeritus) at Stanford University. Luckham’s research and consulting activities in software technology include multi-processing and business processing languages, event-driven systems, complex event processing, program verification, systems architecture modeling and simulation, and automated deduction and reasoning systems. He is a lecturer and keynote speaker at select international conferences and congresses and the author of The Power of Events.

Out of stock
This title is currently unavailable for purchase.
  • Free HK shipping over HK$1,000
  • International shipping to 35+ countries