피드 구독

Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging 2.0 shipped on June 23, announced as part of the overall Red Hat Enterprise MRG 2.0 announcement http://red.ht/jVvqsM. Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging is a strategic standalone messaging platform that supports the Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP), an initiative supported by a range of vendors and end-user organizations. With support for AMQP, Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging offers interoperability in a range of different application environments that include Java, JMS, .NET and Python. For more information on the specifications and the technology, check out the AMQP.org website or take a look at the Enterprise MRG Messaging documentation at www.redhat.com/mrg/messaging/.

AMQP bills itself as “the Internet Protocol for Business Messaging” due to its overarching goal to create a new foundation for distributed computing that is “Internet-aware” in terms of capabilities and scope, while addressing the “real world” requirements of business – such as assured message delivery and message security.

To be the Internet protocol for business messaging also means offering the kind of performance that can address new requirements. Enterprise MRG Messaging’s ability to leverage the underlying Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating system has direct benefits here. And when you consider how nicely we support virtualized configurations, with little of the overhead that plagues other offerings, the story becomes all the more attractive.

Delivering an enterprise-ready messaging platform also means support for different application environments, because modern businesses are not homogeneous entities – they have a mix of environments that should be tied together seamlessly and cost-effectively. It also means that what is an “application” is changing. Ten years ago, application integration meant connecting the order entry system with the inventory system, or the sales system with the customer service application. It was a world dominated by traditional business applications. Of course, these applications still exist, but applications in the modern age are a whole lot more. Anyone reading this posting probably has a smart phone within arm's reach – and what makes that device “intelligent” is the ability to run applications.

But beyond the applications that assist mobile users, there is a whole new category of applications. More and more we are seeing intelligent embedded devices that might be in a fixed location (transformers and sensors in a “smart grid”) or highly mobile (telematics for vehicle tracking, satellite telemetry). Sending out signals is of little use, unless you can capture the information. They are, for all intents and purposes, embedded applications that need to be tied into the enterprise infrastructure. To date, that effort has been much too complex and expensive, pointing to the need for an open, cost-effective platform like Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging.

Lastly, there is the cloud. Open integration is fundamental to Red Hat's cloud initiative and Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging is an important element in that effort.

If you are not familiar with Red Hat Enterprise MRG Messaging, you can read more here. As our announcement hints, there's a lot happening. As a way to knit together a range of different application environments, messaging truly forms a critical piece of the distributed computing infrastructure.

If you missed the June 23 announcement, you can watch the replay of our webcast here.


저자 소개

UI_Icon-Red_Hat-Close-A-Black-RGB

채널별 검색

automation icon

오토메이션

기술, 팀, 인프라를 위한 IT 자동화 최신 동향

AI icon

인공지능

고객이 어디서나 AI 워크로드를 실행할 수 있도록 지원하는 플랫폼 업데이트

open hybrid cloud icon

오픈 하이브리드 클라우드

하이브리드 클라우드로 더욱 유연한 미래를 구축하는 방법을 알아보세요

security icon

보안

환경과 기술 전반에 걸쳐 리스크를 감소하는 방법에 대한 최신 정보

edge icon

엣지 컴퓨팅

엣지에서의 운영을 단순화하는 플랫폼 업데이트

Infrastructure icon

인프라

세계적으로 인정받은 기업용 Linux 플랫폼에 대한 최신 정보

application development icon

애플리케이션

복잡한 애플리케이션에 대한 솔루션 더 보기

Original series icon

오리지널 쇼

엔터프라이즈 기술 분야의 제작자와 리더가 전하는 흥미로운 스토리