From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bassem.w.jamaleddine/IBM-San-Fancisco-Project
Initial release1995; 29 years ago (1995)

Bassem.w.jamaleddine ( talk) 06:35, 30 June 2024 (UTC)

IBM San Francisco Project (SF or SanFranciso) was started in March 1995 and released on August 1997. As WebSphere v4 (supporting J2EE 1.3) was released in 2001, IBM put an end to the San Francisco Project.

SanFrancisco was a shareable framework that consists of distributed objects infrastructure and a set of application business components. IBM SanFrancisco is a stack framework that is build on three layers of reusable code written in Java that can be altered and expanded by application server developers. The stack consists of three layers:

– At the bottom, the foundation layer infrastructure that run as services to provide: transactions, collections, administration, and conflict control.

– Common Business Object Layer that provides implementations of business objects that are common to more than multiple domains

– Core Business Process layer that provides business objects and default business logic for selected domains: warehouse management, order management, accounts receivable, accounts payable, and general ledger.


San-francisco-layers
San-francisco-warehouse-management

Design

IBM San Francisco Project Startup Processes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bassem.w.jamaleddine/IBM-San-Fancisco-Project
Initial release1995; 29 years ago (1995)

Bassem.w.jamaleddine ( talk) 06:35, 30 June 2024 (UTC)

IBM San Francisco Project (SF or SanFranciso) was started in March 1995 and released on August 1997. As WebSphere v4 (supporting J2EE 1.3) was released in 2001, IBM put an end to the San Francisco Project.

SanFrancisco was a shareable framework that consists of distributed objects infrastructure and a set of application business components. IBM SanFrancisco is a stack framework that is build on three layers of reusable code written in Java that can be altered and expanded by application server developers. The stack consists of three layers:

– At the bottom, the foundation layer infrastructure that run as services to provide: transactions, collections, administration, and conflict control.

– Common Business Object Layer that provides implementations of business objects that are common to more than multiple domains

– Core Business Process layer that provides business objects and default business logic for selected domains: warehouse management, order management, accounts receivable, accounts payable, and general ledger.


San-francisco-layers
San-francisco-warehouse-management

Design

IBM San Francisco Project Startup Processes

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook