Last modified by Danniar Firdausy on 2024/09/18 21:32

From version 7.2
edited by Danniar Firdausy
on 2024/09/11 20:45
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 7.1
edited by Erik Bakker
on 2023/09/08 12:48
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Author
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@
1 -XWiki.dfirdausy
1 +XWiki.ebakker
Content
... ... @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
26 26  * Are there dependencies?
27 27  * Will the failure of integration block another?
28 28  
29 -At first, we need to consider whether there are dependencies or whether each integration can perform its job without being influenced by other integrations. In scenarios of no dependence, there is also no risk of dependencies creating a cascade of problems. However, in situations where there are dependencies, one action could impact other integrations. An excellent example in a messaging environment is asynchronous routing. All asynchronous data traffic is passing the asynchronous routing and therefore changes to the routing directly impact all asynchronous integrations. So considering how, if and when to deploy an asynchronous routing is something worth thinking about.
29 +At first, need to consider whether there are dependencies or whether each integration can perform its job without being influenced by other integrations. In scenarios of no dependence, there is also no risk of dependencies creating a cascade of problems. However, in situations where there are dependencies, one action could impact other integrations. An excellent example in a messaging environment is asynchronous routing. All asynchronous data traffic is passing the asynchronous routing and therefore changes to the routing directly impact all asynchronous integrations. So considering how, if and when to deploy an asynchronous routing is something worth thinking about.
30 30  
31 31  The same applies to when you deploy other parts of the solution that could impact different integrations. Always ask yourself whether the quality of the answer will be upheld by the action you are about to perform.
32 32