Integration Middleware

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What Does Integration Middleware Mean?

Integration middleware is the alternate term used for middleware as the purpose of middleware is mainly integration. Integration middleware represents software systems that offer runtime services for communications, integration application execution, monitoring and operations.

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The key function of middleware is to help make application development simpler. This is done by offering common programming abstractions, covering up heterogeneity, delivering fundamental operating systems and hardware, and masking low-level programming details.

Techopedia Explains Integration Middleware

Middleware is a software that links two separate applications or is commonly used to illustrate different products that function as a glue between two separate applications. For instance, there are various middleware products that establish a connection between a Web server and a database system. This lets users request data from the database by means of forms shown on a Web browser. In return, the Web server returns dynamic Web pages according to the user’s requests and profile.

Conventionally, integration middleware is classified based on domains, which are defined by the types of resources that are incorporated:

  • Cloud Integration: Integrates with and also between the cloud services, cloud-based applications (SaaS), private clouds, trade hubs and other typical cloud resources through Web services and standard B2B communication strategies (FTP, AS2, etc.)
  • B2B Integration: Integrates customer, provider and various alternative partner interfaces with various data resources and company-managed applications
  • Application Integration (A2A): Integrates various company-managed applications together, including cloud-based and remote systems
  • Data Integration: Integrates business data resources, such as databases and files, over business and operational intelligence systems

Middleware is often described as plumbing because it links both sides of an application and also transfers data between them. Some standard middleware categories include:

  • Enterprise service buses (ESBs)
  • Transaction processing (TP) monitors
  • Distributed computing environment (DCE)
  • Remote procedure call (RPC) systems
  • Object request brokers (ORBs)
  • Message passing
  • Database access systems
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Margaret Rouse
Technology expert
Margaret Rouse
Technology expert

Margaret is an award-winning writer and educator known for her ability to explain complex technical topics to a non-technical business audience. Over the past twenty years, her IT definitions have been published by Que in an encyclopedia of technology terms and cited in articles in the New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, ZDNet, PC Magazine, and Discovery Magazine. She joined Techopedia in 2011. Margaret’s idea of ​​a fun day is to help IT and business professionals to learn to speak each other’s highly specialized languages.