We Octo Mule fanboys assisted at Mule Summit 2011 in Paris. The summit was quite confidential. This made the interactions with MuleSoft technical staff even richer. CTO and founder Ross Mason was here one more time. It was a pleasure to have such technical speakers. Last year we focused on Mule 3 new exchange architecture (FR). Meanwhile MuleSoft largely improved its ESB with new features. This year we will focus on what makes Mule ESB a reliable Enterprise solution.
With version 3.2, Mule ESB has new business monitoring capabilities. These enhancements fill the lack of previous versions regarding monitoring.
The main applications of this new feature are:
Here is how it works:
Note that it is not possible to track entire messages automatically. The developer has to explicitly configure what information to track. We can't interact with the message and resubmit it through the Management Console. As a result, the feature can't be used as a retry point. Manual retry points still has to be tooled up with technical flows.
One interesting thing however is that Mule now supports the Correlation Identifier pattern. this permits end-to-end monitoring of business flows with time breaks (getting out of Mule ESB and back again). Examples :
Before this new feature, HA had to be tooled up with custom JMS persistence. Different instances of Mule ESB then stored messages in JMS on critical points of the flow, using the Wire Tap pattern. Until JMS became the single point of failure, and so on.
Announced in the roadmap last year, Mule HA is finally here. All these improvements have a price: unless you buy an Enterprise Edition of Mule, you will have to build HA the old way. The new solution offer an active/active clustering across several nodes as follows:
Here is how it works:
During the event, MuleSoft also presented two other new products :
With new mechanisms as persistence (Message Store/Message History), and Correlation Identifier, Mule ESB is extending its initial role. Even if MuleSoft don't communicate on it, and rather highlights integration with external BPM engines, it is getting closer to BPM.
Mulesoft and the community have done a great job in one year. From my point of view, Mule keep its title of most popular ESB. It is very close to fill the gap with vendor's ESBs, providing as many features, but in a lightweight fashion and for a lightweight price per CPU.