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Consult21 Systems Work Package BT Architecture and eBusiness

Consult21 Systems Work Package BT Architecture and eBusiness. Derrick Evans 21CN Systems. Overview. Discussion of Systems Architecture from an external perspective How the architecture behaves externally from a customer/partner perspective Summary of the current situation

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Consult21 Systems Work Package BT Architecture and eBusiness

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  1. Consult21 Systems Work PackageBT Architecture and eBusiness Derrick Evans 21CN Systems

  2. Overview • Discussion of Systems Architecture from an external perspective • How the architecture behaves externally from a customer/partner perspective • Summary of the current situation • Ideas for the future • Principles and Issues for Syndicate Discussions

  3. wholesale products retail products credit vetting1 technical checks1 decomposition1 retail billing1 network1 progress events1 KCI1 Note 1: illustrative functions BT’s legacy • BT’s legacy is built on large integrated national systems • Designed to maximise customer satisfaction • Place as much information as possible in the hands of customer services • Support flow through provisioning

  4. Re-engineering • The current architecture creates issues for the introduction of next generation services and new market structures • An approach is to refactor the OSS stack by layering and segmenting the architecture into a set of applications that provide services or capabilities to each other • This is not possible/desirable in a single step so a “leave and layer” approach is required for the evolution from one stack to the other Today’s architecture 21C Target wholesale products retail products Integration Framework CRM Services Retailersservicemanagement Non-SMP Service Management credit vetting credit vetting1 decompose technical checks1 billing decomposition1 KCI retail billing1 network1 SMP ProductService Management tech checks progress events1 network KCI1 progress Note 1: illustrative functions

  5. “It’s not the components it’s the interfaces”

  6. Today's integration framework • Selected functions from our legacy systems have been exposed for eBusiness integration over the past fifteen years • To achieve this • CRM applications have been built as a layer on CSS and COSMOSS • Portal and gateway front ends are a layer on the CRM applications and/or CSS/COSMOSS • Each has been built to address a product family or market segment and been built using differing architectures and technologies

  7. B2B protocols (ebXML, Resonate) email (SMTP) Web services(http,ftp, SOAP) Gateway Transport Management Partner B2B Profile XML(SOX schema) CSV, Tab delimited binary XML (XSD schema) Format & Translation Bt Internal XML (XSD schema) Process Management Bt Internal XML (XSD schema) OSS Proposed integration framework Partners • A Gateway to host a variety of services and functions • A “loosely coupled” messaging capability based on Internet technologies • The core of this is XML and http (in the form of SOAP and other web service technologies) • Messaging used to synchronise processes (Choreography and Orchestration) • Single messaging platform (single security regime and single platform to manage) • A version of this technology is already deployed for broadband fault reporting and diagnostics

  8. Proposed Syndicate Sessions • Systems management, commercial,etc • IPR • Documentation & change control • Enablement & service support • Consult21 project planning, issues management, housekeeping • Systems principles, standards and capabilities: • Architecture principles • Technical and business standards • Services and capabilities

  9. Service management, commercial, etc • Intellectual Property Rights • Use and re-use • Fair usage • “Selling-on” to end users • Right to change and ownership of “value added” features • “Enablement” & Service Support • Specifications, • Test Environments, • Technical Support, • Change Management, • Service Management. • Documentation & change control • What should be documented, how, when & change control • Consult21 project planning, issues, housekeeping • Future meetings, agendas etc • Documentation, distribution lists, timing • Issue management

  10. Systems principles, standards and capabilities: • Architecture Principles • The “Loosely Coupled” architecture • Transactions versus ETL/MIS Reports • Simple versus Complex Business Services • Technical and Business Standards • Technologies • Document and Process Description Languages • Document Content and Business Process standards • Services and Capabilities • Which services (fulfilment, assurance and billing)? • Granularity (simple transactions or end to end processes)?

  11. Further Details

  12. Intellectual Property Rights • The current and proposed interfaces are derived from BT designs for various products and processes • Questions arise as to what rights partners and customers have when implementing these in their systems • As an example in the US some carriers are implementing variations of TMF trouble ticketing standards and publishing parts of their solutions as open source • Open source is provided without a guarantee of technical support • Open source is free for others to adopt, reengineer and use but the origin must be acknowledged • Adopters must respect the terms in any service they sell on (you can sell support for open source but not the code) • Any contribution to an application is also deemed to be open source and cannot be derived from incorporating work which is not yours to give

  13. Enablement and Service Support • A word specification or an XML schema is not sufficient documentation to implement an interface So what is? • A complete specification of all such an interfaces behaviour is not practicable • An interfaces behaviour is down to complex interaction of product type, order type, current service state, …. • Anyway our experience is • the more you write down the more people pick holes and question which results in more being written down… • most developers do not read documentation and programme from examples anyway • Change management is important But • There are unintended consequences of change (“Who told you that it could be used for that?”) • The impact of change depends more on how an interface is used than how it is provided and we don’t know how people are exploiting “features” • So for example • What is interface and what is content? • Is the inclusion of a new valid product code or order type for a product a change to an interface? • The order format is the same. • If one corrects the spelling of the text of a message is that a change to an interface? • If the text was not designed to be automatically parsed then the answer is no

  14. Architecture Principles • We cannot afford to tightly link partner processes and technologies

  15. Technical and Business Standards

  16. Services and Capabilities • Services are realised by the exchange of messages as part of a transaction/process • Problem is which services and how are they combined?

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