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GWT Showcase - BRMS for JBoss Rules
JBoss Rules (the former "Drools," though it's sad to see that cringe-inducing name making a comeback) is a Business Rules Engine (BRE). Those are the logic engines that allow you to execute a large set of "if-then" rules against a large set of facts (the most common algorithm to achieve this kind of performance is called RETE, from the ancient Greek for "net"). For more on BRE's and how to use them, have a look at our Business Rules blog.
One of the things that has differentiated commercial BRE's like Blaze Advisor and ILOG JRules from the Open Source JBoss Rules is the tools. The commercial BRE's were part of a suite of development and management tools -- IDE's, "natural" language support, Business Rules Management Systems (BRMS) -- that made their use in a corporate IT "ecosystem" much easier.
With version 4 of JBoss Rules, you now get a powerful workbench plugin for Eclipse, support for Domain Specific Languages (DSL) that mimick natural language, and a web-based BRMS. With it you can deploy, roll back, and report on your rules.
The BRMS has a nice Ajax interface and is in fact written in GWT. This is a natural for a Java-based system like JBoss Rules. If the developers who use and develop JBoss Rules can also tinker with the BRMS interface (GWT==Java in the browser), the odds are better that the BRMS will evolve apace with the core system.
Compare this with a framework like Echo2/3 where there is only a small cadre of developers who develop the JavaScript piece of what is essentially a Java centric framework, and consequently the development has lagged relative to other frameworks. So, good decision for JBoss Rules and probably a good decision if you are adding a web interface to your own Java system.
Topics: Blaze Advisor, Business Rules, GWT, ILOG JRules, RETE
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