Category

Process Orchestration

All Camunda blog posts tagged with Process Orchestration.

Announcing the Operate Preview Release: Monitoring and Managing Cross-Microservice Workflows

Today, we’re excited to announce a first-ever preview release of Camunda Operate, a tool that was purpose-built for monitoring and troubleshooting workflows running in Zeebe. The Operate preview is being made available under a trial license that allows for unrestricted use in non-production environments. In this post, we’ll describe the vision behind Operate, show you how to get started, and explain the Operate license in more detail.

By Camunda Cloud Team

BPMN Support in Zeebe Through 0.16: A Quick Primer

Zeebe 0.15, released at the beginning of February 2019, shipped with new BPMN features, including message and timer start events and non-interrupting message and timer boundary events. The Zeebe team has made significant progress on BPMN coverage in the last few releases, and when it comes to the near-term Zeebe BPMN roadmap, the 0.15 features are the last of what’s planned in preparation of a production-ready Zeebe release in mid-2019. In the Zeebe documentation, we describe each supported BPMN element and its technical specifications. Especially if you’re new to BPMN, we recommend you consult the docs during the modeling process. Many important details are covered, from how to define duration for timer events to workflow instance dataflow. Because we’ve added…

By Camunda Cloud Team

Announcing the Zeebe 0.16 Release

The Zeebe team is happy to announce the 0.16 release. You can download Zeebe 0.16 from the release page on GitHub. In this post, we’ll discuss some of the highlights from the release and share other project updates. Questions? Feedback? The Community page on our website lists a number of ways that you can get in touch with us. We monitor and respond to messages on the Slack group and user forum on an ongoing basis, and we’d love to hear from you. Zeebe 0.16 Release Highlights The most significant update in 0.16 is the migration to a new dataflow concept in Zeebe, replacing payloads with variables and scopes. We’ll publish a more detailed post about this change in the…

By Camunda Cloud Team

Announcing the Zeebe 0.15 Release: Start Events, Boundary Events, and More

The Zeebe team is happy to announce the 0.15 release. You can download Zeebe 0.15 from the release page on GitHub. In this post, we’ll discuss some of the highlights from the release and share other project updates. Questions? Feedback? The Community page on our website lists a number of ways that you can get in touch with us. We monitor and respond to messages on the Slack group and user forum on an ongoing basis, and we’d love to hear from you. Zeebe 0.15 Release Highlights Zeebe 0.15 includes more progress with BPMN symbols, adding support for the Message Start Event and Timer Start Event as well as Non-Interrupting Boundary Events. The Message Start Event makes it possible to…

By Camunda Cloud Team

Zeebe in 2018: The Year In Review

As the year comes to a close, we’ll take a moment to review what was accomplished in Zeebe in 2018 and discuss what’s next to come. 2018 was an exciting year with many new features and significant conceptual updates that changed the scope of Zeebe. We’ll cover both in this post, and we’ll also talk about our efforts to spread the word about Zeebe around the globe.

By Camunda Cloud Team

The Microservices Workflow Automation Cheat Sheet

Editor’s Note: This post originally appeared on Bernd Rücker’s blog and was cross-posted here with Bernd’s permission. Thanks Bernd! Your company might want to go for a microservice architecture and apply workflow automation (I do not go into the motivation why in this blog post, but you might want to read about 5 Workflow Automation Use Cases You Might Not Have Considered or BizDevOps — the true value proposition of workflow engines.) This sets you in company with a lot of our customers. Typically, you will have questions around: Scope and boundaries (“what workflow do you want to automate and how is this mapped to multiple microservices or bounded contexts in your landscape”). To limit the scope of this post I spare…

By Bernd Ruecker

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