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Product

All Camunda blog posts tagged with Product.

Getting Started with Zeebe on Kubernetes with Spring Boot

In this tutorial you will learn how to get a simple process definition running into a Zeebe Cluster which runs inside Kubernetes. The tutorial covers: How to install Zeebe in your Kubernetes Cluster using the official Zeebe Helm Charts How to model a process definition with Zeebe Modeler How to interact with the Zeebe Cluster once it is running with zbctl (deploy and create new workflow instances) How to create Zeebe Workers with Spring Boot and How to monitor the process executions with Camunda Operate. Here are some useful links: Full Tutorial + Video Technical Steps and resources: (in GitHub Install Zeebe on Kubernetes Official Docs Zeebe Helm Charts: helm.zeebe.io End to end video, Running Zeebe on GKE Spring Boot…

By Mauricio Salatino

Zeebe and Open Democracy in the Netherlands

Jesse Van Muijden and his team, working in the Ministry of Social Welfare in the Netherlands, have developed a Zeebe-based system that brings transparency to government processes for citizens. In this interview, we talk about the tech stack: Node.js, Kafka.js, Java, Docker, and Zeebe, the innovative solution they’ve designed, and Jesse’s experience developing on Zeebe in a “beyond agile” project, even as Zeebe has been undergoing development.

By Josh Wulf

Oct 17, 2019

Camunda Modeler 3.4 Released

We are happy to announce the release of Camunda Modeler v3.4. It is shipped with two important improvements: Extension point for UI Plugins and features for a better deployment experience. In addition, we included several bug fixes. Download the latest release and start modeling.

By Oguz Eroglu

Announcing the Zeebe 0.21 Release

Today, we’re happy to announce the release of Zeebe 0.21 and Operate 1.1.0. Refer to the Zeebe docs for instructions to download a release. In this blog post we’ll highlight the changes since the 0.20 release. New and Changed in Zeebe 0.21 New and Changed in Zeebe Modeler 0.7.0 New and Changed in Operate 1.1.0 New and Changed in Zeebe 0.21 Java 11 TLS Support on Gateway and Clients OAuth Support in Clients Broker Backpressure Long-polling Workers New BPMN Symbol: Multi-instance subprocess Java 11 Prior to 0.21, Zeebe was built with Java 8. Zeebe is now built with Java 11 LTS. Please note that client applications that embed the Zeebe Java client library can still be written and compiled with…

By Josh Wulf

Oct 2, 2019

Camunda Optimize 2.6.0 Released

We are happy to announce the release of Camunda Optimize version 2.6.0. The release includes many exciting features including: New User Permissions Concept Outlier Analysis Enhanced Reporting Multi-Version Support for Process and Decision Reports Durations for Running Process Instances New User Task Assignee & Candidate Group Reports Improved Support for Undefined and Null Variable Values Supported Docker Image The complete release notes are available in Jira.

By Felix Mueller

Transactional Email Microservice with Zeebe and NestJS

NestJS is a JavaScript Microservices framework for Node.js inspired by Angular. For some time now, front-end developers have been able to get the benefits of configuration by convention, dependency injection, and composition using decorators to build code bases whose structure can scale. Now it’s time for backend developers to get the same benefits. NestJS is a framework that clearly meets a need felt in the community – it was the fastest growing Node.js framework in 2018 (measured by GitHub stars). NestJS leverages TypeScript, decorators, and the MVC architecture to enable developers to build applications that communicate over REST, WebSockets, gRPC, and GraphQL. With a new library from Dan Shapir – nestjs-zeebe – you can now integrate Zeebe into a NestJS…

By Josh Wulf

Zeebe and IoT: Node-RED

Patrick (Paddy) Dehn and Cornelius Suermann join me on the Camunda Nation podcast this week to talk about Zeebe, IoT, and workflow automation. Paddy is a developer working on Operate, the web-based UI for Zeebe workflow inspection and management, and Cornelius is the engineering director for Camunda Cloud. They are also both massive IoT nerds. Paddy is the author of the open-source Zeebe nodes for Node-RED. We talk about their personal home automation projects, the Zeebe nodes for Node-RED, and some of the possibilities for massively scaled workflow automation in the cloud with Camunda Cloud, Zeebe, and IoT. Check them out on GitHub: Cornelius on GitHub Paddy on GitHub

By Josh Wulf

Zeebe and Kubernetes: Introducing Mauricio Salatino

Mauricio Salatino has joined the Zeebe team as a Developer Advocate. He was previously a developer at Red Hat on jBPM, and then at Alfresco on Activiti. He’s also written courses on using Kubernetes. He’s based in London, and is happy to meet people from the Zeebe community at meetups and for coffee. In September, Mauricio sat down to talk with the Camunda Nation Podcast about Zeebe and Kubernetes. You can reach Mauricio in the Zeebe Slack and the Forum, follow him on Twitter @salaboy, and check him out on GitHub. You can subscribe to the Zeebe Nation podcast on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or old-school RSS.

By Josh Wulf

Announcing Camunda Cloud

Today at CamundaCon, our CTO Daniel Meyer (who also happens to have written more than 100,000 lines of Zeebe code) unveiled Camunda Cloud. This is a big step for Camunda. It’s the first time in the company’s history that we’re offering a workflow service in the cloud, and we’re super excited to be starting down this path. And we’re sharing the news here on the Zeebe blog because Zeebe is the workflow engine that sits at the heart of Camunda Cloud.

By Camunda Cloud Team

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