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Ilog JRules 4.0: Working by the rules

Ilog JRules' repository and easy-to-use tools help to better manage rapidly changing business rules across the enterprise

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One consequence of moving to distributed computing is that business rules end up scattered throughout the mass of applications, Web services, legacy systems, and backend platforms that make up the enterprise.

Centralizing these business rules eases their maintenance, thereby reducing overall application costs. That approach also lets companies respond quickly when market conditions, such as competitor pricing, dictate a fast change to business rules.

Ilog's JRules 4.0 provides a solid solution for business rules management through its built-in repository and useful tools. Business analysts and programmers will find using JRules a much easier approach to creating and maintaining business rules than managing rules individually.

Compared to other business-rules management solutions, such as Blaze Advisor, JRules costs less, and its functionality matches its competitors. JRules offers tool interfaces appropriate for both business analysts and software developers.

New in this release, the JRules repository now supports business rule storage for multiple projects, which increases manageability—an improvement over previous releases in which rules were maintained separately in project-based files.

Business analysts will appreciate the browser-based interface, which can easily open a repository to work with existing rules or, if the user is authorized, to create new ones. Developers, for their part, will likely prefer the RulesBuilder, JRule's IDE (integrated development environment), because it provides additional tools, such as rules debugging.

Accessing and using the browser-based JRules interface on both Unix and Windows systems is simple. Ilog's browser-based tools are supported by the Tomcat servlet engine, which is well integrated into the product.

The JRules RuleBuilder IDE worked flawlessly on both Unix and Windows systems. We even took it out for a spin on a Mac OS X Server and enjoyed equal success. The IDE interface is typical of that found in many other tools with its navigational, workspace, properties, and output panes. The tabs let us rapidly navigate through rules, and we liked the project and class views.

The IDE offers developers both a graphical editor and built-in text editor for creating and maintaining rules.

In addition, developers will find the built-in debugging facilities useful and on par with rival rules solutions and other IDEs.

Both business analysts and developers will like JRules support for organizing rules. Built-in package support enables enterprises to maintain business rules by whatever structure is meaningful to them. For example, your company might want to store business rules that are organized by business process, product, or service.

JRules also enables the versioning of the business rules, so users can easily see when rules were changed, what changes were made, and who made them.

The solution also includes a historical view of rule changes, although the information it supplies is a bit sparse. More historical data would be helpful, as would the capability of linking directly with previous changes in rules from the historical view.


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