SWENG597F – Enterprise Integration

 

Advances in design, development, and deployment of control and management software for enterprise and production systems. Topics includes 1) modeling methodologies (such as Petri Nets, Message-base Part Graph, Supervisory Control, and Structured Adaptive Supervisory Control, etc.); 2) development technologies (e.g., client/server architecture, intranet/internet technology, etc.); and 3) system integration issues related to Enterprise Planning Resource (ERP), Sales and Service Management, Supply Chain Management, Manufacturing Execution System (MES), and Shop Floor Controls.

 

Date

Class #

Topic &Chapter & Articles

 

1

Introduction to Enterprise Integration

 

2

Petri nets (articles)

 

3

Supervisory Control (articles)

 

4

MPSG & SASC (articles)

 

5

ERP, SSM (articles)

 

6

SCM, MES, SFC (articles)

 

7

Midterm

 

8

Data Level; Interface Level; Method level (chapter 2, 3, 4, 5)

 

9

Middleware and Transaction (chapter 7, 8, 9, articles)

 

10

CORBA, DCOM, RMI, JMS (articles)

 

11

Process Automation and EAI (chapter 19, articles)

 

12

XML (chapter 17, articles)

 

13

Final

 

14

Project Demo & Presentation

 

Reference Text:          “Enterprise Integration”, Author: Fred Cummins, Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2002.

 

GRADING:   Group Project Report   :   25 points

                        Individual       Report  :    15

                        Midterm                      :    30

                        Final                            :    30

A: (96-100), A-: (91-95), B+: (86-90),  B:(81-85)

OFFICE HOURS:            One hour before class or by appointment.

INSTRUCTOR:        Dr. Robin Qiu (610) 725-5313   e-mail: robinqiu@psu.edu

 

Academic Integrity

Academic integrity is the pursuit of scholarly activity free from fraud and deception and is an educational objective of this institution.  Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, cheating, plagiarism, fabricating of information or citations, facilitating acts of academic dishonesty by others, unauthorized possession of examinations, submitting work for another person or work previously used without informing the instructor or tampering with academic work of other students. 

 

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