BPMN: Difference between revisions

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* [http://www.bpmnforum.com/FAQ.htm BPMN FAQ]
* [http://www.bpmnforum.com/FAQ.htm BPMN FAQ]
* [http://www.bpmn.org/ BPMN Information Home Page]
* [http://www.bpmn.org/ BPMN Information Home Page]
* [http://www.bpm-research.com/ BPM Research Website by Michael zur Muehlen]
* [http://www.bpm-research.com/ BPM Research Website] by Michael zur Muehlen (blog)
* [http://www.brsilver.com/ BPMS Watch] by Bruce Silver (blog)


; Posters
; Posters

Revision as of 16:26, 18 June 2010

Draft

Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) is a graphical representation for specifying business processes in a workflow. BPMN was developed by Business Process Management Initiative (BPMI) (Wikipedia).

“The Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) specification provides a graphical notation for specifying business processes in a Business Process Diagram (BPD).[3] The objective of BPMN is to support business process management for both technical users and business users by providing a notation that is intuitive to business users yet able to represent complex process semantics. The BPMN specification also provides a mapping between the graphics of the notation to the underlying constructs of execution languages, particularly BPEL4WS. (Business Process Modeling Notation, retrieved jan 6 2009).”

See also: The Business Process Execution Language (BPEL), an executable XML language. Most (?) BPMN tools can compile drawings into executable BPEL and other XML formats in addition.

History and versions

  • BPMN 2.0 RFP: Request for Proposals for version 2.0 of BPMN (2008,-)
  • BPMN 1.1: OMG Specification, February, 2008
  • BPMN 1.0: OMG Final Adopted Specification, February 6, 2006
  • BPMN 1.0: May 3, 2004 Draft Specification

The BPMN language

The new revision of BPMN, 2.0 has more than 50 symbols in its full set. In other words, it is a very complex language.

Examples

BPMN discussion model. Source: Erik Wilde, Business Process Execution Language (BPEL), Slides, UC Berkeley iSchool

Tools

There seem to exist some free tools (none tested so far)

See for the moment:

Bibliography and links

Links

Overviews
Web sites
Posters

Bibliography

  • White, Stephen A. (2004). Introduction to BPMN, IBM.
  • White, Stephen A. (2004). Mapping BPMN to BPEL Example, IBM PDF