iPaaS Software Resources
Articles, Glossary Terms, Discussions, and Reports to expand your knowledge on iPaaS Software
Resource pages are designed to give you a cross-section of information we have on specific categories. You'll find articles from our experts, feature definitions, discussions from users like you, and reports from industry data.
iPaaS Software Articles
G2 Launches Embedded Integration Platforms Category
What Is Cloud Integration? Why Join On-Prem and Cloud Apps
2021 Trends in Data Management
Analyzing API Security in the Multicloud World
iPaaS Software Glossary Terms
iPaaS Software Discussions
Because ConnectALL leverages an ESB technology, it can take advantage of the ESB’s enterprise-ready features.
Most of our new ConnectALL users were employing a home-grown, custom-code approach and were seeking an off-the-shelf solution because of the high cost of maintaining a custom solution and because they wanted better scalability and reusability. Some were using an off-the-shelf plugin that can only achieve point-point integration (that is, integration of just two systems). The adapter and ESB architecture meets all needs and is the foundation for ConnectALL.
Yes. It also has greater functionality. An adapter, also referred to as a connector, is a self-contained component set of APIs, provides multiple integrations through a universal broker with the APIs of external applications. That broker is an enterprise serial bus. The unique advantage of an adapter over a plugin is the decoupling of the data layer (where the adapter resides) and the business rule layer (ConnectALL GUI). Therefore, policies and rules can be changed without modifications to the adapter. There is no hardcoded business logic in the adapter, making it a much lighter interface than a plugin. All of the ConnectALL adapters support both unidirectional and bi-directional synchronization.





