Modelling of Service Compositions: Relations to Business Process and Workflow Modelling
Identifieur interne : 000846 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000845; suivant : 000847Modelling of Service Compositions: Relations to Business Process and Workflow Modelling
Auteurs : Michael C. Jaeger [Allemagne]Source :
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science [ 0302-9743 ] ; 2007.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Aalst, Bpel, Bpel4ws, Bpel4ws proposal, Bpmi, Bpml, Bps, Business process, Business process design, Business process execution language, Business process management, Business process modeling language, Business process reengineering, Business process trends, Business processes, Clear focus, Composition languages, Computer systems, Concrete services, Ebxml suite, Electronic trade, Graphical, Graphical notation, Ieee, Ieee computer society press, Ieee internet, Internet protocols, Jaeger, Lighthouse point, Management coalition, Management systems, Modelling, Modelling business processes, Modelling language, Modelling languages, Modelling service compositions, Object management group, Organisation, Other proposals, Petri, Petri nets, Process description, Process interface, Process language, Reference model, Report management coalition, Research work, Service choreography interface, Service composition, Service composition languages, Service compositions, Service consumers, Services acronym hell, Services flow language, Software, Software components, Software systems, Technical report, Wfmc, Wfms, Wsci, Wsci proposal, Wsfl, Xlang.
Abstract
Abstract: The service oriented architecture (SOA) represents a trend in the IT industry for the development of a flexible and unifying software infrastructure. In an SOA, software components provide their functionality as a service by using uniform interface description and invocation protocols. The provision of software components in an uniform manner allow their efficient composition to form new complex services. Currently, the compositions of services is a popular field of research with many ongoing efforts. However, the sheer number of existing proposals and efforts to describe service compositions in this field have led to term Web Services Acronym Hell (WSAH) [1] and an obvious confusion. This paper intends to serve as an orientation for explaining what the differences between business processes and workflow control flow languages are and why service compositions are used in this field. It will also introduce past and existing proposals for Web service composition languages for understanding why so many different languages for modelling workflows, business processes and compositions exist.
Url:
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-75492-3_13
Affiliations:
Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)
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Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: The service oriented architecture (SOA) represents a trend in the IT industry for the development of a flexible and unifying software infrastructure. In an SOA, software components provide their functionality as a service by using uniform interface description and invocation protocols. The provision of software components in an uniform manner allow their efficient composition to form new complex services. Currently, the compositions of services is a popular field of research with many ongoing efforts. However, the sheer number of existing proposals and efforts to describe service compositions in this field have led to term Web Services Acronym Hell (WSAH) [1] and an obvious confusion. This paper intends to serve as an orientation for explaining what the differences between business processes and workflow control flow languages are and why service compositions are used in this field. It will also introduce past and existing proposals for Web service composition languages for understanding why so many different languages for modelling workflows, business processes and compositions exist.</div>
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