Non-intrusive monitoring and service adaptation for WS-BPEL
Proceedings of the 17th international conference on World Wide Web
Data flow testing of service-oriented workflow applications
Proceedings of the 30th international conference on Software engineering
Atomicity Analysis of Service Composition across Organizations
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Web Services: Concepts, Architectures and Applications
Web Services: Concepts, Architectures and Applications
A web search-centric approach to recommender systems with URLs as minimal user contexts
Journal of Systems and Software
Towards dynamic reconfiguration for qos consistent services based applications
ICSOC'12 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Service-Oriented Computing
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Peer services depend on one another to accomplish their tasks, and their structures may evolve. A service composition may be designed to replace its member services whenever the quality of the composite service fails to meet certain quality-of-service (QoS) requirements. Finding services and service invocation endpoints having the greatest impact on the quality are important to guide subsequent service adaptations. This paper proposes a technique that samples the QoS of composite services and continually analyzes them to identify artifacts for service adaptation. The preliminary results show that our technique has the potential to effectively find such artifacts in services.