Architectural styles and the design of network-based software architectures
Architectural styles and the design of network-based software architectures
Service-Oriented Modeling and Architecture for Realization of an SOA
SCC '06 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Services Computing
Patterns: Soa Foundation Service Creation Scenario
Patterns: Soa Foundation Service Creation Scenario
Enterprise SOA: Designing IT for Business Innovation
Enterprise SOA: Designing IT for Business Innovation
Web Service Discovery - Reality Check 2.0
NWESP '07 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Next Generation Web Services Practices
Modelling of Service-Oriented Architectures with UML
Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science (ENTCS)
Multi-layer perspectives and spaces in SOA
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Systems development in SOA environments
Web-Oriented Architectures: On the Impact of Web 2.0 on Service-Oriented Architectures
APSCC '08 Proceedings of the 2008 IEEE Asia-Pacific Services Computing Conference
Speaking a common language: a conceptual model for describing service-oriented systems
ICSOC'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Service-Oriented Computing
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Service-oriented architectures (SOAs) provide the basis of distributed application frameworks where software components are provided as modular and reusable services. Until today there is no generally accepted method for conceptual modelling of a SOA. Rather, there exist several procedural methods which are used in practice. On the other hand, recent developments in the context of what is commonly termed "Web 2.0" show how easy it can be to link or compose ("mesh") IT components dynamically, so that original SOA goals like flexibility, reusability, or reduction of complexity can indeed be achieved by relatively simple means. An interesting concept in this context is the Web-oriented architecture (WOA), which represents a specialization of SOAs obtained by using simple Web 2.0 technologies and standards (e.g., HTTP, SSL, XML). This paper introduces a methodology for designing WOAs, where the big picture follows existing SOA models. In particular, this WOA methodology comprises conceptual as well as realization issues and breaks WOA design down into three distinct phases.