Web Services and Business Transactions
World Wide Web
The VLDB Journal — The International Journal on Very Large Data Bases
A Petri net-based model for web service composition
ADC '03 Proceedings of the 14th Australasian database conference - Volume 17
Current Solutions for Web Service Composition
IEEE Internet Computing
Pitfalls of OWL-S: a practical semantic web use case
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Service oriented computing
Semantic integration: a survey of ontology-based approaches
ACM SIGMOD Record
Model-Driven Semantic Web Service Composition
APSEC '05 Proceedings of the 12th Asia-Pacific Software Engineering Conference
Testing BPEL-based Web Service Composition Using High-level Petri Nets
EDOC '06 Proceedings of the 10th IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference
Semi-automated adaptation of service interactions
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Adaptive Service Composition in Flexible Processes
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
COCOA: COnversation-based service COmposition in pervAsive computing environments with QoS support
Journal of Systems and Software
Computer
A Generative Framework for Service Process Composition
ICSOC-ServiceWave '09 Proceedings of the 7th International Joint Conference on Service-Oriented Computing
Model driven orchestration: design for service compatibility
MODELS'10 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Model driven engineering languages and systems: Part II
A hybrid approach for generating compatible WS-BPEL partner processes
BPM'06 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Business Process Management
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Many different approaches have been proposed towards the goal of flexible distributed heterogeneous interoperation of software systems using service composition techniques. Recent approaches are described in terms of higher level models rather than be coded at low level. Current practice, however, sees the service process specifications, written in BPEL or other languages, again as being largely hard-coded rather than exploiting the potential flexibility offered. We propose an approach that is influenced by related fields of model-driven development, conceptual modeling of business processes and workflows, semantic process descriptions and service matching through constraint satisfaction. They can be utilized in a complementary way to support dynamic, instance-based selection and composition of Web services, during runtime and extends this to provide self-modifying adaptation when circumstances change.