ACTA: a framework for specifying and reasoning about transaction structure and behavior
SIGMOD '90 Proceedings of the 1990 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Modeling long-running activities as nested sagas
Data Engineering
Database transaction models for advanced applications
Database transaction models for advanced applications
Transaction Processing: Concepts and Techniques
Transaction Processing: Concepts and Techniques
UTML: Unified Transaction Modeling Language
WISE '02 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering
The VLDB Journal — The International Journal on Very Large Data Bases
Efficient commit protocols for the tree of processes model of distributed transactions
ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review
Cross-Organizational Transaction Support for E-Services in Virtual Enterprises
Distributed and Parallel Databases
EDOC '03 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Enterprise Distributed Object Computing
Web service composition transaction management
ADC '04 Proceedings of the 15th Australasian database conference - Volume 27
Extending the concept of transaction compensation
IBM Systems Journal
Theoretical foundations for compensations in flow composition languages
Proceedings of the 32nd ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT symposium on Principles of programming languages
Comparing two approaches to compensable flow composition
CONCUR 2005 - Concurrency Theory
A survey on the history of transaction management: from flat to grid transactions
Distributed and Parallel Databases
From theory to practice in transactional composition of web services
EPEW'05/WS-FM'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on European Performance Engineering, and Web Services and Formal Methods, international conference on Formal Techniques for Computer Systems and Business Processes
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The Cloud Computing paradigm influences various items including principles and architectures in the domain of the transaction processing. It might be predictable that the number of processing will exponentially increase. Although the domain of the transaction processing has evolved and a number of implementations have also been developed according to the various requirements over the ages, there are still some remaining engineering issues in practice within SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) area. Therefore, it is predictable that developers will face a lot of difficulties to realize implementations and scalability. In this paper, we show a tentative proposal on a regulated framework and an abstract model in which a compensation transaction plays the central role. Further we propose a more effective transaction processing which rely on the new possible features by scalable environment.