Decentralized orchestration of composite web services
Proceedings of the 13th international World Wide Web conference on Alternate track papers & posters
Decentralized Orchestration of CompositeWeb Services
ICWS '06 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
ATL: a QVT-like transformation language
Companion to the 21st ACM SIGPLAN symposium on Object-oriented programming systems, languages, and applications
Interoperability of Enterprise Software and Applications
Interoperability of Enterprise Software and Applications
Challenging the interoperability between computers in industry with MDA and SOA
Computers in Industry - Special issue: Collaborative environments for concurrent engineering
EDOC '07 Proceedings of the 11th IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference
ATL: A model transformation tool
Science of Computer Programming
Challenges and solutions in enterprise computing
Enterprise Information Systems - Challenges and Solutions in Enterprise Computing - 11th International IEEE EDOC Conference (EDOC 2007)
Towards model-driven service-oriented enterprise computing
Enterprise Information Systems - Towards Model-driven Service-oriented Enterprise Computing - 12th International IEEE EDOC Enterprise Computing Conference (EDOC 2008)
Interacting services: From specification to execution
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Value-oriented coordination process modeling
BPM'10 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Business process management
Standards for web service choreography and orchestration: status and perspectives
BPM'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Business Process Management
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Enterprise Interoperability is the ability of enterprises to interoperate in order to achieve their business goals. Although the purpose of enterprise interoperability is determined at the business level, the use of technical (IT) services to support business services implies that interoperability solutions at both the business and technical level should be aligned. This paper introduces and demonstrates the suitability of an approach based on model transformations to automate enterprise interoperability. We start by considering that a set of enterprises are willing to interoperate in the context of their individual goals. The interactions necessary for their cooperation are then properly captured in terms of a so-called choreography. Our approach allows a choreography to be mapped and transformed to an orchestration, which defines the operation of the actual technical services of the interoperating enterprises. The paper discusses the technical challenges of implementing the transformation, and illustrates our approach with two application scenarios.