DocumentCode :
611070
Title :
A Chemistry-Inspired Middleware for Self-Adaptive Service Orchestration and Choreography
Author :
Chen Wang ; Pazat, J.
Author_Institution :
IRISA/INRIA, Rennes, France
fYear :
2013
fDate :
13-16 May 2013
Firstpage :
426
Lastpage :
433
Abstract :
Orchestration and choreography are two perspectives to model service interactions in executing a service composition. Compared to orchestration model, choreography can improve the performances in scalability, throughput and execution time by eliminating centralized point of coordination. However, it also brings additional complexities and challenges such as inter-organizational service coordination, fault-tolerance and etc. In this paper, we propose two self-managed and self-adaptive choreography models, namely semi-choreography and auto-choreography. Both models as well as a centralized orchestration model have been implemented in a chemistry-inspired middleware. With the metaphor from chemical reactions, the middleware is modeled as an autonomic distributed chemical system, where services are described as complex molecules and service coordination and adaptation is performed by a series of pervasive chemical reactions controlled by a number of rules. By using different sets of rules, providers are able to specify their preferred execution models to run service compositions, in either centralized or collaborative way. The middleware is implemented in Higher-Order Chemical Language (HOCL) and running on distributed infrastructures (Grid´5000). Finally, by executing two experimental workflows in the middleware, a number of experiments have been conducted to evaluate and compare different models in terms of complexity and efficiency.
Keywords :
Web services; middleware; ubiquitous computing; HOCL; autochoreography; autonomic distributed chemical system; centralized orchestration mode; chemistry-inspired middleware; complex molecule; higher-order chemical language; interorganizational service coordination; pervasive chemical reaction; self-adaptive service choreography; self-adaptive service orchestration; self-managed choreography model; semichoreography; service composition; Adaptation models; Chemicals; Collaboration; Connectors; Runtime; Web services; adaptation; chemical computing; choreography; middleware; orchestration; service composition;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Cluster, Cloud and Grid Computing (CCGrid), 2013 13th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Delft
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6465-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CCGrid.2013.51
Filename :
6546122
Link To Document :
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