Title :
A Dynamic Composition and Stubless Invocation Approach for Information-Providing Services
Author :
Paganelli, Federica ; Parlanti, D.
Author_Institution :
Nat. Interuniv. Consortium for Telecommun., Italy
Abstract :
The automated specification and execution of composite services are important capabilities of service-oriented systems. In practice, service invocation is performed by client components (stubs) that are generated from service descriptions at design time. Several researchers have proposed mechanisms for late binding. They all require an object representation (e.g., Java classes) of the XML data types specified in service descriptions to be generated and meaningfully integrated in the client code at design time. However, the potential of dynamic composition can only be fully exploited if supported in the invocation phase by the capability of dynamically binding to services with previously unknown interfaces. In this work, we address this limitation by proposing a way of specifying and executing composite services, without resorting to previously compiled classes that represent XML data types. Semantic and structural properties encoded in service descriptions are exploited to implement a mechanism, based on the Graphplan algorithm, for the run-time specification of composite service plans. Composite services are then executed through the stubless invocation of constituent services. Stubless invocation is achieved by exploiting structural properties of service descriptions for the run-time generation of messages.
Keywords :
Web services; XML; client-server systems; data structures; formal specification; semantic Web; service-oriented architecture; Graphplan algorithm; Web services; XML data types; automated composite service execution; automated composite service specification; client code; client components; composite service plans; dynamic composition approach; information providing services; object representation; run-time message generation; run-time specification; semantic Web; semantic properties; service descriptions; service invocation; service-oriented systems; structural properties; stubless invocation approach; Data models; Semantics; Service oriented architecture; Syntactics; Unified modeling language; XML; Web services; XML; planning; semantic web; service brokering; service composition; service invocation; service-oriented architecture;
Journal_Title :
Network and Service Management, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSM.2013.022213.120229