Author_Institution :
SAP Res. (Brisbane), SAP AG, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
Abstract :
The next-generation of service-oriented architecture (SOA) needs to scale for flexible service consumption, beyond organizational and application boundaries, into communities, ecosystems and business networks. In wider and, ultimately, global settings, new capabilities are needed so that business partners can efficiently and reliably enable, adapt and expose services. Those services can then be discovered, ordered, consumed, metered and paid for, through new applications and opportunities, driven by third-parties in the global "village". This trend is already underway, in different ways, through different early adopter market segments. This paper proposes an architectural strategy for the provisioning and delivery of services in communities, ecosystems and business networks - a Service Delivery Framework (SDF). The SDF is intended to support multiple industries and deployments where a SOA platform is needed for collaborating partners and diverse consumers. Specifically, it is envisaged that the SDF allows providers to publish their services into network directories so that they can be re-purposed, traded and consumed, and leveraging network utilities like B2B gateways and cloud hosting. To support these different facets of service delivery, the SDF extends the conventional service provider, service broker and service consumer of the Web Services Architecture to include service gateway, service hoster, service aggregator and service channel maker.
Keywords :
Web services; business data processing; internetworking; service-oriented architecture; B2B gateways; Web services architecture; architectural strategy; business network; business networks; cloud hosting; ecosystems; network directories; network utilities; next-generation service delivery; service aggregator; service channel maker; service consumption; service delivery framework; service gateway; service hoster; service-oriented architecture; Communities; Companies; Government; Logic gates; Logistics; Service oriented architecture; BPO; SOA; business networks; service delivery platform; softwareas- a-service;