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Service Orchestration as Organization
Building Multi-Tenant Service Applications in the Cloud
1st Edition - August 12, 2014
Authors: Malinda Kapuruge, Jun Han, Alan Colman
Language: English
Paperback ISBN:9780128009383
9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 0 0 9 3 8 - 3
eBook ISBN:9780128010976
9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 0 1 0 9 7 - 6
Service orchestration techniques combine the benefits of Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) and Business Process Management (BPM) to compose and coordinate distributed software se…Read more
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Service orchestration techniques combine the benefits of Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) and Business Process Management (BPM) to compose and coordinate distributed software services. On the other hand, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is gaining popularity as a software delivery model through cloud platforms due to the many benefits to software vendors, as well as their customers. Multi-tenancy, which refers to the sharing of a single application instance across multiple customers or user groups (called tenants), is an essential characteristic of the SaaS model.
Written in an easy to follow style with discussions supported by real-world examples, Service Orchestration as Organization introduces a novel approach with associated language, framework, and tool support to show how service orchestration techniques can be used to engineer and deploy SaaS applications.
Describes the benefits as well as the challenges of building adaptive, multi-tenant software service applications using service-orchestration techniques
Provides a thorough synopsis of the current state of the art, including the advantages and drawbacks of the adaptation techniques available
Describes in detail how the underlying framework of the new approach has been implemented using available technologies, such as business rules engines and web services
Software Architects and Software Engineers, Researchers and postgraduate research students (PhD/Master students), Undergraduate students, BPM (Business Process Modeling) practitioners
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Listings
Preface
About the Authors
Part One
1. Introduction
1.1 Business process management
1.2 Service orchestration and its adaptation
1.3 Research goals
1.4 Approach overview
1.5 Contributions
1.6 Overview of this book
2. Motivational Scenario
2.1 RoSAS business model
2.2 Support for controlled change
2.3 Support for SIMT
2.4 Requirements of service orchestration
2.5 Summary
3. Literature Review
3.1 BPM – an overview
3.2 BPM and SOA
3.3 Adaptability in BPM
3.4 Techniques to improve adaptability in BPM
3.5 Summary and observations
3.6 Towards an adaptive service orchestration framework
3.7 Summary
Part Two
4. Orchestration as Organisation
4.1 The organisation
4.2 Loosely coupled tasks
4.3 Behaviour-based processes
4.4 Two-tier constraints
4.5 Behaviour specialisation
4.6 Interaction membranes
4.7 Support for adaptability
4.8 Managing complexity
4.9 The meta-model
4.10 Summary
5. Serendip Runtime
5.1 The design of an adaptive service orchestration runtime
5.2 Process life cycle
5.3 Event processing
5.4 Data synthesis of tasks
5.5 Dynamic process graphs
5.6 Summary
6. Adaptation Management
6.1 Overview of process management and adaptation
6.2 Adaptation management
6.3 Adaptations
6.4 Automated process validation
6.5 State checks
6.6 Summary
Part Three
7. The Serendip Orchestration Framework
7.1 Serendip-Core
7.2 Deployment environment
7.3 Tool support
7.4 Summary
8. Case Study
8.1 Defining the organisational structure
8.2 Defining the processes
8.3 Message interpretations and transformations
8.4 Adaptations
8.5 Summary
9. Evaluation
9.1 Support for change patterns
9.2 Runtime performance overhead
9.3 Comparative assessment
9.4 Summary
10. Using the Serendip Framework
10.1 Pre-requisites
10.2 Install ROAD4WS platform
10.3 Deploy Serendip orchestration descriptions
10.4 Send Web service requests to the deployed composite
10.5 Manage the composite
10.6 Summary
11. Conclusion
11.1 Contributions
11.2 Future work
Bibliography
Appendix A. SerendipLang Grammar
Appendix B. RoSAS Description
Appendix C. Organiser Operations
Appendix D. Adaptation Scripting Language
Appendix E. Schema Definitions
No. of pages: 334
Language: English
Edition: 1
Published: August 12, 2014
Imprint: Morgan Kaufmann
Paperback ISBN: 9780128009383
eBook ISBN: 9780128010976
MK
Malinda Kapuruge
Malinda Kapuruge received his PhD degree in Computer Science and Software Engineering from Swinburne, University of Technology (Melbourne Australia) in 2012. Currently working as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology, he is investigating how BPM practices can be used to build multi-tenanted, adaptable service-based software systems. His research interest includes business process management, service oriented architecture, cloud computing and adaptive software systems.
Affiliations and expertise
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne Australia
JH
Jun Han
Jun Han received his PhD degree in Computer Science from the University of Queensland (Brisbane, Australia) in
1992. Since 2003, he has been Professor of Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology
(Melbourne, Australia). His primary research focus has been the architecture and qualities of software systems. His
current research interests include dynamic software architectures, context-aware software systems, cloud and
service oriented software systems, software architecture design, and software performance and security. He has
published over 200 peer reviewed articles in international journals and conferences.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia
AC
Alan Colman
Alan Colman Han received his PhD degree in Computer Science and Software Engineering from Swinburne University of Technology (Melbourne Australia) in 2006. Since 2006, he has been a researcher and senior lecturer in Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology (Melbourne, Australia). His primary research focus has been adaptive service oriented software systems, context-aware software systems, software and cloud performance prediction and control. He has published over 70 peer reviewed articles in international journals and conferences.
Affiliations and expertise
Senior Lecturer in Software Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia
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