Service-oriented architecture

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Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is a computer systems architectural style for creating and using business processes, packaged as services, throughout their lifecycle. SOA also defines and provisions the IT infrastructure to allow different applications to exchange data and participate in business processes. These functions are loosely coupled with the operating systems and programming languages underlying the applications.[1] SOA separates functions into distinct units (services), which can be distributed over a network and can be combined and reused to create business applications.[2] These services communicate with each other by passing data from one service to another, or by coordinating an activity between two or more services. SOA concepts are often seen as built upon, and evolving from older concepts of distributed computing[2] and modular programming.

Overview

Companies have long sought to integrate existing systems in order to implement information technology (IT) support for business processes that cover all present and prospective systems requirements needed to run the business end-to-end. A variety of designs can be used to this end, ranging from rigid point-to-point electronic data interchange (EDI) interactions to Web auctions. By updating older technologies, such as Internet-enabling EDI-based systems, companies can make their IT systems available to internal or external customers; but the resulting systems have not proven to be flexible enough to meet business demands. A flexible, standardized architecture is required to better support the connection of various applications and the sharing of data. SOA is one such architecture. It unifies business processes by structuring large applications as an ad hoc collection of smaller modules called services. These applications can be used by different groups of people both inside and outside the company, and new applications built from a mix of services from the global pool exhibit greater flexibility and uniformity. One should not, for example, have to provide redundantly the same personal information to open an online checking, savings or IRA account, and further, the interfaces one interacts with should have the same look and feel and use the same level and type of input data validation. Building all applications from the same pool of services makes achieving this goal much easier and more deployable to affiliate companies. An example of this might be interacting with a rental car company's reservation system even though you are doing so from an airline's reservation system.

SOAs build applications out of software services. Services are intrinsically unassociated units of functionality, which have no calls to each other embedded in them. They typically implement functionalities most humans would recognize as a service, such as filling out an online application for an account, viewing an online bank statement, or placing an online booking or airline ticket order. Instead of services embedding calls to each other in their source code, protocols are defined which describe how one or more services can talk to each other. This architecture then relies on a business process expert to link and sequence services, in a process known as orchestration, to meet a new or existing business system requirement.

Relative to typical practices of earlier attempts to promote software reuse via modularity of functions, or by use of predefined groups of functions known as classes, SOA's atomic-level objects are often 100 to 1,000 times larger, and are associated by an application designer or engineer using orchestration. In the process of orchestration, relatively large chunks of software functionality (services) are associated in a non-hierarchical arrangement (in contrast to a class hierarchies) by a software engineer, or process engineer, using a special software tool which contains an exhaustive list of all of the services, their characteristics, and a means to record the designer's choices which the designer can manage and the software system can consume and use at run-time.

Underlying and enabling all of this is metadata which is sufficient to describe not only the characteristics of these services, but also the data that drives them. XML has been used extensively in SOA to create data which is wrapped in a nearly exhaustive description container. Analogously, the services themselves are typically described by WSDL, and communications protocols by SOAP. Whether these description languages are the best possible for the job, and whether they will remain the favorites going forward, is at present an open question. What is certain is that SOA is utterly dependent on data and services that are described using some implementation of metadata which meets two criteria. The metadata must be in a form which software systems can configure dynamically to maintain coherence and integrity, and in a form which system designers can understand and use to manage that metadata.

The goal of SOA is to allow fairly large chunks of functionality to be strung together to form ad hoc applications which are built almost entirely from existing software services. The larger the chunks, the fewer the interface points required to implement any given set of functionality; however, very large chunks of functionality may not be granular enough to be easily reused. Each interface brings with it some amount of processing overhead, so there is a performance consideration in choosing the granularity of services. The great promise of SOA is that the marginal cost of creating the n-th application is zero, as all of the software required already exists to satisfy the requirements of other applications. Only orchestration is required to produce a new application.

The key is that there are no interactions between the chunks specified within the chunks themselves. Instead, the interaction of services (all of whom are unassociated peers) is specified by humans in a relatively ad hoc way with the intent driven by newly emergent business requirements. Thus the need for services to be much larger units of functionality than traditional functions or classes, lest the sheer complexity of thousands of such granular objects overwhelm the application designer. The services themselves are developed using traditional languages like Java, C#, C++, C or COBOL.

SOA services are loosely coupled, in contrast to the functions a linker binds together to form an executable, a dynamically linked library, or an assembly. SOA services also run in "safe" wrappers such as Java or .NET, which manage memory allocation and reclamation, allow ad hoc and late binding, and provide some degree of indeterminate data typing.

Increasing numbers of third-party software companies are offering software services for a fee. In the future, SOA systems may consist of such third-party services combined with others created in-house. This has the potential to spread costs over many customers, and customer uses, and promotes standardization both in and across industries. In particular, the travel industry now has a well-defined and documented set of both services and data, sufficient to allow any reasonably competent software engineer to create travel agency software using entirely off-the-shelf software services. Other industries, such as the finance industry, are also making significant progress in this direction.

SOA is an architecture that relies on service-orientation as its fundamental design principle.[3] In a SOA environment independent services can be accessed without knowledge of their underlying platform implementation.[4]

SOA relies on services exposing their functionality via interfaces which other applications and services read to understand how the service can be utilized

Requirements for a service-oriented architecture

In order to efficiently use an SOA, one must meet the following requirements:

  • Interoperability between different systems and programming languages provides the basis for integration between applications on different platforms through a communication protocol. One example of such communication is based on the concept of messages. Using messages across defined message channels decreases the complexity of the end application thereby allowing the developer of the application to focus on true application functionality instead of the intricate needs of a communication protocol.
  • Desire to create a federation of resources. Establish and maintain data flow to a federated data warehouse. This allows new functionality developed to reference a common business format for each data element.

Web services approach to a service-oriented architecture

Web services can be used to implement a service-oriented architecture. A major focus of Web services is to make functional building blocks accessible over standard Internet protocols that are independent from platforms and programming languages. These services can be new applications or just wrapped around existing legacy systems to make them network-enabled.

which services to expose, how to make trade-offs between security and easy availability, how to price the services, or, if they are free, how to exploit them for other value. The provider also has to decide what category the service should be listed in for a given broker service and what sort of trading partner agreements are required to use the service.

  • Service broker
    The service broker, also known as service registry, is responsible for making the Web service interface and implementation access information available to any potential service requestor. The implementer of the broker decides about the scope of the broker. Public brokers are available through the Internet, while private brokers are only accessible to a limited audience, for example, users of a company intranet. Furthermore, the amount of the offered information has to be decided. Some brokers specialize in many listings. Others offer high levels of trust in the listed services. Some cover a broad landscape of services and others focus within an industry. There are also brokers that catalog other brokers. Depending on the business model, brokers can attempt to maximize look-up requests, number of listings or accuracy of the listings. The Universal Description Discovery and Integration (UDDI) specification defines a way to publish and discover information about Web services. Other service broker technologies include for example ebXML (Electronic Business using eXtensible Markup Language) and those based on the ISO/IEC 11179 Metadata Registry (MDR) standard.
  • Service requestor
    The service requestor or Web service client locates entries in the broker registry using various find operations and then binds to the service provider in order to invoke one of its Web services.

Other SOA concepts

Architecture is not tied to a specific technology.[2] It may be implemented using a wide range of technologies, including SOAP, RPC, DCOM, CORBA, Web Services or WCF. SOA can be implemented using one or more of these protocols and, for example, might use a file system mechanism to communicate data conforming to a defined interface specification between processes conforming to the SOA concept. The key is independent services with defined interfaces that can be called to perform their tasks in a standard way, without the service having foreknowledge of the calling application, and without the application having or needing knowledge of how the service actually performs its tasks.

Elements of SOA, by Dirk Krafzig, Karl Banke, and Dirk Slama. Enterprise SOA. Prentice Hall, 2005
SOA Meta Model, The Linthicum Group, 2007
SOA Modeling Framework, by Michael Bell. Service-Oriented Modeling. Wiley & Sons, 2008

SOA can also be regarded as a style of information systems architecture that enables the creation of applications that are built by combining loosely coupled and interoperable services[5]. These services inter-operate based on a formal definition (or contract, e.g., WSDL) that is independent of the underlying platform and programming language. The interface definition hides the implementation of the language-specific service. SOA-based systems can therefore be independent of development technologies and platforms (such as Java, .NET etc). Services written in C# running on .NET platforms and services written in Java running on Java EE platforms, for example, can both be consumed by a common composite application (or client). Applications running on either platform can also consume services running on the other as Web services, which facilitates reuse. Many COBOL legacy systems can also be wrapped by a managed environment and presented as a software service. This has allowed the useful life of many core legacy systems to be extended indefinitely no matter what language they were originally written in.

SOA can support integration and consolidation activities within complex enterprise systems, but SOA does not specify or provide a methodology or framework for documenting capabilities or services.

High-level languages such as BPEL and specifications such as WS-CDL and WS-Coordination extend the service concept by providing a method of defining and supporting orchestration of fine grained services into more coarse-grained business services, which in turn can be incorporated into workflows and business processes implemented in composite applications or portals[citation needed].

The use of Service component architecture (SCA) to implement SOA is a current area of research.

How can an SOA address interoperability and reusability challenges of our computing environments and simplify the heterogeneous business and technological landscapes that we have been building for decades? SOA introduces another concept to help practitioners to understand their complex environments by modeling practices. These disciplines are introduced by the Service-Oriented Modeling paradigm [6], an SOA framework that identifies the various disciplines that guide SOA practitioners to conceptualize, analyze, design, and architect their service-oriented assets. Thus, the service-oriented modeling framework (SOMF) is simply a work structure. It is a high-level map depicting the various components that contribute to a successful service-oriented modeling approach. It illustrates the major elements that identify the “what to do” aspects of a service development scheme. These are the modeling pillars that will enable practitioners to craft an effective project plan and to identify the milestones of a service-oriented initiative—either a small project or large-scale business or a technological venture.

SOA definitions

SOA is a design for linking business and computational resources (principally organizations, applications and data) on demand to achieve the desired results for service consumers (which can be end users or other services). OASIS (the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards) defines SOA as the following:

A paradigm for organizing and utilizing distributed capabilities that may be under the control of different ownership domains. It provides a uniform means to offer, discover, interact with and use capabilities to produce desired effects consistent with measurable preconditions and expectations.

There are multiple definitions of SOA, the OASIS group and the Open Group have created formal definition with depth which can be applied to both the technology and business domains.

Why SOA?

Enterprise architects believe that SOA can help businesses respond more quickly and cost-effectively to changing market conditions[9] . This style of architecture promotes reuse at the macro(service) level rather than micro(classes) level. It can also simplify interconnection to - and usage of - existing IT (legacy) assets.

In some respects, SOA can be considered an architectural evolution rather than a revolution and captures many of the best practices of previous software architectures. In communications systems, for example, there has been little development of solutions that use truly static bindings to talk to other equipment in the network. By formally embracing a SOA approach, such systems are better positioned to stress the importance of well-defined, highly inter-operable interfaces.[citation needed]

Some have questioned whether SOA is just a revival of modular programming (1970s), event-oriented design (1980s) or interface/component-based design (1990s)[citation needed]. SOA promotes the goal of separating users (consumers) from the service implementations. Services can therefore be run on various distributed platforms and be accessed across networks. This can also maximize reuse of services[citation needed].

SOA principles

The following guiding principles define the ground rules for development, maintenance, and usage of the SOA:[10]

  • Reuse, granularity, modularity, composability, componentization, and interoperability
  • Compliance to standards (both common and industry-specific)
  • Services identification and categorization, provisioning and delivery, and monitoring and tracking

The following specific architectural principles for design and service definition focus on specific themes that influence the intrinsic behaviour of a system and the style of its design:

  • Service encapsulation - Many web-services are consolidated to be used under the SOA Architecture. Often such services have not been planned to be under SOA.
  • Service loose coupling - Services maintain a relationship that minimizes dependencies and only requires that they maintain an awareness of each other
  • Service contract - Services adhere to a communications agreement, as defined collectively by one or more service description documents
  • Service abstraction - Beyond what is described in the service contract, services hide logic from the outside world
  • Service reusability - Logic is divided into services with the intention of promoting reuse
  • Service composability - Collections of services can be coordinated and assembled to form composite services
  • Service autonomy – Services have control over the logic they encapsulate
  • Service optimization – All else equal, high-quality services are generally considered preferable to low-quality ones
  • Service discoverability – Services are designed to be outwardly descriptive so that they can be found and assessed via available discovery mechanisms[11]

The following references provide additional considerations for defining a SOA implementation:

  • SOA Reference Architecture provides a working design of an enterprise-wide SOA implementation with detailed architecture diagrams, component descriptions, detailed requirements, design patterns, opinions about standards, patterns on regulation compliance, standards templates etc.[12]
  • Life cycle management SOA Practitioners Guide Part 3: Introduction to Services Lifecycle introduces the Services Lifecycle and provides a detailed process for services management though the service lifecycle, from inception through to retirement or repurposing of the services. It also contains an appendix that includes organization and governance best practices, templates, comments on key SOA standards, and recommended links for more information.

In addition, the following factors should be taken into account when defining a SOA implementation:

Service contract

A service contract needs to have the following components:

  • Header
    • Name - Name of the service. Should indicate in general terms what it does, but not be the only definition
    • Version - The version of this service contract
    • Owner - The person/team in charge of the service
    • RACI
      • Responsible - The role the person/team is responsible for the deliverables of this contract/service. All versions of the contract
      • Accountable - Ultimate Decision Maker in terms of this contract/service
      • Consulted - Who must be consulted before action is taken on this contract/service. This is 2-way communication. These people have an impact on the decision and/or the execution of that decision.
      • Informed - Who must be informed that a decision or action is being taken. This is a 1-way communication. These people are impacted by the decision or execution of that decision, but have no control over the action.
    • Type - This is the type of the service to help distinguish the layer in which it resides. Different implementations will have different service types. Examples of service types include:
      • Presentation
      • Process
      • Business
      • Data
      • Integration
  • Functional
    • Functional Requirement (From Requirements Document) - Indicates the functionality in specific bulleted items what exactly this service accomplishes. The language should be such that it allows test cases to prove the functionality is accomplished.
    • Service Operations - Methods, actions etc. Must be defined in terms of what part of the Functionality it provides.
    • Invocation - Indicates the invocation means of the service. This includes the URL, interface, etc. There may be multiple Invocation paths for the same service. We may have the same functionality for an internal and external clients each with a different invocation means and interface. Examples:
  • Non-Functional
    • Security Constraints - Defines who can execute this service in terms of roles or individual partners, etc. and which invocation mechanism they can invoke.
    • Quality of Service - Determines the allowable failure rate
    • Transactional - Is this capable of acting as part of a larger transaction and if so, how do we control that?
    • Service Level Agreement - Determines the amount of latency the service is allowed to have to perform its actions
    • Semantics - Dictates or defines the meaning of terms used in the description and interfaces of the service
    • Process - Describes the process, if any, of the contracted service

SOA and web service protocols

An SOA is commonly built using Web services standards (e.g., using SOAP) that have gained broad industry acceptance. These standards (also referred to as Web Service specifications) also provide greater interoperability and some protection from lock-in to proprietary vendor software. One can, however, implement SOA using any service-based technology, such as Jini, CORBA or REST.

SOA, Web 2.0, and mashups

Web 2.0 refers to a "second generation" of web sites, primarily distinguished by the ability of visitors to contribute information for collaboration and sharing. Web 2.0 applications use Web services and may include Ajax, Flash, or JavaFX user interfaces, Web syndication, blogs, and wikis. While there are no set standards for Web 2.0, it is characterised by building on the existing web server architecture and using services. Web 2.0 can therefore be regarded as displaying some SOA characteristics[13] [14].

Mashups are also regarded by some as Web 2.0 applications. The term "enterprise mashup" has been coined to describe Web applications that combine content from more than one source into an integrated experience, which share many of the characteristics of service-oriented business applications (SOBAs), which are applications composed of services in a declarative manner. There is ongoing debate about "the collision of Web 2.0, mashups, and SOA", with some stating that Web 2.0 applications are a realisation of SOA composite and business applications. [15]



SOA 2.0 or Advanced SOA

Amid much negative reaction, Oracle is taking up SOA 2.0 as "the next-generation version of SOA" combining service-oriented architecture and Event Driven Architecture, and categorizing the first iteration of SOA as client-server driven[16] . Even though Oracle indicates that Gartner is coining a new term, Gartner analysts indicate that they call this advanced SOA and it is 'whimsically' referred to as SOA 2.0.[17] Most of the pure-play middleware vendors (e.g., webMethods and TIBCO Software) have had SOA 2.0 attributes for years. SOA 2.0 can therefore be regarded as "more marketing noise than anything else"[18] and product evangelism rather than a new "way of doing things".

However, other industry commentators have criticized attaching a version number to an application architecture design approach, while others have stated that the "next generation" should apply to the evolution of SOA techniques from IT optimization to business development[19] .

Challenges faced in SOA adoption

One obvious and common challenge faced is managing services metadata[citation needed]. SOA-based environments can include many services which exchange messages to perform tasks. Depending on the design, a single application may generate millions of messages. Managing and providing information on how services interact is a complicated task.

Another challenge is providing appropriate levels of security. Security model built into an application may no longer be appropriate when the capabilities of the application are exposed as services that can be used by other applications. That is, application-managed security is not the right model for securing services. A number of new technologies and standards are emerging to provide more appropriate models for security in SOA. See SOA Security entry for more info.

As SOA and the WS-* specifications are constantly being expanded, updated and refined, there is a shortage of skilled people to work on SOA based systems, including the integration of services and construction of services infrastructure.

Interoperability is another important aspect in the SOA implementations. The WS-I organization has developed Basic Profile (BP) and Basic Security Profile (BSP) to enforce compatibility.[20] Testing tools have been designed by WS-I to help assess whether web services are conformant with WS-I profile guidelines. Additionally, another Charter has been established to work on the Reliable Secure Profile.

There is significant vendor hype concerning SOA that can create expectations that may not be fulfilled. Product stacks are still evolving as early adopters test the development and runtime products with real world problems. SOA does not guarantee reduced IT costs, improved systems agility or faster time to market. Successful SOA implementations may realize some or all of these benefits depending on the quality and relevance of the system architecture and design[21] . See also: WS-MetadataExchange OWL-S Abrobit Roy

Criticisms of SOA

Some criticisms[weasel words] of SOA are based on the assumption that SOA is just another term for Web Services. For example, some critics[weasel words] claim SOA results in the addition of XML layers introducing XML parsing and composition. In the absence of native or binary forms of Remote Procedure Call (RPC) applications could run slower and require more processing power, increasing costs. Most implementations do incur these overheads, but SOA can be implemented using technologies (for example, Java Business Integration (JBI)) which do not depend on remote procedure calls or translation through XML. At the same time, there are emerging, open-source XML parsing technologies, such as VTD-XML, and various XML-compatible binary formats that promise to significantly improve the SOA performance[22][23][24].

Stateful services require both the consumer and the provider to share the same consumer-specific context, which is either included in or referenced by messages exchanged between the provider and the consumer. The drawback of this constraint is that it could reduce the overall scalability of the service provider because it might need to remember the shared context for each consumer. It also increases the coupling between a service provider and a consumer and makes switching service providers more difficult.

Another concern is that WS-* standards and products are still evolving (e.g., transaction, security), and SOA can thus introduce new risks unless properly managed and estimated with additional budget and contingency for additional Proof of Concept work.

Some critics[weasel words] feel SOA is merely an obvious evolution of currently well-deployed architectures (open interfaces, etc).

A SOA being an architecture is the first stage of representing the system components that interconnect for the benefit of the business. At this level a SOA is just an evolution of an existing architecture and business functions. SOAs are normally associated with interconnecting back end transactional systems that are accessed via web services.

The real issue with any IT "architecture" is how one defines the information management model and operations around it that deal with information privacy, reflect the business's products and services, enable services to be delivered to the customers, allow for self care, preferences and entitlements and at the same time embrace identity management and agility. On this last point, system modification (agility) is a critical issue which is normally omitted from IT system design. Many systems, including SOAs, hard code the operations, goods and services of the organization thus restricting their online service and business agility in the global market place.

Adopting SOAs is therefore just the first (diagrammatic) step in defining a real business system. The next step in the design process is the definition of a Service Delivery Platform (SDP) and its implementation. It is in the SDP design phase where one defines the business information models, identity management, products, content, devices, and the end user service characteristics, as well as how agile the system is so that it can deal with the evolution of the business and its customers.

SOA and Business Architecture

One area where SOA has been gaining ground is in its power as a mechanism for defining business services[25] and operating models and thus provide a structure for IT to deliver against the actual business requirements and adapt in a similar way to the business. The purpose of using SOA as a business mapping tool is to ensure that the services created properly represent the business view and are not just what technologists think the business services should be. At the heart of SOA planning is the process of defining architectures for the use of information in support of the business, and the plan for implementing those architectures [26]. Enterprise Business Architecture should always represent the highest and most dominant architecture. Every service should be created with the intent to bring value to the business in some way and must be traceable back to the business architecture.

Within this area, SOMA (service-oriented modelling and architecture) was announced by IBM as the first publicly announced SOA-related methodology in 2004. Since then, efforts have been made to move towards greater standardization and the involvement of business objectives, particularly within the OASIS standards group and specifically the SOA Adoption Blueprints group. All of these approaches take a fundamentally structured approach to SOA, focusing more on the Services and Architecture elements and leaving implementation to the more technically focused standards. Another pertinent example is SAP Enterprise Services Architecture, which is focused on a strict governance process and the use of semantics to improve the usefulness of services in business process innovation.

SOA and network management architecture

The principles of SOA are currently being applied to the field of network management. Examples of service-oriented network management architectures are TS 188 001 NGN Management OSS Architecture from ETSI, and M.3060 Principles for the Management Of Next Generation Networks recommendation from the ITU-T.

Tools for managing SOA infrastructure include:

References

  1. ^ Newcomer, Eric (2005). Understanding SOA with Web Services. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-321-18086-0. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c Erl, Thomas (2005). Service-oriented Architecture: Concepts, Technology, and Design. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall PTR. ISBN 0-13-185858-0.
  3. ^ An alternative view, particularly after initial deployments, is that SOAs properly ought not dictate physical implementation, so the formal definition should not include "network." High performance SOAs may not be viable, especially if deployed to distributed nodes on a network. Separate nodes for every (or most) services could be prohibitively expensive.
  4. ^ Channabasavaiah, Holley and Tuggle, Migrating to a service-oriented architecture, IBM DeveloperWorks, 16 Dec 2003
  5. ^ Cardoso, Jorge (2006). "Foreword". Semantic Web Services, Processes and Applications. SEMANTIC WEB AND BEYOND: Computing for Human Experience. Foreword by Frank Leymann. Springer. pp. xxi. ISBN 978-0-387-30239-3. The corresponding architectural style is called "service-oriented architecture": fundamentally, it describes how service requesters and service providers can be decoupled via discovery mechanisms resulting in loosely coupled systems. ... Implementing a service-oriented architecture means to deal with heterogeneity and interoperability concerns. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ Bell, Michael (2008). "Introduction to Service-Oriented Modeling". Service-Oriented Modeling: Service Analysis, Design, and Architecture. Wiley & Sons. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-470-14111-3.
  7. ^ SOA - Documents - Document details
  8. ^ SOA Reference Model definition
  9. ^ Christopher Koch A New Blueprint For The Enterprise, CIO Magazine, Mar 1 2005
  10. ^ Yvonne Balzer Improve your SOA project plans, IBM, 16 July 2004
  11. ^ Thomas Erl Serviceorientation.org - About the Principles, 2005-2006
  12. ^ SOA Practitioners Guide Part 2: SOA Reference Architecture
  13. ^ Dion Hinchcliffe Is Web 2.0 The Global SOA?, SOA Web Services Journal, 28 October 2005
  14. ^ >Schroth, Christoph ; Janner, Till; (2007). "Web 2.0 and SOA: Converging Concepts Enabling the Internet of Services". IT Professional 9 (2007), Nr. 3, p. 36-41, IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved 2008-02-23. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Jason Bloomberg Mashups and SOBAs: Which is the Tail and Which is the Dog?, Zapthink
  16. ^ Paul Krill Make way for SOA 2.0, InfoWorld , May 17, 2006
  17. ^ Yefim Natis & Roy Schulte Advanced SOA for Advanced Enterprise Projects, Gartner, July 13, 2006
  18. ^ Sandra Rogers Patience Grasshopper…It’s a Learning Process, Business Trends Quarterly, Q4, 2006
  19. ^ Joe McKendrick Anti-SOA 2.0 petition nears 400, ZDNet.com, June 29, 2006
  20. ^ WS-I Basic Profile
  21. ^ Is There Real Business Value Behind the Hype of SOA?, Computerworld, June 19, 2006
  22. ^ Index XML documents with VTD-XML
  23. ^ The Performance Woe of Binary XML
  24. ^ Manipulate XML Content the Ximple Way
  25. ^ Steve Jones Enterprise SOA Adoption Strategies, InfoQ, May 17, 2006, ISBN 978-1-84728-398-6
  26. ^ Spewak, Steven. Enterprise Architecture Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Data, Applications, and Technology. ISBN 978-0894354366. {{cite book}}: More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) Note that there is another edition that just lists Spewak as an author that may have better availability.
  • Janner, Till ; Cañas Vaz, Miguel Angel ; Hierro, Juan J. ; Lizcano, David ; Reyes , Marcos ; Schroth, Christoph ; Soriano, Javier ; Hoyer, Volker: Enterprise Mashup: Putting a face on next generation global SOA. The 8th International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering (WISE 2007). Nancy, France, 2007.- URL http://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/Publikationen/41338
  • Schroth, Christoph ; Christ, Oliver: Brave New Web: Emerging Design Principles and Technologies as Enablers of a Global SOA. In: Proceedings of the 2007 IEEE International Conference on Services Computing (SCC 2007) : IEEE Computer Society, 2007.- 2007 IEEE International Conference on Services Computing (SCC 2007).- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, S. 8.- URL http://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/Publikationen/37038


See also

External links