Eric Wohlstadter, Stefan Tai, et al.
ICWS 2006
Service-oriented computing is emerging as a distributed computing model where autonomous services interact with each other using standard Internet technology. In addition to the application-specific functions that services provide (different) services may also support (different) sets of protocols and formats addressing extra-functional concerns such as transaction processing and reliable messaging. This raises the need for services to complement their functional service descriptions with descriptions of extra-functional capabilities, requirements, and/or preferences, which must be matched and enforced for service interactions. In this paper, we address the problem of transactional coordination in service-oriented computing. We argue for the use of declarative policy assertions to advertise and match support for different transaction styles (direct transaction processing, queued transaction processing, and compensation-based transaction processing), and introduce the concept of and system support for transaction coupling modes as the policy-based contracts guiding transactional business process execution. We focus on concrete, protocol-specific policies that apply to relevant Web services specifications. Using transaction policies and our middleware system, we are able to support a reliable SOC environment. © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Eric Wohlstadter, Stefan Tai, et al.
ICWS 2006
Paula Austel, Han Chen, et al.
CF 2015
Stefan Tai, Thomas Mikalsen, et al.
ICDCS 2002
Ömer Erdem Demir, Premkumar Devanbu, et al.
SEM 2005