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Let’s Dance: A Language for Service Behavior Modeling
Author(s) -
Johannes Maria Zaha,
Alistair Barros,
Marlon Dumas,
Arthur H. M. ter Hofstede
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
lecture notes in computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.249
H-Index - 400
eISSN - 1611-3349
pISSN - 0302-9743
ISBN - 3-540-48287-3
DOI - 10.1007/11914853_10
Subject(s) - computer science , evolvability , reuse , software engineering , process (computing) , service (business) , set (abstract data type) , modeling language , human–computer interaction , artificial intelligence , software , programming language , engineering , evolutionary biology , economics , biology , waste management , economy
In Service-Oriented Architectures (SOAs), software systems are decomposed into independent units, namely services, that interact with one another through message exchanges. To promote reuse and evolvability, these interactions are explicitly described right from the early phases of the development lifecycle. Up to now, emphasis has been placed on capturing structural aspects of service interactions. Gradually though, the description of behavioral dependencies between service interactions is gaining increasing attention as a means to push forward the SOA vision. This paper deals with the description of these behavioral dependencies during the analysis and design phases. The paper outlines a set of requirements that a language for modeling service interactions at this level should fulfill, and proposes a language whose design is driven by these requirements

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