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Web Information Systems Engineering: WISE 2005: 6th International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering, New York, NY, USA, November 20-22, 2005, Proceedings

Anne H. H. Ngu ; Masaru Kitsuregawa ; Erich J. Neuhold ; Jen-Yao Chung ; Quan Z. Sheng (eds.)

En conferencia: 6º International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering (WISE) . New York, NY, USA . November 20, 2005 - November 22, 2005

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Popular Computer Science; Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet); Information Storage and Retrieval; Database Management; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics); Computers and Society

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-30017-5

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-32286-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005

Tabla de contenidos

A SOAP Container Model for e-Business Messaging Requirements

Hamid Ben Malek; Jacques Durand

e-Business software vendors need to accommodate several standards involved in the various functions of a messaging endpoint. Vendors also need to quickly rollout the next version of a messaging protocol by reusing as much as possible of the common software. Increasingly in an e-Business context, several versions of a messaging standard will have to be concurrently operated by business partners. The current platforms for Web service or SOAP offer little support to the above. We have designed SPEF (SOAP Profile Enabling Framework) to address these engineering and business challenges. SPEF allows for coordinating the processing of SOAP modules that implement different standards (security, reliability, etc.). It has been designed as a lightweight messaging framework that behaves as a container for functional plug-ins. Message processing (either for sending or receiving) amounts to a workflow among such plug-ins. The framework relies heavily on open-source software for the basic functions common to various messaging profiles. The paper reports on the resulting integration and on experimenting with SPEF on existing SOAP standards.

Palabras clave: Business Process Management; Messaging Protocol; Open Source Implementation; Soap Message; Messaging Standard.

- Industry-1: Semantic Web | Pp. 643-652

An Empirical Study of Security Threats and Countermeasures in Web Services-Based Services Oriented Architectures

Mamoon Yunus; Rizwan Mallal

As enterprises deploy Services Oriented Architecture (SOA), Web Services Security and Management has become the cornerstone of successful architectures. The greatest potential of Web Services is through re-usability and flexibility. This required flexibility in turn leads to significant security and management challenges. Enterprises migrating to SOA face security challenges such as malicious and malformed SOAP messages parser vulnerabilities and Denial of Service attacks over Web Services. Discovering Web Service Vulnerabilities and Compliance Violations and establishing countermeasure policies for Web Services security threats across large enterprises need to be addressed through standards-based products. This paper explores typical Web Services implementations, threat identification methods, and countermeasures against Web Services vulnerabilities.

- Industry-2: SOA | Pp. 653-659

Collaborative End-Point Service Modulation System (COSMOS)

Naga Ayachitula; Shu-Ping Chang; Larisa Shwartz; Surendra Maheswaran

Many diverse end point devices require high levels of interoperability to effectively manage services and applications. This paper attempts to provide a comprehensive framework for classifying services and offers a building-block approach that uses service as a basic unit for end-point interactions and collaboration. This paper presents a layered architecture of service classification that can be leveraged for facile and an effective adoption of new services and the orchestration of existing services. Today, a vast variety of services and agents exist in the market place and new ones are constantly created at a faster pace than ever. Initiated earlier, the move to a common open service platform for service collaboration conforming to standards like Open Service Gateway initiative (OSGi), Open Mobile Alliance Device Management (OMA DM) etc., expands the capabilities and service delivery for service providers and device manufacturers. Common end point device platform management functions include, but are not limited to, service collaboration, configuration, and inventory and software management services. A common service platform will make the services on the device interoperable with a broader range of applications, services, and transport and network technologies. Solutions available today use a single service for data connectivity, transport service mechanism, etc and therefore, by means of this tight coupling, risk limiting the service provider capabilities. Choosing to support multiple technologies enables service providers to support more types of services on device. However, the complexities arising from adoption of interoperability require taxonomy of services for effective service collaboration with existing services.

- Industry-2: SOA | Pp. 660-668

A Process-Driven e-Business Service Integration System and Its Application to e-Logistics Services

Kwanghoon Kim; Ilkyeun Ra

In this paper, we introduce a process-driven e-Business service integration (BSI) system, which is named ’e-Lollapalooza’, and has been successfully developed through a functional extension of the ebXML technology. It consists of three major components – Choreography Modeler coping with the process-driven collaboration issue, Runtime & Monitoring Client coping with the business intelligence issue and EJB-based BSI Engine coping with the scalability issue. This paper particularly focuses on the e-Lollapalooza’s implementation details supporting the ebXML-based choreography and orchestration among the engaged organizations in a process-driven multiparty collaboration for e-Logistics and e-Commerce services. Now, it is fully deployed on an EJB-based middleware computing environment, and operable based upon the ebXML standard as an e-Business process management framework for e-Logistics process automation and B2B choreography. Finally, we describe an application of the e-Lollapalooza system to the purchase order and delivery processes in a cyber-shopping mall run by a postal service company.

Palabras clave: e-Business Service Integration System; B2B Choreography and Orchestration; e-Business Process Management; ebXML Standard; CPP/CPA; BPSS; e-Logistics; e-Commerce.

- Industry-2: SOA | Pp. 669-678

BPM and SOA: Synergies and Challenges

Thomas Woodley; Stephane Gagnon

While BPM and SOA have evolved independently, there is an inevitable symbiotic relationship between them. As well, a SOA can be developed using various service formats, whether unique Web Services, orchestrated services using the Business Process Execution Language (BPEL), or other service providers. A SOA promotes the creation of highly accessible, loosely coupled, discrete business services. For greatest reach, BPM consumes and leverages such services, tying them together to solve and streamline broad business challenges. Not surprisingly however, there are certain considerations while designing a SOA to support BPM. Certain service designs align well within a BPM solution or strategy, while others can cause significant headaches for an overall BPM solution. Conversely, SOA with BPM layered on top can become an entirely different value proposition as compared to SOA alone. As a backbone for SOA components, BPM can integrate important functionalities to extend the value of the SOA investment. Similarly, BPM can provide a platform for SOA service management. We will explore the interdependencies between BPM and SOA, and will provide practical guidance on how to make each implementation mutually supportive, extending the reach and value of each. We will also discuess whether SOA alone can provide the business service functionality required for BPM solutions of the future, or if other complementary architectures may also have a role to play.

Palabras clave: Business Process; Business Service; Service Design; Business Process Execution Language; Soap Message.

- Industry-3: BPM | Pp. 679-688

Web Performance Indicator by Implicit User Feedback – Application and Formal Approach

Michael Barth; Michal Skubacz; Carsten Stolz

With growing importance of the internet, web sites have to be continously improved. Web metrics help to identify improvement potentials. Particularly success metrics for e-commerce sites based on transaction analysis are commonly available and well understood. In contrast to transaction based sites, the success of web sites geared toward information delivery is harder to quantify since there is no direct feedback of the user. We propose a generic success measure for information driven web sites. The idea of the measure is based on the observation of user behaviour in context of the web site semantics. In particular we observe users on their way through the web site and assign positive and negative scores to their actions. The value of the score depends on the transitions between page types and their contribution to the web site’s objectives. To derive a generic view on the metric construction, we introduce a formal meta environment deriving success measures upon the relations and dependencies of usage, content and structure of a web site.

Palabras clave: User Session; Content Page; Topic Shift; Target Page; Page Category.

- Industry-3: BPM | Pp. 689-700

Discovering the Most Frequent Patterns of Executions in Business Processes Described in BPEL

Benoit Dubouloz; Candemir Toklu

Emerging Business Process Management Systems (BPMS) are revolutionizing the way enterprises address inter-/intra- company process integration and business IT alignment problems. BPMS is becoming the tool of choice for process lifecycle management. Continuous process improvement is the key focus of process lifecycle management. To carry out this task effectively process designers need a deep understanding of the process behavior. They will need efficient mining algorithms that deliver pertinent and valuable information on all executed instances of a complex process. We propose an algorithm that mines the frequent paths of execution for processes described in BPEL by extending the formalism that has been proposed for mining frequent patterns in a workflow.

Palabras clave: Frequent Pattern; Mining Algorithm; Process Instance; Business Process Execution Language; Loop Body.

- Industry-3: BPM | Pp. 701-710

CONFIOUS: Managing the Electronic Submission and Reviewing Process of Scientific Conferences

Manos Papagelis; Dimitris Plexousakis; Panagiotis N. Nikolaou

Most scientific communities have recently established policies and mechanisms to put into practice electronic conference management, mainly by exploiting the Internet as the communication and cooperation infrastructure. Their foremost objective is to reduce the operational and communication costs but to maintain high quality reviewing and the fairness of the evaluation process. Interestingly, we report on experience gained by an implemented system named Confious. Confious [8] is a state-of-the-art management system that combines modern design, sophisticated algorithms and a powerful engine to help the program committee (PC) Chair to effortlessly accomplish a number of complicated tasks and carry out the necessary activities to produce the proceedings of a scientific conference. We are principally interested in (a) describing the workflow dynamics of a real-world scientific process, (b) identifying the main concerns of the person in charge of the conference organization, (c) providing mechanisms that enable the efficient management and monitoring of the overall coordination process.

Palabras clave: Potential Conflict; Program Committee; Scientific Conference; Review Form; User Role.

- Industry-3: BPM | Pp. 711-720

Tool Support for Model-Driven Development of Web Applications

Jaime Gómez; Alejandro Bia; Antonio Parraga

This paper describes the engineering foundations of VisualWADE, a CASE tool to automate the production of Web applications. VisualWADE follows a model-driven approach focusing on requirements analysis, high level design, and rapid prototyping. In this way, an application evolves smoothly from the first prototype to the final product, and its maintenance is a natural consequence of development. The paper also discusses the lessons learned in the development of the tool and its application to several case studies in the industrial context.

Palabras clave: Class Diagram; Object Constraint Language; Case Tool; Navigation Model; Object Oriented Analysis.

- Industry-4: Web Infrastructure | Pp. 721-730

Web Personalization: My Own Web Based on Open Content Platform

Seiyoung Lee; Hwan-Seung Yong

The key word in the 2nd round of portal competition will be Personalization. This study reviewed recent core research related to Web Personalization and thus showed the ideal next generation model based on recent personalization strategies of major portals. The model is mainly composed of the following: Open Content strategy based on RSS; Personalized Search based on a user’s preferences, Desktop Search, My Web storage, etc; Social Network, the concept that a user can share information with others depending on his interests; and Ubiquitous Computing that can merge people, computers and materials with the help of various multimedia technologies.

- Industry-4: Web Infrastructure | Pp. 731-739