Overview of Web Services and Service Oriented Architecture SOA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Overview of Web Services and Service Oriented Architecture SOA

Description:

SOAP message structure an XML element with two child elements ... as a sports equipment manufacturer and also as a skateboard manufacturer. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2412
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: busi50
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Overview of Web Services and Service Oriented Architecture SOA


1
Overview of Web Services and Service Oriented
Architecture (SOA)
  • Vijayan Sugumaran
  • School of Business Administration
  • Oakland University
  • Rochester, MI 48309

2
Background
  • Build a distributed computing platform for the
    Web
  • Applications are encapsulated, loosely coupled
    Web components that can bind dynamically to
    each other
  • Easily find these components and integrate them
    to meet specific requirements
  • Plug-and-Play
  • Buy and integrate code into your system
  • Subscribe to necessary services

3
What are Web Services?
  • New breed of Web application
  • Self-contained, self-describing, modular
    applications that can be published, located, and
    invoked across the Web
  • Perform functions, which can be anything from
    simple requests to complicated business processes
  • Once a Web service is deployed, other
    applications (and other Web services) can
    discover and invoke the deployed service

4
Web Services Promise
  • Web Services connect computers and devices with
    each other using the Internet to exchange data
    and combine data in new ways.
  • The key to Web Services is on-the-fly software
    creation through the use of loosely coupled,
    reusable software components.
  • Software can be delivered and paid for as streams
    of services as opposed to packaged products.
  • Business services can be completely decentralized
    and distributed over the Internet.
  • The dynamic enterprise and dynamic value chains
    become achievable and may be even mandatory.

5
Attributes of Web-Services
  • Web-based Protocols Web-services based on HTTP
    are designed to work over the public internet.
    The use of HTTP for transport means these
    protocols can traverse firewalls, and can work in
    a heterogeneous environment.
  • Interoperability SOAP defines a common standard
    that allows differing systems to interoperate.
    E.g., the tooling allows Visual Basic clients to
    access Java server components and vice versa.
  • XML-based The Extensible Markup Language is a
    standard framework for creating machine-readable
    documents.

Fremantle et al. 2002, Enterprise Services, CACM.
Oct
6
Web Services Technologies
  • Web Services technology and underlying standards
    are being rapidly developed
  • Introduction of ebXML for Web Service has
    generated lot of interest in the B2B market.
  • To provide services, the interface of the service
    should be described with a standard language.
  • The contents of services should be registered
    with a registry, shared on the Web.
  • A service repository is a distributed directory
    of services and has functions for searching and
    registering.

7
Web Services Technologies (continued)
  • In the service registry, information about
    services location and usage are included.
  • A particular user could use one or more of the
    services at run time to accomplish a particular
    task.
  • Standards are needed to perform the integration
    function

8
Designing Web Services
  • Enable universal interoperability
  • Enable (Internet scale) dynamic binding
  • Support service oriented architecture (SOA)
  • Efficiently support both open (Web) and more
    constrained environments
  • Based on standards. Pervasive support is critical
  • Minimal amount of required infrastructure should
    be assumed
  • Very low level application integration expected

9
Web Services Standards
  • UDDI provides a mechanism for clients to find web
    services. A UDDI registry is similar to a CORBA
    trader, or it can be thought of as a DNS service
    for business applications.
  • WSDL defines services as collections of network
    endpoints or ports. A port is defined by
    associating a network address with a binding a
    collection of ports define a service.
  • SOAP is a message layout specification that
    defines a uniform way of passing XML-encoded
    data. In also defines a way to bind to HTTP as
    the underlying communication protocol. SOAP is
    basically a technology to allow for RPC over the
    web.

10
Web services technology stack
  • Collection of Web Services standards has been put
    together and categorized into different levels
    depending upon their function
  • Divided into four levels protocol, description,
    interaction and security
  • Helps us to understand the purpose of the
    standards and their underlying assumptions that
    might be required
  • Example interaction level (CS-WS) presupposes
    process description level (BPEL4WS), and focuses
    on exchange of messages based on the order of
    sequence described in the process description
    level

11
Web Services Stack (Turner et al., 2003)
12
Web Services How They Work?
SOAP Messages
Requestor
(http transport)
SOAP Client
Web Service Provider
  • Components required
  • Software which needs to be exposed as a Web
    service
  • A SOAP Server (Apache Axis, SOAPLite, etc.)
  • HTTP Server (if HTTP is used as the transport
    level protocol)
  • SOAP Client (Apache Axis, SOAPLite etc.)

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
13
Simple Web Service Invocation
Service Requestor
Remote Web Service Repository (Web Sites)
2
Manual Web Service Lookup
HTTP GET
3
WSDL File
Write Client Code
1
Remote Web service
4
SOAP Request
Invoke Web Service
Publish Web Service
5
SOAP Response
WSDL - Web Service Description SOAP - Web
Service Message Protocol
From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
14
Web Service Description
  • Why describe Web services?
  • A service requestor needs to analyze a service
    for his requirements
  • A Web service needs to provide the following
    information
  • the operations it supports
  • the transport and messaging protocols on which it
    supports those operations
  • the network endpoint of the Web service
  • Languages such as WSDL, DAML-S, RDF can be used
    for describing Web services
  • WSDL describes the syntactic information of a
    service
  • DAML-S and RDF describe the syntactic as well
    as the semantic information

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
15
SOAP-Simple Object Access Protocol
  • Simple lightweight protocol for exchanging XML
    data over the Web
  • Envelop for transmitting messages, guidelines for
    encoding data, rules for representing remote
    procedure calls (RPCs)
  • SOAP message structure an XML element with two
    child elements
  • Header security, routing, proper handling of
    message
  • Body actual message to be transmitted
  • Also defines a model that dictates how recipients
    should process SOAP messages
  • The message model also includes actors, which
    indicates who should process the message

16
Web Service Message Protocol - SOAP
  • SOAP is an XML Messaging Protocol
  • that allows software running on disparate
    operating systems, running in different
    environments to
  • make Remote Procedure Calls (RPC).

Header
Body
17
WSDL Web Services Description Language
  • Describes the programmatic interface of a web
    service similar to IDL
  • Two parts of WSDL description
  • Application-level (abstract interface)
  • Vocabulary, Message, and Interaction
  • data type definitions, operations supported by
    the service, input/output message formats
  • Specific protocol-dependent details
  • network address, protocol bindings, etc.
  • what communication protocol to use
  • how to accomplish individual service interactions
  • where to terminate communication
  • A port element describes a single end point as a
    combination of a binding and a network address
  • A service element groups a set of related ports

18
Web Service Description (WSDL)
Abstract Description
Concrete Description
From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
19
UDDI Universal Description, Discovery, and
Integration
  • Mechanism to register and locate web services
  • Interaction with UDDI accomplished via a set of
    pre-defined SOAP interfaces
  • Web services register two types of information
    within UDDI
  • tModel (technical model)
  • Abstract service protocols that describe a
    particular web services behavior
  • businessEntity
  • Describes the service implementation
  • Refers to multiple tModels and provides
    descriptions about the behavior of the collection
    of tModels

20
UDDI (Universal Description, Discovery and
Integration)
  • UDDI serves as a Business and services registry
    and are essential for dynamic usage of Web
    services
  • UDDI APIs
  • Publication API - Authenticated set of operations
    that allow organizations to publish businesses,
    services, service type specifications
  • Inquiry API - Non authenticated public set of
    operations that allows users to extract
    information out of the UDDI registry.

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
21
UDDI
  • UDDI classifies businesses and services according
    to standard taxonomies
  • Why Classification ?
  • Searches based on keywords alone, could return a
    large set of hits for a particular search
  • Classification of services and businesses allows
    to perform better searches
  • Registry Data
  • White Pages
  • Yellow Pages
  • Green Pages
  • ServiceType Registrations

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
22
UDDI
  • White Pages
  • contains business name, text description, contact
    info and other related info.
  • Yellow Pages
  • contains classification information about the
    business entity and types of the services the
    entity offers.
  • e.g. a business entity could have itself
    classified as a sports equipment manufacturer and
    also as a skateboard manufacturer.
  • Green Pages
  • contains information about how to invoke the
    offered services.
  • If a business entity were to offer its catalog
    online, its Green
  • pages entry would have a reference to its
    catalog URL

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
23
UDDI
  • Service Types
  • Reusable, abstract definitions of services (
    abstract part of WSDL)
  • that are defined by industry groups and
    standard bodies.
  • These reusable abstractions are referred to as
    Technology Models
  • The UDDI data structure corresponding to this is
    called TModels
  • TModels
  • Any abstract concept can be registered within
    UDDI as a TModel.
  • e.g. If you define a new WSDL port type, you can
    define a TModel that represents the port type
    within the UDDI

From S. Chandrasekarans Talk
24
How UDDI Works ?
1.
SW companies, standards bodies, and programmers
populate the registry with descriptions of
different types of services
UDDI Business Registry
Service Type Registrations
Source http//www.uddi.org/pubs/UDDI_Overview_Pr
esentation.ppt
25
Service Oriented Architecture and Related
Challenges
26
Current Business Trends
  • How can, new value be created by leveraging
    existing technology investments?
  • How can technology help reconfigure operational
    processes and improve flexibility through
    business process outsourcing?
  • How can companies move from one-channel, single
    business unit solutions to cross-enterprise,
    multi-channel solutions?
  • How can the inside-out process perspective
    (customer management, supply chain) be balanced
    with an outside-in services view

27
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
  • SOA - structure of the system
  • Includes software components, externally visible
    properties of those components, relationships
    among them, and constraints on their use
  • The underlying foundation for designing and
    developing SOA is the emerging field of Web
    Services
  • Enables different software components to be
    integrated without having to develop these
    components from scratch - no hassle of custom
    coding

28
Services Aspect of Web-Services
  • Modular Service Components are useful in
    themselves, reusable, and it is possible to
    compose them into larger components.
  • Available Services are available to systems
    that wish to use them. Services must be exposed
    outside of the particular paradigm or system they
    are available in.
  • Described Services have a machine-readable
    description that can be used to identify the
    interface of the service, and its location and
    access information.
  • Implementation-independent The service
    interface must be available in a way that is
    independent of the ultimate implementation.
  • Published Service descriptions are made
    available in a repository where users can find
    the service and use the description to access the
    service.

Fremantle et al. 2002, Enterprise Services ,
CACM. Oct
29
Putting it Together
  • Web Services (SOAP, UDDI, WSDL)
  • Data exchange between two programs in XML format
  • Operate on syntactic level Web services
    infrastructure do not access data content.

30
Web Services Invocation
  • Invocation Model
  • One way invocation
  • Request/Reply invocation
  • Solicit/Response invocation
  • Invoked Entity (Service Provider)
  • Publishes WSDL operation with input and output
    message
  • Invoker (Service Requester) No concept
  • Especially not a subroutine call a la RPC with
    appropriate stack operations or stub generation

31
WS-Based Development
  • Standards organizations
  • Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
  • Organization for the Advancement of Structured
    Information Systems (OASIS)
  • Web Services Industry body (WS-I)
  • Microsoft, IBM, BEA, Sun Micro Systems, SAP,
    Oracle and Hewlett-Packard
  • Three stakeholders
  • service provider
  • service consumer
  • Web Services Standards Organizations
  • Several challenges exist in integrating Web
    Services into E-commerce applications

32
WS Based Application Development Issues
  • Identifying and analyzing the challenges that
    exist for each of these stakeholders
  • Presents a framework that organizes and
    inter-relates the challenges in an easily
    understandable manner
  • The framework is intended to help both the
    service consumers and providers in improving
    their expectations and quality regarding Web
    Services

33
Concerns with SOA-based Application Development
  • Automate individual applications based on
    cross-organizational, heterogeneous software
    components
  • Coordination of a set of Web Services working
    toward a common goal
  • Web services performance needs to be optimized
  • Quality of service parameters as well as service
    level agreements
  • Monitoring and controlling of Web Services

34
Stakeholders
WS Providers
WS Consumers
WS Integrators Publishers
Web Service Vendors
Application Assemblers
End Users
Standards Organizations
W3C
OASIS
WS-I
Others
35
Challenges in WS Integration
  • Important issues with adoption of web services
  • insufficient standardization
  • low acceptance of service consumers
  • critical mass of available useful services
  • Need a framework for studying web services
    adoption
  • technical and non-technical issues associated
    with web services deployment
  • These two dimensions have to be investigated for
    all the major stakeholders
  • web service providers, web service consumers, and
    standards organizations

36
Web Services Providers
  • Identifying new web services requirements,
    design, implementation, testing, eliciting
    customer feedback
  • Web services development strategy, architecture
    standards, and design requirements
  • Service provider specific processes such as
    metering, accounting, and billing
  • Service delivery overhead
  • Coordination function is critical because
    business transactions usually follow a
    contractually defined, fixed pattern

37
Web Service Providers (contd.)
  • Support for versioning management
  • Quality of Service (QoS) policy
  • Service Level Agreements (SLAs), legally binding
    contracts that establish bounds on various QoS
    metrics
  • Unpredictable workloads and high peak-to-average
    ratios in workload intensity
  • Implementing priority-based admission control
    mechanisms

38
Web Service Consumers
  • Application Assemblers and End Users
  • Difficulty in identifying relevant web services
    and integrating them to generate a cohesive
    application
  • Manually search for web services, typically by
    completing a web form to search a repository
  • Dealing with web services that evolve over time
  • For discontinued services application should
    automatically search for the next best fit and
    seamlessly integrate it

39
Web Service Consumers
  • Service Integrators face a number of issues
  • Efficiency - web services execution must be very
    efficient
  • Expressiveness - B2B interactions are complex,
    requires expressive set of supported integration
    concepts
  • Security - interactions must be secured to
    prevent attacks of all types, and non-repudiation
    must be provided for reliable record keeping
  • Reliability - remote and distributed
    communication must be reliable, and messages must
    be sent exactly once to ensure dependable
    interactions
  • Manageability - inter-enterprise communication
    changes frequently, requiring easily manageable
    technology

40
WS Standards Organizations
  • Business process dynamics and nonfunctional
    properties of service-enabled processes are
    poorly addressed
  • Current standards do not put forth a methodology
    to assist designers in building web services on
    top of legacy assets
  • Specifications to support creating robust service
    compositions
  • Standards-based definition of an interoperability
    communication protocol

41
WS Standards Organizations
  • Mechanisms for service description, discovery,
    and composition and a basic set of quality of
    service protocols
  • Design guidelines, including
  • large granularity of messages
  • asynchronous messaging,
  • bi-directionality of services,
  • endpoint discovery, service agents,
  • request pipeline
  • context and content-based routing

42
Overall Challenges Framework
Web Services Suppliers
Web Services Consumers
Web Services Registry
Web Services Standards Organizations
43
Web Services Supplier
  • Technical Challenges
  • Service description and profile
  • WS accessibility, and documentation
  • Architecture standards infrastructure
  • Design Requirements
  • Web services evolution
  • Managerial Challenges
  • Pricing Quality of Service commitments
  • Identifying new services
  • Customer feedback and support
  • Partnerships with third party providers
  • Demand management and Liability

44
Web Services Consumer
  • Technical Challenges
  • Search and identification of relevant WS
  • Customization and integration
  • Validation and testing
  • Technology, domain task characteristics
  • Tools, infrastructure and metrics
  • Managerial Challenges
  • WS utilization strategy
  • Promoting WS, training and education
  • Resource allocation and support
  • Incentives and rewards
  • Partnership management and Security

45
WS Standards Organizations
  • Technical Challenges
  • Service description, publishing invocation
  • WS technology stack components
  • Modeling web services
  • Architectures for WS applications
  • Specifications for all aspects of WS
  • Managerial Challenges
  • Future directions for WS research practice
  • WS implementation guidelines
  • Vendor cooperation for common standards
  • Open standards and interoperability
  • Consistency between standards

46
Summary
  • Mass market for web services are slow to
    materialize and businesses are slow to adopt web
    services technology
  • Web services based development warrants a shift
    in paradigm, and managers are ill equipped to
    assess the advantages and disadvantages
  • Myriad of challenges faced in adopting web
    services havent been thoroughly explored
  • Challenges framework for studying the adoption
    and diffusion of web services from the
    stakeholders perspective
  • Managerial challenges have to be investigated
    using relationships between web service producers
    and consumers
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com