Synthesis of orchestrators from service choreographies


Autoria(s): McIlvenna, Stephen
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

With service interaction modelling, it is customary to distinguish between two types of models: choreographies and orchestrations. A choreography describes interactions within a collection of services from a global perspective, where no service plays a privileged role. Instead, services interact in a peer-to-peer manner. In contrast, an orchestration describes the interactions between one particular service, the orchestrator, and a number of partner services. The main proposition of this work is an approach to bridge these two modelling viewpoints by synthesising orchestrators from choreographies. To start with, choreographies are defined using a simple behaviour description language based on communicating finite state machines. From such a model, orchestrators are initially synthesised in the form of state machines. It turns out that state machines are not suitable for orchestration modelling, because orchestrators generally need to engage in concurrent interactions. To address this issue, a technique is proposed to transform state machines into process models in the Business Process Modelling Notation (BPMN). Orchestrations represented in BPMN can then be augmented with additional business logic to achieve value-adding mediation. In addition, techniques exist for refining BPMN models into executable process definitions. The transformation from state machines to BPMN relies on Petri nets as an intermediary representation and leverages techniques from theory of regions to identify concurrency in the initial Petri net. Once concurrency has been identified, the resulting Petri net is transformed into a BPMN model. The original contributions of this work are: an algorithm to synthesise orchestrators from choreographies and a rules-based transformation from Petri nets into BPMN.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29162/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29162/1/Stephen_McIlvenna_Thesis.pdf

McIlvenna, Stephen (2009) Synthesis of orchestrators from service choreographies. Masters by Research thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #service composition, service protocol, choreography, orchestration, Petri nets, BPMN
Tipo

Thesis