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Fabio Casati, Ski Ilnicki, LiJie Jin, Vasudev Krishnamoorthy, and Ming-Chien Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eflow. Technical report, Hewlett-Packard Co., 2000.

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Collecting and Querying Distributed Traces of Composite.. - Fauvet, Dumas..   (Correct)

.... location (the centralised orchestration approach) or implemented as a set of distributed processes that cooperate in a peer to peer manner (the P2P orchestration approach) In the centralised approach, the scheduler of a composite service S is implemented as a single software module as in [11] [2] and [21] This scheduler is responsible for initiating the execution of the components of S according to the control flow statechart associated with S. To do so, the scheduler of S invokes each of the components of S according to the control flow dependencies of the composite service. In the P2P ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000. Springer Verlag.


Issues in Data Management for Pervasive Environments - Avancha, Chakraborty..   (Correct)

....knowledge to determine closest possible matches to a given service request. Anamika: A simple Reactive Service composition system over Bluetooth Project Anamika addresses the problem of service composition in a mobile ad hoc environment. The traditional service composition architectures [6], 10] 23] are built over the fixed network infrastructures. They assume the presence of a centralized, highly available manager that handles complex queries requiring multiple services to be executed in a certain manner. This assumption does not hold in an ad hoc environment. In addition, the ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eflow. Technical Report, HPL-2000.


Service Components for Managing the Life-Cycle of Service.. - Yang, Papazoglou (2003)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

....with an XQuery extension that handles message mappings. 8 Related work Most of the work in service composition has focussed on using work flows either as a engine for distributed activity coordination or as a tool to model and define service composition. Representative work is described in [6] where the authors discuss the development of a platform specifying and enacting composite services in the context of a workflow engine. The eFlow system provides a number of features that support service specification and management, including a simple composition language, events and exception ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, M.C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow, HP Lab. Techn. Report, HPL-2000-39.


Web Component: A Substrate for Web Service Reuse and Composition - Yang, Papazoglou (2002)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

....has been developed on basis of the depth first search. 6 Related Work Most of the work in service composition has focussed on using work flows either as a engine for distributed activity coordination or as a tool to model and define 15 service composition. Representative work is described in [1] where the authors discuss the development of a platform specifying and enacting composite services in the context of a workflow engine. The eFlow system provides a number of features that support service specification and management, including a simple composition language, events and exception ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, M.C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow, HP Lab. Techn. Report, HPL-2000-39 .


DeclarativeC omposition and Peer-to-Peer Provisioning.. - Benatallah, Dumas.. (2002)   (21 citations)  (Correct)

....From th ere on, th e coordinator object is no longer needed, so it is removed from th pool and destroyed. 5. Related Work Service composition is a ver active area of research and development [13, 3] Inthq section, we focus on research efforts th are closel related to our work, namel eFLOW [4], CMI [12] CrossFlow [7] WISE [9] CPM [5] and Mentor [10, 3] CMI [12] and eFlow [4] are platforms for specif ing, enacting, and monitoring composite services. In both of thz e platforms, th e underl ing execution model is based on a centralised process engine, responsible for sch5zC ing, ....

....pool and destroyed. 5. Related Work Service composition is a ver active area of research and development [13, 3] Inthq section, we focus on research efforts th are closel related to our work, namel eFLOW [4] CMI [12] CrossFlow [7] WISE [9] CPM [5] and Mentor [10, 3] CMI [12] and eFlow [4] are platforms for specif ing, enacting, and monitoring composite services. In both of thz e platforms, th e underl ing execution model is based on a centralised process engine, responsible for sch5zC ing, dispatch ing, and controlling th e execution of allth e instances of a composite service.Th ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krish namoorth y, and M.- C. Sh an. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockh" m, Sweden, June 2000. Springer Verlag.


Compatibility of e-Services in a Cooperative.. - Mecella, Pernici, Craca (2001)   (Correct)

....not adopting a strictly coordinated system for inter organization cooperation [6] In the workflow community, much attention has been paid to adaptive and extensible systems and to the separation of concern between interface and im plementation of a process and or activity. The eFlow system [4] is a process management system that supports adaptive and dynamic service composition, by separating the concepts of process schema, service node and service process instance, all of them described through an XML based description language. In [16] different activities of a multi enterprise ....

Casati, F., Ilnicki, S., Krishnamoorthy, V., Shan, M.C.: Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAISE 2000), Stockholm, Sweden, 2000.


Web Component: A Substrate for Web Service Reuse and Composition - Yang, Papazoglou (2002)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

.... Fig. 6. An application program class HolidayPlanning 6 Related Work Most ofthe work in seOO7O composition has focusse on using work flowse,NHO as ae ngine for distribute activity coordination or as a tool to mode and de ne se7fl ce composition. RerefiN tative work is defifiH b e in [2] whe e the authors discuss the de e lopme t of a platform spe,fi(2(N and e, cting composite s evice in the conte xt of a workflow e gine . The e low syste m provide s a numb e of fe tur e that support s evice spe,O7O tion and manage me t,including a simple composition language)N e ts ande xce tion ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, M. C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow, HP Lab. Techn. Report, HPL-2000-39 . 35


Dynamic Service Composition and Its Applicability to.. - Tosic, Mennie, Pagurek (2000)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

....issues that are currently not addressed by the industrial initiatives. However, the experiences from our research could be very useful for the emerging industrial approaches to dynamic composition of Web services, like IBM s WDFL (Web Services Flow Language) 8] and also for HP s eFlow [3]. Several different approaches for example, 7] 14] and [2] to dynamic software composition and closely related issues were presented in the literature. The majority of such research has focused on techniques for creating new applications at runtime on a single node or in a distributed ....

Casati, F., Ilnicki, S., Jin, L.-J., Krishnamoorthy, V., Shan, M.-C.: Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Tech. Rep. HPL-2000-39. Hewlett-Packard Company (March 2000). On-line at: http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/2000/HPL-2000-39.pdf


Building Reliable Web Services Compositions - Pires, Benevides, Mattoso (2002)   (10 citations)  (Correct)

....As these services become available in the Web service environment, a new business opportunity is created, i.e. the possibility of providing value added Web services. Such value added Web services can be built through the integration and composition of basic Web services available on the Web [3]. Web service composition is the ability of one business to provide value added services to its customers through the composition of basic Web services, possibly offered by different companies [3, 4] Web service composition shares many requirements with business process management [1] They both ....

.... can be built through the integration and composition of basic Web services available on the Web [3] Web service composition is the ability of one business to provide value added services to its customers through the composition of basic Web services, possibly offered by different companies [3, 4]. Web service composition shares many requirements with business process management [1] They both need to coordinate the sequence of service invocation within a composition, to manage the data flow between services, and to manage execution of compositions as transaction units. In addition, they ....

Casati, F., Ilnicki, S., Jin, L., et al., "Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow". In: Proceedings of CaiSE 2000, Stockholm, Sweden, pp. 13-31, June 2000.


A Reactive Service Composition Architecture for.. - Chakraborty.. (2002)   (6 citations)  (Correct)

....be defined as the process of creating customized services from existing services by a process of dynamic discovery, integration and execution of those services in a planned order to satisfy a request from a client. Research in the area of service discovery [1, 19, 3, 8, 22]and service composition [6, 21, 14, 20, 4, 17]has focused on trying to leverage the wide array of e services available over the network to provide customized services to e customers, for example planning a business trip for a person. A business trip manager could integrate existing services like a car rental service, an airline ticket booking ....

....a car rental service, an airline ticket booking service, and a hotel room reserving service to provide the user with a complete planned business trip. There has been a sharp increase in these types of wired infrastructure based services in the last few years. Existing service composition systems [17, 6, 14]broadly address the problems associated with composing various services that are available over the fixed network infrastructure. They primarily rely on a centralized composition engine to carry out the discovery, integration and composition of web based e services. However, computing today is ....

[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eflow. Technical Report, HPL-2000.


Infrastructure for Information Spaces - Schek, Schuldt, Schuler, Weber (2002)   (Correct)

....different providers. Our approach which uses a global subscription list component allows the infrastructure to dynamically choose a suitable service instance at process execution time. This allows the system to execute processes in a dynamic way. Approaches dealing with similar paradigms are eFlow [2] and CrossFlow [7] Existing service description directories like the UDDI Repository [1] could be used to discover external, non cooperative service providers. To find services matching a complex service definition, additional effort has to be taken. The ISEE [13] system shows how e service ....

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. In Proc. Conf. on Advanced Information Systems Engineering, Stockholm, 2000.


Towards A Semantic Framework For Service Description - Dumas, O'Sullivan.. (2001)   (8 citations)  (Correct)

....As a result, many di#erent and often incompatible approaches to describing, managing and providing services have been developed, and there is still a lack of consensus and sometimes clear understanding about what constitutes a service. Some recent approaches to business to business e commerce [Casati et al. 2000; Schuster et al. 2000; Jennings et al. 2000] essentially view a service as a simple or a complex task or activity, executed within an organisation on behalf of a customer or another organisation. In other words, services are seen as abstractions of business processes. This abstraction is ....

....extraction over the Internet (e.g. search engines) Service composition. In the last decade, this issue has become crucial as business processes are being modeled through workflows, that can be connected through emerging enterprise wide and inter organisational workflow management systems [Casati et al. 2000; Schuster et al. 2000; Jennings et al. 2000] As a result, services that are primarily intended to be composed with others (i.e. intermediary services) need to be distinguished from those which are directly consumable (i.e. final services) On the extreme of the automation dimension, ....

[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]

Casati, F., Ilnicki, S., Jin, L.-J., Krishnamoorthy, V., and Shan, M.-C. (2000). Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden. Springer Verlag.


Self-Coordinated and Self-Traced Dynamic Composite Services - Fauvet, Benatallah.. (2001)   (Correct)

....the providers participating in a composite service execution, is distributed across several software components hosted by the providers themselves. As these components interact in a peer to peer way, the execution of a composite service is not dependent on a central scheduler as in eFlow [3] and CMI [16] thereby avoiding a potential bottleneck. In addition, each provider is free to implement its service using any business process manager, unlike other peer to peer execution approaches such as CPM [4] which impose all the providers to deploy the same workflow management engine. ....

....and the related field of inter organisational workflows, have been the subject of intensive developments in the last few years. In this section, we focus on those efforts dealing with the aspects addressed in this paper, that is, coordination between services and provider selection. EFlow [3] is a platform for specifying, enacting, and monitoring composite services. The execution model is based on a centralised process engine, which is responsible for scheduling, dispatching, and controlling the execution of the composite services. Clearly, this centralised engine represents a ....

[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000. Springer Verlag.


Self-Coordinated and Self-Traced Composite Services.. - Benatallah, Dumas.. (2001)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

.... whereby the responsibility of coordinating the execution a composite service, is distributed across several state coordinators (or coordinators in short) In other words, the execution of a composite service is not dependent on a central scheduler as in previous proposals (e.g. EFlow [5] and CMI [19] but rather on software components hosted by each of the providers participating in a service composition. This software components interact in a peer to peer fashion in order to ensure that each instance of a composite service is executed in accordance with its control flow and its ....

....of inter organisational workflows, have been the subject of intensive developments in the last few years. In this section, we focus on those efforts dealing with the aspects addressed in this paper, that is, coordination between services, provider selection, and execution trace collection. eFlow [5] is a platform for specifying, enacting, and monitoring composite services. The execution model is based on a centralised process engine, which is responsible for scheduling, dispatching, and controlling the execution of the composite services. Clearly, this centralised process engine represents a ....

[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000. Springer Verlag.


An Architecture to Support Dynamic Composition of Service.. - Mennie (2000)   (12 citations)  (Correct)

....every e service will be updated since change occurs frequently and modification is a risky and laborious undertaking. The goal is for service processes to adapt with little or no human interaction to the changes in the environment while still providing seamless service to the customer. eFlow [7] (see Figure 2.5) was created to cope with this environment and allow composite e services to be specified, instantiated, and monitored. A composite service in eFlow is described as a process schema that composes other basic or composite services. A service process instance is an implementation ....

Casati, F., Ilnicki, S., Jin, L., Krishnamoorthy, V., and Shan, M., "Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow", HP Labs Technical Report, HPL-200039, Software Technology Laboratory, Palo Alto, CA, March, 2000. Available at: http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/2000/HPL-2000-39.pdf


What's in a Service? Towards Accurate Description of.. - O'Sullivan, Edmond.. (2002)   Self-citation (Casati)   (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan, "Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow," Technical Report HPL-2000-39, Hewlett Packard Software Technology Laboratory, Palo Alto, CA, USA, March 2000. Available from http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/2000/HPL-200039. html, accessed on 27 Dec. 2000.


An Overview of Standards and Related Technology in Web.. - Tsalgatidou, Pilioura (2002)   (6 citations)  Self-citation (Casati)   (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati et al., "Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow," http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/ 2000/HPL-2000-39.html.


Ubiquitous Web Services - Attard   (Correct)

No context found.

Fabio Casati, Ski Ilnicki, LiJie Jin, Vasudev Krishnamoorthy, and Ming-Chien Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eflow. Technical report, Hewlett-Packard Co., 2000.


QoS-Assured Service Composition in Managed Service Overlay.. - Xiaohui Gu Klara (2003)   (5 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati et. al. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. HP technical Report HPL-2000-39, March 2000.


Solar: Building a Context Fusion Network for Pervasive Computing - Chen (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

Fabio Casati, Ski Ilnicki, Li-Jie Jin, Vasudev Krishnamoorthy, and Ming-Chien Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical Report HPL-2000-39, HP Labs, 2000.


Solar: Building a Context Fusion Network for Pervasive Computing - Chen (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

Fabio Casati, Ski Ilnicki, Li-Jie Jin, Vasudev Krishnamoorthy, and Ming-Chien Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical Report HPL-2000-39, HP Labs, 2000.


Scalable Peer-to-Peer Process Management - The OSIRIS.. - Schuler, Weber, Schuldt, .. (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Conf. on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, 2000.


QoS-Assured Service Composition in Managed Service.. - Gu, Nahrstedt, Chang.. (2003)   (5 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati et. al. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. HP technical Report HPL-2000-39, March 2000.


Artificial Intelligence: a Promised Land for Web Services - Richards, Sabou, van.. (2003)   (Correct)

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Casati, F., Ilnicki, S. and Jin, L Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. HP Technical Report, HPL-2000.


Peer-to-Peer Process Execution with Osiris - Schuler, Weber, Schuldt, Schek (2003)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. In Proc. Conf. on Advanced Information Systems Engineering, Stockholm, 2000.


Design and Implementation of a Large-Scale Context Fusion Network - Chen, Li, Kotz (2004)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical Report HPL-2000-39, HP Labs, 2000.


Configuring Web Services, using Structuring and.. - Van Splunter.. (2004)   (Correct)

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Casati, F., Ilnicki, S. and Jin, L. "Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow" HP Technical Report, HPL-2000.


Conflict Resolution in Web Service Federations - Veruska Aragao And (2003)   (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical report, HP Laboratories Palo Alto, 2000.


Discovering E-Services Using UDDI in SELF-SERV - Quan Sheng Boualem (2002)   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000, Springer Verlag.


A Three-Layer Architecture for E-Contract Enforcement in an .. - Chiu, Cheung, Till (2003)   (Correct)

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F. Casati, et al. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. HP Lab's Technical Report HPL-2000-39, March 2000.


Conflict Resolution in Web Service Federations - Veruska Aragao And   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical report, HP Laboratories Palo Alto, 2000.


Semantic Web Enabled Composition of Web Services - Medjahed (2004)   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering, pages 13--31, Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000.


Me-Services: A Framework for Secure Personalized - Discovery Composition And   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow. Technical Report, HPL-200039, Software Technology Laboratory, Palo Alto, CA, March 2000.


Brokering Based Self Organizing E-Service Communities - Sumi Helal Mei (2001)   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Llnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, M. Shan, "Adaptive and Dynamic Service Composition in eFlow", HP Labs, 2000


A Distributed Service Composition Protocol for - Dipanjan   (Correct)

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F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eflow. Technical Report, HPL2000.


Towards Patterns of Web Services Composition - Benatallah, Dumas, Fauvet, Rabhi (2002)   (7 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

F. Casati, S. Ilnicki, L.-J. Jin, V. Krishnamoorthy, and M.-C. Shan. Adaptive and dynamic service composition in eFlow. In Proc. of the Int. Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), Stockholm, Sweden, June 2000. Springer Verlag.

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