Flexible Service Choreography
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Abstract
Service-oriented architectures are a popular architectural paradigm for building software
applications from a number of loosely coupled, distributed services. Through a
set of procedural rules, workflow technologies define how groups of services coordinate
with one another to achieve a shared task. A problem with workflow specifications
is that often the patterns of interaction between the distributed services are too complicated
to predict and analyse at design-time. In certain cases, the exact patterns of
message exchange and the concrete services to call cannot be predicted in advance, due
to factors such as fluctuating network load or the availability of services. It is a more
realistic assumption to endow software components with the ability to make decisions
about the nature and scope of their interactions at runtime.
Multiagent systems offer a complementary paradigm: building software applications
from a number of self interested, autonomous agents. This thesis presents an investigation
into fusing the agency and service-oriented architecture paradigms, in order
to facilitate flexible, workflow composition. Our approach offers an agent-based solution
to service choreography and is founded on the concept of shared interaction
protocols. By adopting an agent-based approach to service choreography, active autonomous
agents can utilise the typically passive service-oriented architectures, found
in Internet and Grid systems. In contrast with statically defined, centralised service
orchestrations, decentralised agents can perform service choreography at runtime, allowing
them to operate in scenarios where it is not possible to define the pattern of
interaction in advance.
Application to real scenarios is a driving factor behind this research. By working
closely with a number of active Grid projects, namely AstroGrid and the Large-Synoptic
Survey Telescope (LSST), a concrete set of requirements for scientific workflow have
been derived, based on realistic science problems. This research has resulted in the
MultiAgent Service Choreography (MASC) language to express scientific workflow,
methodology for system building and a software framework which performs agent based
Web service choreography, in order to enact distributed e-Science experiments.
Evaluation of this thesis is conducted through case study, applying the language, methodology
and software framework to solve a motivating set of workflow scenarios.
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