Title: Semantic Web Services Initiative Architecture Committee
1Semantic Web Services InitiativeArchitecture
Committee
- co-chaired by
- Mark BursteinBBN Technologies
- Christoph Bussler Digital Enterprise Research
Institute (DERI)
2Committee Members
- Bob Balzer, Teknowledge, Inc. (Los Angeles)
- Boualem Benatallah, University of South Wales,
Australia - Fabio Casati, HP Labs (Palo Alto)
- Mike Dean, BBN Technologies
- Tim Finin, University of Maryland, Baltimore
County - Carole Goble, University of Manchester, UK
- Michael Huhns, University of South Carolina
- Atanas Kiryakov, Sirma Ltd., Bulgaria
- Enrico Motta, Open University, UK
- John Mylopolous, University of Toronto
- Massimo Paolucci, Carnegie Mellon University
- Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University (new)
- Dan Weld, University of Washington (withdrawn)
- Stuart Williams, HP Labs (Bristol, UK)
- Others?
3SWSA Mission Statement
- The mission of the SWSI Architecture Committee
(SWSA) is to develop architectural and protocol
abstractions forming a reference architecture to
support Semantic Web Service technologies. - Develop use cases to demonstrate the benefits of
using machine interpretable semantics to
facilitate dynamic interoperability,
composability, and substitutability among web
services and for agent-based services in other
distributed environments. - Promote the development of standards,
methodological and theoretical underpinnings
through discussions, publications, reference
implementations and coordination with standards
bodies.
4Objectives
- To identify, through use case analysis, a set of
key functional elements needed to enable semantic
web service capabilities, such as dynamic
interoperability and compositionality, and to
enumerate requirements for the implementation of
these functions in different architectural
environments. - To develop abstract protocols for interaction
with the middleware functions delineated in (1)
to support semantic web services. These protocols
should be realizable in the specification
language(s) developed by the SWSI Language
committee.
5Tasks
- (0) Identify common functionalities required to
support semantic web services. - Develop use cases in different operational
environments that identify protocol
requirements and alternative software
architectures for distributing the support
functions described in (0). - Develop abstract protocols for the identified
support functions. Work with the SWSL committee
to represent these protocols in the language(s)
they develop. - Determine the feasibility of implementing these
service support functions as extensions of the
W3C WS reference architecture. - Develop small exploratory prototypes to validate
the concepts developed.
6Milestones
- 1. Working draft of document covering
requirements and 4 key Use Cases by November
2003. - 2. Working draft of abstract protocols for SWS
architectural support functions by June 2004. - 3. Development of a coordinated SWSI submission
to W3C by Q1, 2005
7Diverse Set of Usage Scenarios to Capture
Variability in Requirements
- Coverage of five major areas of potential use of
semantic web services - B2B and Enterprise Integration Systems
- Grid Computing
- Ubiquitous Computing
- B2C and End User (personal agent) Web Services
- Agent-based Systems in large organizations
8Within Scenarios, Use Cases to Cover a Range of
Applicable Core Functions
- a)Â Â Service request planning and response
interpretation (based on process descriptions) - b)Â Â Choreography (protocol) interpretation and
execution - c)Â Â Semantic translation/mediation (e.g., of
message content, process descriptions or
advertisments) - d)Â Â Candidate service discovery (mediated)
- e) Candidate service selection (negotiated)
- f)Â Â Automated Process composition
- g)Â Â Â Process mediation and delegation
- h)Â Â Service process status tracking
- i)Â Â Ontology management and access
- j)Â Â Â Security (including identification,
authentication, policy-based authorization) - k)Â Â Â Reputation services
- l)Â Â Service failure handling and compensation
- m)Â Â Â Negotiation and contracting
- n)Â Server executable process management (service
factories, instantiation, migration)
9Use Cases Under Development
- Discovery and Invocation for B2C Web Services
- Discovery and Security/Privacy Policies in
Ubiquitious Computing - Semantics for Composition, Service Resource
Management in Grid Computing - Contract Negotiation and Ontology, Ontology Map
Management for Interoperability maintenance in
B2B
10Identify Important Functionalities in Each
Environment
11Example GRID
- The services to be delivered primarily relate to
service executions, however may involve hardware
services in the future. - 1.1Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Functional requirements for OGSA
platform - This use case uses the following OGSA
functionalities as described in 1 - 1.     Discovery.
- 2.      Workflow management.
- 3.      Scheduling of service tasks.
- 4.      Disaster Recovery.
- 5.      Provisioning.
- 6.      Brokering.
- 7.      Load Balancing.
- 8.      Fault Tolerance.
- 9.      Transport Management.
- 10.  Legacy Application Management.
- 11.  Services Facilitating Brokering.
- 12.  Application and Network-level Firewalls.
- 13.  Agreement-based interation. Authorization
and use policies.
12Wheres the Semantics?
- Identify the role that semantics could play in
improving the capabilities of each functional
area. - Identify support elements required to provide
that capability. - Identify protocols and language requirements.
13Goals for the Meeting Today
- Discuss each of the Use Cases currently under
development - What are the architectural issues involved?
- What (abstract) protocols should be standardized?
- Are there requirements on languages that arise
from this? - Develop draft list of requirements
- Do we want to assume particular underlying
architectural layers? - Develop outline and writing assignments for
Requirements Document draft.
14Overall Agenda
- 900 - 910 Opening Remarks (Katia)910 -
940 Language Committee Report
(Kifer/Martin)940 -1010 Architecture
Report (Burstein/Bussler)1010 - 1020
Industrial Board (Davies/Grosof/Uschold)1020 -
1045 Break1045 - 1230 Parallel Working
Sessions for the two committeesSWSA
Presentation and Discussion of Use Cases1230 -
1330 Lunch1330 - 1530 Parallel Working
Sessions for the two committeesSWSA Discussion
of Candidate Requirements - 1530 - 1600 Break1600 - 1700 Parallel
Working Sessions for the two committeesSWSA
Outlining of Requirements Document and
Assignments1700 - 1730 Out brief of the two
committees (15 minutes each)1730 - 1800
Management Session             --determining
the action items and plans for the future
15What we did during this F2F
- Reviewed mapping of SWS environments against key
functions, developed matrix identifying where
each was critical, likely to be required, or not. - Refined list of functions, refined definition of
each functional area, with examples. - Developed outline for use cases
- Postponed finalizing outline for requirements
document to next telecon after ISWC.
16Use Cases Under Development
- Discovery and Invocation for B2C Web Services
-Massimo - Discovery and Security/Privacy Policies in
Ubiquitious Computing Tim, Stuart, Norman - Semantics for Composition, Service Resource
Management in Grid Computing - Carol - Contract Negotiation and Ontology, Ontology Map
Management for Interoperability maintenance in
B2B - Chris - use case repository at http//www.daml.org/ser
vices/use-cases/architecture
17Reviewed Range of Core Functions
- a)Â Â Service request planning and response
interpretation (based on process descriptions) - b)Â Â Choreography (protocol) interpretation and
execution - c)Â Â Semantic translation/mediation (e.g., of
message content, process descriptions or
advertisments) - d)Â Â Candidate service identification
(matchmaking) and selection - e)Â Â Automated Process composition
- f)Â Â Â Process mediation and delegation
- g)Â Â Service process status tracking
- h)Â Â Ontology management and access
- i)Â Â Â Security (including identification,
authentication, delegation and policy-based
authorization) - j)Â Â Â Reputation services
- k)Â Â Service failure handling and compensation
- l)Â Â Â Negotiation and contracting
- m)Â Server executable process management (service
factories, instantiation, migration)
18Refined List of Functions
- a)Â Â Â Â Â Â Service invocation message formulation
and response interpretation - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Atomic parameterized grounded
invocation of a service operation from a services
description - E.g. Identification of required input
values for a P.O. message to SAP, execution of
the grounding - b)Â Â Â Â Â Â Choreography (protocol) interpretation
and execution - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Execution of the interaction protocol
of one service. Attribution of semantics to set
of temporally related messages. - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â E.g. protocol descriptions could be
described by UML sequence diagrams - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â E.g. Request, Acknowledgement of a PO
- Choreography interpretation of multi-service
interactions - c)Â Â Â Â Â Semantic translation/mediation (e.g., of
message content, process descriptions or
advertisements) - d)Â Â Â Â Â Candidate service discovery via
directory, broker or referral - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â In U.C. find a printer when you walk
into a room (referral by broker or peer) - e)Â Â Â Â Â Service Selection (by negotiation
directly with candidate services) - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Refining requirements
- -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â eg auctions
- f)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Automated Process composition
(planning, creation of a choreography, writing of
a program) - g)Â Â Â Â Â Process mediation and delegation
- -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â mediating between two service
descriptions or choreographies - h)Â Â Â Â Â
19Continued
- SeService process status tracking/monitoring vs
event notification - i)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Ontology management and access
- j)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Security (including identification,
authentication, delegation and policy-based
authorization) - k)Â Â Reputation services
- l Service failure handling and compensation
- m)Â Â Â Negotiation and contracting
- n)Â Â Â Â Â Server executable process management
(service factories, instantiation, migration,
liveness) - o)Â Â Â Â Â
- NEW
- Resource Allocation/Provisioning
- p)Â Â Â Â Â Dispute Resolution and Compliance
- q)Â Â Â Â Â Privacy and Confidentiality
- r)Â Â Â Â Â Â Usability (by humans) - includes HCI
- s)Â Â Â Â Â Â Non-Repudiation/ Audit
Tracking/Explanation
20Matrix of Requirements to Use Cases