Studienarbeit STUD-2124

Bibliograph.
Daten
Schumm, David: A Graphical Tool for Modeling BPEL 2.0 Processes.
Universität Stuttgart, Fakultät Informatik, Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik, Studienarbeit Nr. 2124 (2007).
84 Seiten, englisch.
CR-Klassif.D.2.2 (Software Engineering Design Tools and Techniques)
H.4.1 (Office Automation)
H.5.2 (Information Interfaces and Presentation User Interfaces)
KeywordsBPEL; BPEL 1.1; BPEL 2.0; SOA; Service Oriented Architecture; Model Driven Architecture; MDA; Model Driven Development; MDD; Eclipse; Plug-In; GEF; EMF; GMF; BPMN
Kurzfassung

Nowadays Web Services (WS) are the most prominent technology for solving the key problem facing businesses - the Application Integration (AI). To elaborate on this, both, Intra Enterprise Integration (Enterprise Application Integration, EAI) and Integration with Business Partners (Business Process Integration, BPI) can be achieved by loosely coupled applications using WS interfaces.

Here the Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL) comes into play. It enables the definition of business processes as coordinated sets of WS interactions (Orchestration) recursively into new aggregated Web Services. Furthermore BPEL may be used to define the external behavior of a service (through an Abstract Process) as well as the internal implementation (through an Executable Process).

Although there is a variety of languages for service orchestration, such as the business process modeling language [BPML], the language BPEL4WS initially proposed in July 2002 by BEA, Microsoft and IBM [BPEL1.0] has emerged as de facto standard in this area. It has been transferred to OASIS for standardization and was released in April 2007 as BPEL 2.0.

The basis for this thesis is a graphical process modeling tool, implemented as an Eclipse-Plugin, which was designed to be compliant with BPEL 1.1 standard. The objective of this thesis is to extend this tool in order to be compliant with the OASIS BPEL 2.0 standard.

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CopyrightDavid Schumm (2007)
Abteilung(en)Universität Stuttgart, Institut für Architektur von Anwendungssystemen
Eingabedatum21. November 2007
   Publ. Informatik