Design of Hybrid Architecture Cloud Center of Service-Oriented Aerospace T&C Application Integration System

Author(s):  
Hongyan Chen ◽  
Sihong Wang ◽  
Junwei Wan ◽  
Wensu Li
2011 ◽  
Vol 225-226 ◽  
pp. 729-733
Author(s):  
Guo Jun Yang ◽  
Ying Zheng

Aiming at the disadvantages like the enterprise application system scalability, integration and interoperability is not strong, neglecting the business process integration, the integration platform lacks flexibility and adaptability, based on service oriented and workflow technology system, Service-oriented and for integration of foundation, enterprise application integration system solutions were proposed. To realize loosely coupled, business process integration, high integration and interoperability strong application integration system we need discuss enterprise application integration the architecture and hierarchical model.


2007 ◽  
pp. 507-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanislav Pokraev ◽  
Dick A. C. Quartel ◽  
Maarten W. A. Steen ◽  
Andreas Wombacher ◽  
Manfred Reichert

Author(s):  
José Carlos Martins Delgado

The fundamental problem of distributed application integration is reducing application coupling as much as possible while still meeting the minimum interoperability requirements. Service-oriented architecture (SOA) and representational state transfer (REST) are the most used architectural styles to deal with this problem. This chapter performs a comparative study of these styles and shows that, while both solve basic interoperability, neither of them minimizes coupling, since data description schemas are shared by the interacting applications (symmetric interoperability). SOA is oriented towards behavior (services) and REST towards state (structured resources). Services have no structure and resources have a fixed service. This chapter proposes a new architectural style, structured services, that combines the best characteristics of SOA and REST (services can have structure and resources can implement application-specific services), while using asymmetric interoperability (schema compatibility is based on structural compliance and conformance) to minimize application coupling.


Author(s):  
José Carlos Martins Delgado

The main application integration approaches, the service-oriented architecture (SOA) and representational state transfer (REST) architectural styles, are rather different in their modeling paradigm, forcing application developers to choose between one and the other. In addition, both introduce more application coupling than required, since data schemas need to be common, even if not all instantiations of those schemas are used. This chapter contends that it is possible to improve this scenario by conceiving a new architectural style, structural services, which combines services and resources to reduce the semantic gap with the applications, allowing to tune the application integration between pure service-based and pure resource-based, or an intermediate mix. Unlike REST, resources are not constrained to offer a fixed set of operations, and unlike SOA, services are allowed to have structure. In addition, compliance is used to reduce coupling to the bare minimum required by the actually used application features.


Author(s):  
Stéphanie Chollet ◽  
Philippe Lalanda ◽  
Jonathan Bardin

The visionary promise of Service-Oriented Computing (SOC) is a world-scale network of loosely coupled services that can be assembled with little effort in agile applications that may span organizations and computing platforms. In practice, services are assembled in a Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) that provides mechanisms and rules to specify, publish, discover and compose available services. The aim of this chapter is to present the different technologies implementing the new paradigm of SOA: Web Services, UPnP, DPWS, and service-oriented component OSGi and iPOJO. These technologies have been developed and adapted to multiple domains: application integration, pervasive computing and dynamic application integration.


Author(s):  
Dimitrios Tektonidis ◽  
Albert Bokma

Integrating enterprise system has become an issue of sharing information rather than transforming information due to the increasing complexity and the heterogeneity of the applications. The transition from application centric to integration centric enterprise application integration (EAI) requires methods and technologies that will enable and facilitate the definition of shared information. The use of ontologies Semantic Web and technologies can improve the existing EAI methods by providing a framework capable to define shared information. Ontologies based Enterprise application integration (ONAR) framework utilizes Semantic Web technologies to define shared information among heterogeneous systems. The present paper presents the utilization of ontologies for the formation of ONAR framework and its application for service oriented application integration (SOAI)


Author(s):  
Xi Chen ◽  
Hua Li ◽  
Lin You ◽  
Chonghua Wang

A framework of CAD/CAE integration system and its implementation for dockside container crane are proposed in this paper. First, the system framework based on web technology, software design pattern and service-oriented architecture (SOA) is introduced. Then, requirement input interfaces of Customer-Designer-Interaction (CDI) module are built based on ASP.NET multiple-layer Browser/Server (B/S) architecture, core design patterns and .NET WCF Services, and customers can provide specifications of the cranes to designers. Next, CAD and CAE modules are accomplished using multiple-layer architecture, and designers can parametrically create 3D models of the crane structures and conduct explicit dynamic Finite Element Analysis (FEA) on the designed crane structures. SOA based Design-Analysis-Integration (DAI) is developed to maintain consistence between CAD and CAE models by using .Net WCF Service. Last, system management functions such as user interaction, user account and file management are described. Since all the operations are conducted in Web and SOA context, customers and designers are able to participate in the design process at different geographical locations.


2010 ◽  
pp. 644-659
Author(s):  
Catarina Ferreira da Silva ◽  
Paulo Rupino da Cunha ◽  
Parisa Ghodous ◽  
Paulo Melo

In Service-Oriented Architectures (SOA), service descriptions are fundamental elements. In order to automatically execute SOA tasks, such as services discovery, it is necessary to capture and process the semantics of services. We review several Semantic Web Services frameworks that intend to bring semantics to Web Services. This chapter depicts some ideas from SOA and Semantic Web services and their application to enterprise application integration. We illustrate an example of logic-based semantic matching between consumer services and provided services, which are described in ontologies.


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