Abstract

AbstractRecent years have witnessed the rapid development of service‐oriented computing technologies. The boom of Web services increases software developers' selection burden in developing new service‐based systems such as mashups. Timely recommending appropriate component services for developers to build new mashups has become a fundamental problem in service‐oriented software engineering. Existing service recommendation approaches are mainly designed for mashup development in the single‐round scenario. It is hard for them to effectively update recommendation results according to developers' requirements and behaviours (e.g. instant service selection). To address this issue, the authors propose a service bundle recommendation framework based on deep learning, DLISR, which aims to capture the interactions among the target mashup to build, selected (component) services, and the following service to recommend. Moreover, an attention mechanism is employed in DLISR to weigh selected services when recommending a candidate service. The authors also design two separate models for learning interactions from the perspectives of content and invocation history, respectively, and a hybrid model called HISR. Experiments on a real‐world dataset indicate that HISR can outperform several state‐of‐the‐art service recommendation methods to develop new mashups iteratively.

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