Abstract

Service-oriented computing has become a popular area of research, with a particular focus on service composition. There have been many developments in this field, such as new techniques for data engineering in service description languages, protocols for publication and discovery, the optimization of service selection and scheduling, and the deployment and monitoring of composed services. However, this diversity of approaches and methodologies can make it challenging to navigate between different proposed solutions and identify research gaps. In order to provide a clearer understanding of this body of work, this paper presents a comprehensive framework for the taxonomy of service composition approaches, methodologies, and tools. This framework proposes a structured view of different perspectives, such as formal, semantic, and automatic approaches, with a particular focus on the end-user’s perspective and tools such as Mashups.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call