Abstract

Web services are used through all disciplines in life sciences and the online landscape is growing by hundreds of novel servers annually. However, availability varies, and maintenance practices are largely inconsistent. We screened the availability of 2396 web tools published during the past 10 years. All servers were accessed over 133 days and 318 668 index files were stored in a local database. The number of accessible tools almost linearly increases in time with highest availability for 2019 and 2020 (∼90%) and lowest for tools published in 2010 (∼50%). In a 133-day test frame, 31% of tools were always working, 48.4% occasionally and 20.6% never. Consecutive downtimes were typically below 5 days with a median of 1 day, and unevenly distributed over the weekdays. A rescue experiment on 47 tools that were published from 2019 onwards but never accessible showed that 51.1% of the tools could be restored in due time. We found a positive association between the number of citations and the probability of a web server being reachable. We then determined common challenges and formulated categorical recommendations for researchers planning to develop web-based resources. As implication of our study, we propose to develop a repository for automatic API testing and sustainability indexing.

Highlights

  • Scientific web servers and web services are frequently developed to make complex algorithms available to a broad research and user community

  • 37 other tools were removed because the mentioned web servers were to be deployed locally or not originally published in the linked articles

  • Rescue experiment shows that over 50% of web servers can be brought back to service

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Summary

Introduction

Scientific web servers and web services are frequently developed to make complex algorithms available to a broad research and user community. They have facilitated substantial contributions to the development of the current research landscape in the life sciences and biomedicine. Extensions for protein alignment such as Gapped BLAST and PSI-blast [2] have been made available as web services and are accessed.

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