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Adding High Availability and Autonomic Behavior to Web Services
Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom May 23-May 28
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICSE.2004.131741026th International Conference on Soft ...
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Ken Birman, Cornell University
Robbert van Renesse, Cornell University
Werner Vogels, Cornell University
Rapid acceptance of the Web Services architecture promises to make it the most widely supported and popular object-oriented architecture to date. One consequence is that a wave of mission-critical Web Services applications will certainly be deployed in coming years. Yet the reliability options available within Web Services are limited in important ways. To use a term proposed by IBM, Web Services systems need to become far more "autonomic," configuring themselves, diagnosing faults, and managing themselves. High availability applications need more attention. Moreover, the scenarios in which such issues arise often entail very large deployments, raising questions of scalability. In this paper we propose a path by which the architecture could be extended in these respects.
Citation:
Ken Birman, Robbert van Renesse, Werner Vogels, "Adding High Availability and Autonomic Behavior to Web Services," icse, pp.17-26, 26th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE'04), 2004
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