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1 © Copyright 2010 Dieter Fensel and Srdjan Komazec
Semantic Web Services
Web Service Execution Environment (WSMX)
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Where are we?
# Title 1 Introduction
2 Web Science
3 Service Science
4 Web services
5 Web2.0 services
6 Semantic Web
7 Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO)
8 Web Service Modeling Language (WSML)
9 Web Service Execution Environment (WSMX)
10 OWL-S and others
11 Light-weight Annotations
12 Applications
13 Mobile Services
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Outline
• Motivation • Technical solution
– Overview • Introduction • Relation to the WSMO and WSML • Design principles • Lifecycle
– Conceptual Model • Architecture • Components • System entry points
– Behavioral Model • Execution semantics
• Illustration by larger example • Extensions • Summary • References
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Motivation
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Motivation How SESA emerged?
• Service Orientation in information systems – Service-Oriented Computing (SOC)
• Services as the fundamental elements for the development of rapid, low-cost, and easily integrable enterprise applications,
– Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) • SOC can be abstractly implemented by SOA, • From function to object to service, • SOA requirements: loose coupling, implementation neutrality, flexible configuration, long
lifetime, granularity and teams.
• Existing technologies and SOA solutions are… – … difficult to scale without a proper degree of automation, – … partial solution to interoperability.
• Semantically Enabled Service Oriented Architecture (SESA) represents SOA empowered by adding semantics as a means to deal with heterogeneity and mechanization of service usage.
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Motivation What is SESA?
• Application of SESA offers a scalable integration, more adaptive to changes
– service offerings and required capabilities are described by semantically rich and formal service models,
– exchanged data is also semantically described, and
– reasoning provides total or partial automation of tasks.
• A SESA implementation should build a layer on top of the existing technologies (e.g. Web Services).
Web Service Execution Environment (WSMX) is an implementation of SESA.
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Motivation SESA Architecture
Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
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Motivation WSMX Goals
• Middleware for Semantic Web Services – Allows service providers to focus on their business,
• Reference implementation for WSMO – Eat our own cake,
• Environment for goal based discovery and invocation – Run-time binding of service requesters and providers,
• Provide a flexible Service Oriented Architecture – Add, update, remove components at run-time as needed,
• Keep open-source to encourage participation – Developers are free to use in their own code, and
• Define formal execution semantics – Unambiguous model of system behaviour.
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Technical Solution Overview
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Overview Introduction
WSMX is… • … is comprehensive software framework for runtime binding
of service requesters and service providers, • … interprets service requester’s goal to
– discover matching services, – select (if desired) the service that best fits, – provide data/process mediation (if required), and – make the service invocation,
• … is reference implementation for WSMO, • … has a formal execution semantics, and • … is service oriented, event-based and has pluggable
architecture – Open source implementation available through Source Forge, – based on microkernel design using technologies such as JMX.
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Overview Relation to WSMO and WSML
Conceptual Model & Axiomatization for SWS
Formal Language for WSMO
Ontology & Rule Language for the
Semantic Web
Execution Environment for WSMO
SEE TC
STI2 CMS WG
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Overview Design principles
• Service-oriented principle – Service reusability, loose coupling, abstraction, composability,
autonomy, discoverability,
• Semantic Principle – Rich and formal description of information and behavioral
models enabling automation of certain tasks by means of logical reasoning,
• Problem-solving principle – Goal-based discovery and invocation of services, and
• Distributed principle – Executing process across a number of components/services
over the network, thus promoting scalability and quality of process.
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Overview Lifecycle
WSMX aims to support the complete Semantic Web Service lifecycle:
1) Discovery - determines usable services for a request,
2) Composition - combine services to achieve a goal,
3) Selection - chooses most appropriate service among the available ones,
4) Mediation- solves mismatches (data, protocol, process) hampering interoperation,
5) Choreography – interactions and processes between the service providers and clients,
6) Grounding – lifting and lowering between the semantic and syntactic data representations, and
7) Invocation - invokes Web service following programmatic conventions.
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model - Architecture
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Conceptual Model Architecture
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• WSMX architectural components are divided into three layers – Execution Management layer
• Responsible for managing all other components and interactions between them, • Components are orchestrated in the form of Execution Semantics (explained in upcoming
slides). – Broker layer
• Represented by a number of broker services each dedicated to accomplish different tasks in SWS lifecycle.
– Base layer • Provides support to various upper level components by providing storage services, as well as
parsing and reasoning.
• WSMX provides different entry points in order to enable users to consume the offered functionality
Conceptual Model Architecture
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Core Management
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• Core Management is a kernel of WSMX with the following objectives – It realizes the overall operational semantics in order to achieve the functional
semantics of its client-side interface – It orchestrates the functionality of the middleware components into a coherent process
in an orderly and consistent fashion called Execution Semantics (see later) – It ensures the proper inter-component communication through publishing and
subscribing to the data as sets of triples over triple space or directly in the synchronous communication manner
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Core Management
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Communication Manager and Invoker
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WSMX Components Communication Manager and Invoker
• Responsible for interaction with services and entities that are external to WSMX.
• Should be open to support as many transport and messaging protocols as possible (transparently to WSMX).
• WSMX uses – The SOAP implementation from Apache AXIS, and – The Apache Web Service Invocation Framework (WSIF) .
• Both RPC and Document style invocations possible
Network
Invoker Apache AXIS Grounding Mediated
WSML Data
XML Web Service
SOAP
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Grounding
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WSMX Components Grounding
• WSMO service descriptions are grounded to WSDL by the means of XSLT lifting and lowering
Jacek Kopecký et al. D24.2v0.1. WSMO Grounding, WSMO Working Draft 27 April 2007. http://wsmo.org/TR/d24/d24.2/v0.1
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WSMX Components Grounding - Example
<xsl:stylesheet version="2.0" ! xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"! xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"! xmlns:p="http://www.wsmo.org/sws-challenge/ShipmentOntologyProcess#"! xmlns:muller="http://www.example.org/muller/"! exclude-result-prefixes="#all"! xmlns:helper="java:ie.deri.wsmx.commons.Helper">!
<xsl:output method="xml" omit-xml-declaration="yes"/>!
<xsl:template match="/muller:invokePriceResponse">!
<xsl:variable name="randomId" select="helper:getRandomId()"/>!
<rdf:RDF>! <rdf:Description about="http://example.com/testresponse{$randomId}">! <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.wsmo.org/sws-challenge/ShipmentOntologyProcess#PriceQuoteResp"/>! <p:price rdf:datatype="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal"><xsl:value-of select="number(./muller:price)"/
></p:price>! </rdf:Description>! </rdf:RDF>!</xsl:template>!</xsl:stylesheet>!
Lifting transformation
<shipmentOrderResponse xmlns="http://www.example.org/muller/">! <pickupDate>2009-01-03T06:04:31.747+01:00</pickupDate>! <price>65.06</price>!</shipmentOrderResponse>!
Web Service Invocation Response
instance http://example.com/testresponse{1234567 memberOf http://www.wsmo.org/sws-challenge/ShipmentOntologyProcess#PriceQuoteResp!
price hasValue 65.06! Data represented as ontology and ontology instance
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery
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• Responsible for finding appropriate Web Services capable of fulfilling a goal
• Different techniques available – trade-off: ease-of-provision vs. accuracy – resource descriptions & matchmaking algorithms
Key Word Matching - match natural language key words in resource descriptions,
Controlled Vocabulary - ontology-based key word matching, and
Semantic Matchmaking - what Semantic Web Services aim at.
Ease of provision
Possible A
ccuracy
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery
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• Allows for a fast filtering and ranking of the huge number of available services rather quickly.
• Nonfunctional properties from the Dublin Core namespace (e.g. dc#description) are candidates for indexing and querying.
• Dictionaries of synonyms (WordNet) can be used to discover more services.
wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-rule"
namespace {_"http://www.wsmo.org/sws-challenge/WSMuller#", dc _"http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1#"}
webService WSMuller nfp dc#title hasValue "Muller Web Service" dc#description hasValue "We ship to Africa, North America, Europe, Asia (all countries)." dc#contributor hasValue "Maciej Zaremba, Matt Moran, Tomas Vitvar, Thomas Haselwanter" endnfp
capability WSMullerCapability ...
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery – Key Word Matching
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Exact Match: G, WS, O, M ╞ ∀x. (G(x) <=> WS(x) )
PlugIn Match: G, WS, O, M ╞ ∀x. (G(x) => WS(x) )
Subsumption Match: G, WS, O, M ╞ ∀x. (G(x) <= WS(x) )
Intersection Match: G, WS, O, M ╞ ∃x. (G(x) ∧ WS(x) )
Non Match: G, WS, O, M ╞ ¬∃x. (G(x) ∧ WS(x) )
= G = WS
X
Keller, U.; Lara, R.; Polleres, A. (Eds): WSMO Web Service Discovery. WSML Working Draft D5.1, 12 Nov 2004.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery – Simple Semantic Descriptions
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Domain knowledge
Generic goals
Specific goals
Web services
Lara, R., Lausen, H (Eds): WSMO Discovery Engine. WSML Working Draft D5.2, 26 Nov 2004.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery – Simple Semantic Descriptions - Example
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• Exact match
• Plug-in match
• Subsumption match
• Intersection match
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Discovery – Simple Semantic Descriptions - Example
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Ranking and Selection
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• One service which best satisfies the user preferences is selected from the candidate services returned by the service discovery.
• Selection – determines best candidate out of discovered WS,
• Ranking – determines a priority list of discovered WS.
• The process is run after “functional” discovery • Criteria:
– Quality of Service (security, robustness, availability), – Context (regional, business / social communities), – Preferences and policies, – Financial criteria, – …
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Ranking and Selection
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Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Ranking and Selection
• Ontologies for specifying QoS (http://www.wsmo.org/ontologies/nfp) – set of 17 ontologies (i.e. locative, temporal, availability, price, trust, security, etc.) – provide the terminology needed to specify QoS aspects of services
• The data required for ranking and selection can be attached through the non-functional aspects of SWS
• The example defines the value of price for the Web Service consumption as a WSML logical expression which needs to be evaluated. • If the client is older than 60 or less than 100 years old the predefined absolute price is taken which must be less or equal to 10.
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• Service Ranking – Based on order theory which defines notions of total order, partial order and ranking. – WSMX uses Multicriteria ranking – considers multiple nonfunctional properties
• Service Selection – User specifies selection criteria in terms of nonfunctional properties such as SLA,
QoS, etc. Those can be obtained from goal description. – Service defines nonfunctional property values are directly provided or computed/
collected by a monitoring tool.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Ranking and Selection
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Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Ranking and Selection – Example
namespace {pref _"http://www.wsmo.org/ontologies/nfp/preferenceOntology#"}!webService TestService1! nfp! pref#Obligation hasValue 10! pref#Discount hasValue 120! pref#AverageInvocationTime hasValue 230! endnfp!
namespace {pref _"http://www.wsmo.org/ontologies/nfp/preferenceOntology#"}!webService TestService2! nfp! pref#Obligation hasValue 12! pref#Discount hasValue 130! pref#AverageInvocationTime hasValue 150! endnfp!
namespace {pref _"http://www.wsmo.org/ontologies/nfp/preferenceOntology#"}!goal TestGoal! nfp! dc#title hasValue "TestGoal”! pref#order hasValue pref#descending! pref#preferencesNFPs hasValue {prefObligation, prefDiscount, prefAverageInvocationTime} ! endnfp!
instance prefObligation memberOf pref#Preference! pref#nonFunctionalProperty hasValue pref#Obligation! pref#interestValue hasValue 0.1!
instance prefDiscount memberOf pref#Preference! pref#nonFunctionalProperty hasValue pref#Discount! pref#interestValue hasValue 0.6!
instance prefAverageInvocationTime memberOf pref#Preference! pref#nonFunctionalProperty hasValue pref#AverageInvocationTime! pref#interestValue hasValue 0.3!
WS1
WS2
Goal
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation
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• Ontology-to-ontology mediation • A set of mapping rules are defined and then executed
– Ontology Mapping Language • Initially rules are defined semi-automatic • Create for each source instance the target instance(s)
Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation
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Design-time – Inputs
• Source Ontology and Target Ontology
– Features • Graphical interface • Set of mechanism towards semi-
automatic creation of mappings • Capturing the semantic
relationships identified in the process
• Storing these mappings in a persistent storage
– Output • Abstract representation of the
mappings
Run-time – Main Mediation Scenario:
Instance Transformation – Inputs
• Incoming data – Source ontology instances
– Features • Completely automatic process • Grounding of the abstract
mappings to a concrete language – WSML
• Uses reasoner to evaluate the mapping rules
– Outputs • Mediated data
– Target ontology instances
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation
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wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-flight"
namespace { _"http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel1#"}
ontology travel1
concept ticket type ofType _string departure_city ofType _string departure_code ofType _string arrival_city ofType _string arrival_code ofType _string departure_date ofType date arrival_date ofType date departure_time ofType time arrival_time ofType time issuing_terms ofType terms firstName ofType _string lastName ofType _string
...
wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-flight"
namespace { _"http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel2#"}
ontology travel2
concept travelVoucher type ofType _string bearer ofType name toFrom ofType tripPoints departureDate ofType date arrivalDate ofType date departureTime ofType time arrivalTime ofType time terms ofType payment deliveryDate ofType date ...
Source ontology Destination ontology
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation - Example
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Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation – Example – WSMT Mappings
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<Alignment> <dc:identifier rdf:resource="m2"/> <onto1> <formalism name="WSML" uri="http://www.wsmo.org/wsml"/><uri>http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel1#travel1</
uri> </onto1> <onto2> <formalism name="WSML" uri="http://www.wsmo.org/wsml"/><uri>http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel2#travel2</
uri> </onto2> <map> … <Cell id="http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel1#tickethttp://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/
travel2#travelVoucher"> <entity1> <Class rdf:about="http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel1#ticket"></Class> </entity1> <entity2> <Class rdf:about="http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel2#travelVoucher"></Class> </entity2> <measure>1.0</measure> <relation>ClassMapping</relation> </Cell> … </map> </Alignment> Mapping between two concepts
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation - Example
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wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-flight"
namespace { _"http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel1#”}
ontology travel1
instance my_ticket_input memberOf ticket type hasValue "flight" firstName hasValue "Adrian" lastName hasValue "Mocan" arrival_date hasValue my_arrival_date departure_date hasValue my_departure_date arrival_time hasValue my_arrival_time departure_time hasValue my_departure_time departure_city hasValue "Innsbruck" departure_code hasValue "INN" arrival_city hasValue "Rome" arrival_code hasValue "RO" issuing_terms hasValue my_terms
wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-flight"
namespace { _"http://deri.org/iswc2005tutorial/ontologies/travel2#"}
ontology travel2
instance expected_travelVoucher memberOf travelVoucher departureDate hasValue expected_departureDate terms hasValue expected_payment arrivalDate hasValue expected_arrivalDate bearer hasValue expected_name departureTime hasValue expected_departureTime arrivalTime hasValue expected_arrivalTime type hasValue "flight"
Source instances Destination instances
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Data Mediation - Example
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Process Mediation
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• Requester and provider have their own communication patterns • Only if the two match precisely, a direct communication may take
place • At design time equivalences between the choreographies’
conceptual descriptions is determined and stored as set of rules • The Process Mediator provides the means for runtime analyses of
two choreography instances and uses mediators to compensate possible mismatches
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Process Mediation*
* Not implemented yet!
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Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Process Mediation
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• Not a priori compatible behavior interfaces for communication & information interchange
• Partially resolvable by “process mediation patterns”
Figure taken from Emilia Cimpian, D13.7 v0.1 Process Mediation in WSMX, WSMX Working Draft 08 July 2005
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Process Mediation - Example
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Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Process Mediation - Example
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Choreography
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• Requester and provider have their own observable communication patterns – Choreography part of WSMO
• Choreography instances are loaded for the requester and provider – Both requester and provider have their own WSMO descriptions
• Abstract State Machines (ASM)-based Choreography Engine – Evaluation of transition rules
• prepares the available data
– Sends data to the Process Mediator • filters, changes or replaces data
– Receives data from PM and forwards it to the Communication manager • data to be finally sent to the communication partner
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Choreography
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• The model used to express typical characteristics of a choreography must be compliant to the following features:
– Abstract – hides away any details regarding the underlying message exchange protocols and message formats,
– State-based – the interactions are described in the form of updates on a state of the choreography,
– Expressive – allows describing features such as sequences of message interactions and branching, and
– Ontology Reliance – ontologies are used as the underlying data model for message exchanges.
• The abstract state model chosen to address the requirements is inspired by the Abstract State Machines (ASM) methodology.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Choreography – Abstract State Machines
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• The choreography model consists primarily of – state signature – defines ontology which is used by the choreography, – set of transition rules – express the interaction steps in the choreography and also the
updates over the state.
• State signature allows to define – Set of imported ontologies – Set of modes which are associated with the concepts and/or relations.
• Modes can be of the following types: – static – extension of the concept/relation cannot be changed, – in - extension of the concept/relation can only be changed by the client and read by
the choreography instance; grounding mechanism must be provided. – out - extension of the concept/relation can only be changed by the the choreography
instance and read by the client; grounding mechanism must be provided. – shared - extension of the concept/relation can be changed and read by both
choreography instance and client; grounding mechanism must be provided, and – controlled - extension of the concept/relation is changed and read only by the
choreography instance.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Choreography – Abstract State Machines
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• Transition rules define actual behavior of the choreography.
• The rules can take the form of – if Condition then Rules endIf – if the condition holds executes the updates. – forall Variables with Condition do Rules endForall - simultaneous execution of
updates for each binding of a variable satisfying a given condition. – choose Variables with Condition do Rules endChoose - executes an update with an
arbitrary binding of a variable chosen among those satisfying the selection condition. , where – condition (guard) - is an arbitrary logical expression as defined by WSML, – rules - may take the form of Updates, whose execution is to be understood as
changing (or defining, if there was none) instances in an ontology • add – adds new instances in the state ontology, • delete – deletes instances from the state ontology, and • update – updates instances in the state ontology.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Choreography – Abstract State Machines
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WSMX Components Choreography - Example
choreography WSMullerShipmentOrderChoreography stateSignature WSMullerShipmentOrderStateSignature … in sop#ShipmentOrderReq withGrounding { _"http://sws-challenge.org/shipper/v2/
muller.wsdl#wsdl.interfaceMessageReference(muller/ShipmentOrder/in0)"} in so#ContactInfo in so#ShipmentDate in so#Package in so#Address out sop#ShipmentOrderResp
transitionRules WSMullerShipmentOrderTransitionRules forall {?request} with (?request memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq) do add(_#1 memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderResp) delete(?request memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq) endForall
<shipmentOrderReq(soi#MoonContactInfo, soi#shipmentDate1, package, soi#SzyslakContactInfo), package(1, 7.0, 6.0, 4.0, 1.0), shipmentDate1(“2009-01-21T13:00:00.046Z”, "2009-01-22T13:00:00.046Z")>
<shipmentOrderResp(“2009-01-21T15:00:00.046Z”, 65.03), package(1, 7.0, 6.0, 4.0, 1.0), shipmentDate1(“2009-01-21T13:00:00.046Z”, "2009-01-22T13:00:00.046Z")>
S1
S2
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Resource Manager
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• Stores internal memory model to a data store • Decouples storage mechanism from the rest of WSMX • Data model is compliant to WSMO API • Independent of any specific data store implementation i.e. database
and storage mechanism • Maintains six repositories to store
– WSMO top level entities, i.e. • Goals, • Web Service descriptions, • Mediators, and • Ontologies.
– Event data and intermediate messages – WSDL descriptions
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Resource Manager
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners
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• Different components within WSMX necessitate efficient and different reasoning functionality:
– Discovery • Simple ontological reasoning and query answering as well as logical entailment between
preconditions and postconditions of SWS and Goals • Both description logic-based and logic programming–based reasoning is required.
– Selection • Evaluation of the logical rules that are used to model the non-functional properties of services • Logic programming–based reasoning is required.
– Data mediation • Ontology mapping rules, source instances and source and target schema information are
loaded into the reasoning space where rules are evaluated in order to produce target instances.
• Logic programming–based reasoning is required. – Process Mediation
• Reasoning is used to check whether messages are expected at the certain phase of the communication.
• Evaluation of transition rules is required.
• Different reasoning functionality is provided to WSMX through WSML2Reasoning framework.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners
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• Represents a generic, flexible architecture for reasoning with the different variants of the WSML family.
• Instead of implementing new reasoners it uses existing reasoner implementations for WSML through a wrapper that
1) maps WSML expressions into a common (shared) knowledge representation format (different formats for the rule-based and description logic based WSML variants), and
2) maps the expressions via specific adapters into the appropriate syntaxes of concrete reasoning engines.
• People can use their specific existing reasoner of choice and can exploit already developed, proven and tested reasoning systems.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners - WSML2Reasoner Framework
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Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners - WSML2Reasoner Framework
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• Reasoning with rule-Based WSML – Covers WSML-Core, WSML-Flight, and WSML-Rule
• Supported through semantics-preserving syntactic transformation of WSML ontologies to Datalog programs with (in)equality and integrity constrains.
– Axiomatization – conversion of conceptual elements into appropriate axioms, – Normalization – reduction of complexity by bringing the expressions closer to the
simple syntactic form of literals in Datalog rules – Lloyd-Topor transformation – flattening of the remaining complex WSML logical
expressions in order to produce simple rules (single head and conjunctive – possibly negated - body literals).
– Datalog rule generation – All WSML logical expressions are transformed into a Datalog program
• Supported reasoning tasks – Query answering, ontology consistency, entailment, retrieval
Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners - WSML2Reasoner Framework
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Conceptual Model – WSMX Components Reasoners - WSML2Reasoner Framework
• Reasoning WSML-DL
• Supported through semantics-preserving syntactic transformation of WSML-DL ontologies to OWL-DL ontologies.
– Relations to attributes – replacing relations, subrelations, and relation instances by attributes and axioms,
– Axiomatization - conversion of conceptual elements into appropriate axioms, – Implication reduction rules – replacing equivalences and right implications in logical
expressions by left implications, – Inverse implication reduction rules – replace conjunctions on the left side and
disjunctions on the right side of an inverse implication by left implications, – Molecule decomposition rules – replace complex molecules inside logical expressions
by conjunctions of cimple ones, and – OWL API transformation – each logical expression is translated into the corresponding
OWL descriptions
• Supported reasoning tasks – Knowledge base consistency, concept satisfiability, concept subsumption, instance
checking, realization, instance retrieval
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Technical Solution Conceptual Model – Entry Points
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• Represent input ports to which messages can be sent for initiating specific execution semantics.
• Published as SOAP Endpoints
– getWebServices(WSMLDocument): Web Services • A service requester wishes to discover a list of SWS fulfilling its requirements provided by as a
goal description using WSML. • A set of WSML Web Service descriptions whose capability matches the goal is returned.
– invokeWebService(WSMLDocument, Context): Context • Used to invoke already known Semantic Web Service by relying on data provided in the form
of WSML ontology and conversation context.
– achieveGoal(WSMLDocument): Context • A service requester wishes to use WSMX for all aspects of goal-based service invocation
(discovery, mediation, invocation) by providing both goal and data in the single WSML document.
• Processing of the message is identified by the conversation context .
Conceptual Model – Entry Points
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Technical Solution Behavioral Model
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Behavioral Model Execution Semantics
• Execution Semantics is a formal description of the operational behavior of the system in terms of computational steps
• The benefits of having behavioral models are in – Greater flexibility in SESA implementations, – Foundations for model testing, – Executable representation, and – Improved model understanding among humans.
• Mandatory execution semantics – Goal-Based Web Service Discovery – Web Service Invocation – Goal-Based Service Execution
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Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Goal-based discovery
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• Input – Service requester wishes to discover a list of SWS fulfilling its requirements provides
them as a goal description using WSML.
• Output – A set of WSML Web Service description whose capability matches the goal is
returned.
• Process 1. Message containing WSML goal is received and passed to the communication
manager, which takes care of message persistence. 2. The goal is sent to discovery activity which evaluates whether a WSML Web service
from the repository is capable of fulfilling the goal. It may need data mediation as its internal step.
3. The selection activity may be triggered to determine which of the discovered services to return to the service requester.
4. WSML Web service description is returned in a form of message to the requester by relying on the Communication Manager facilities.
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Goal-based discovery
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Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Web Service Invocation
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• Input – As input the requester is providing WSML content (Web service + data) and
conversation context (if known!!! The first message is sent without it, but it is returned as output of the invocation).
• Output – Results of the Web Service invocation (and possibly conversational context)
• Process 1. Communication Manager unpacks the content and retrieves Web service and data. 2. Data mediation may be required in cases where heterogeneities exists (this step can
internally use reasoner) 3. Process mediation has all the required data to commence (matching the message
patterns and data types offered by SWS and required by the goal). This is a process of aligning of input data instances so that they can be understood by the Choreography.
4. The choreography activity is commencing (determines which messages to send on the basis of choreography descriptions - ASM).
5. Grounding is taking place in order to transform those instances to the format required by the invoked service.
6. Invocation takes place
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Web Service Invocation
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Fensel, D.; Kerrigan, M.; Zaremba, M. (Eds): Implementing Semantic Web Services: The SESA Framework. Springer 2008.
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Goal-based Service Execution
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• Service requester wishes to employ the complete SWS lifecycle, i.e., all aspects of goal-based service invocation (discovery, mediation, invocation)
• Input – Requester provides both the goal and the input data descriptions in a single WSML
document.
• Output – Results of the Web Service invocation (if any).
• Operation 1. Execute the Goal-based Web Service discovery execution semantics 2. In case of more than one result run the selection process in order to determine the
Web Service which is the most appropriate for the execution (based on non-functional properties and employed selection mechanisms)
3. Execute the Web Service Invocation execution semantics
Behavioral Model Execution Semantics – Goal-based Service Execution
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Illustration by a Larger Example
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Illustration by larger example Scenario description
• The goal is to discover a suitable solution for the transportation of a package with defined size and weight
• Candidate Web Services have different constraints regarding the transportation destinations, package size and weight acceptance, as well as pricing schemas
• For more information visit: – http://sws-challenge.org/wiki/index.php/Scenario:_Shipment_Discovery
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Illustration by larger example Goal description
wsmlVariant _"http://www.wsmo.org/wsml/wsml-syntax/wsml-flight"
goal GoalA1
capability GoalA1Capability postcondition definedBy ( ?x[sop#price hasValue ?price] memberOf sop#PriceQuoteResp and sop#isShipped(shipmentOrderReq) ).
interface GoalA1Interface choreography GoalA1Choreography stateSignature GoalA1StateSignature
in sop#ShipmentOrderReq out sop#ShipmentOrderResp
transitionRules GoalA1TransitionRules
forall {?request} with (?request memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq) do add(_#1 memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderResp) endForall
ontology GoalRequest
instance shipmentOrderReq memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq sop#from hasValue soi#MoonContactInfo sop#shipmentDate hasValue soi#shipmentDate1 sop#package hasValue package sop#to hasValue soi#SzyslakContactInfo
instance package memberOf so#Package so#quantity hasValue 1 so#length hasValue 7.0 so#width hasValue 6.0 so#height hasValue 4.0 so#weight hasValue 1.0
instance shipmentDate1 memberOf so#ShipmentDate so#earliest hasValue "2009-01-21T13:00:00.046Z" so#latest hasValue "2009-01-22T13:00:00.046Z"
I want to have my package shipped from CA, USA to Tunis, Africa size (7/6/4), weight 1 lbs, the cheaper the better.
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
Goal expressed in WSML is sent to the WSMX Entry Point
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
Communication Manager instantiates AchieveGoal Execution Semantics
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
Discovery is employed in order to find suitable Web Service
Discovery consults appropriate ontologies and Web Service descriptions
Web Service may be invoked in order to discover service availability
Africa ($85.03/13 lbs), ... Max 50 lbs. Price = $85.03
Africa, ... Max 50 lbs. Price on request only.
Ships only to US ($10/1.5 lb). Cannot be used for Africa.
PriceReq
Price ($65.03)
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
List of candidate Web Services is ranked and best” solution is selected
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
Requester and provider choreographies are instantiated and processed
Invocation of Web Service occurs
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics – choreography exec
choreography WSMullerShipmentOrderChoreography stateSignature WSMullerShipmentOrderStateSignature … in sop#ShipmentOrderReq withGrounding { _"http://sws-challenge.org/shipper/v2/
muller.wsdl#wsdl.interfaceMessageReference(muller/ShipmentOrder/in0)"} in so#ContactInfo in so#ShipmentDate in so#Package in so#Address out sop#ShipmentOrderResp
transitionRules WSMullerShipmentOrderTransitionRules forall {?request} with (?request memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq) do add(_#1 memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderResp) delete(?request memberOf sop#ShipmentOrderReq) endForall
<shipmentOrderReq(soi#MoonContactInfo, soi#shipmentDate1, package, soi#SzyslakContactInfo), package(1, 7.0, 6.0, 4.0, 1.0), shipmentDate1(“2009-01-21T13:00:00.046Z”, "2009-01-22T13:00:00.046Z")>
<shipmentOrderResp(“2009-01-21T15:00:00.046Z”, 65.03), package(1, 7.0, 6.0, 4.0, 1.0), shipmentDate1(“2009-01-21T13:00:00.046Z”, "2009-01-22T13:00:00.046Z")>
S1
S2
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Illustration by larger example AchieveGoal execution semantics
Result is returned to the client in the form of WSML message
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Possible Extensions
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Possible Extensions
Extensions under current development are marked with yellow boxes.
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Possible Extensions Discovery
• Discovery component has undergone a set of smaller improvements: – Instead of full Semantic Web Service descriptions the results are returned in the form
of WG mediators. – Caching of the discovery results, i.e., WG mediators.
• WG mediators are allowing us to – Connect Goal descriptions with the Semantic Web Service descriptions, – Attach discovery (e.g., type of match) and ranking results (e.g., fitness of the service).
• Caching of the results enables reductions of the computational time required for discovery when the same Goal is issues multiple times over the same set of SWS descriptions.
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• WSMX can be viewed as a vibrant events producer – events related to the broker services execution, – events related to the external Web Service invocations, – events related to the progress of processed execution semantics.
• The events represent a rich source of knowledge which can facilitate profiling, optimization and reliability of the environment.
• The monitoring and complex event processing subsystem exhibits following behavior
– WSMX components have been instrumented to emit appropriate semantically-described events in regard to the computational process progress,
– RDF-based CEP engine detects occurrences of specified event patterns and executes the appropriate actions de- fined for the detected event (e.g. update of the aggregated statistical measures, notification of the administrator about the successive operation failures)
Possible Extensions Monitoring and Complex Event Processing
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• Notification Broker enables asynchronous communication within WSMX • The broker provides following functionality
– registering and storing user goal-descriptions and related results, and – notifying subscribed users of the related results.
• The broker currently supports the subscription to the goal-based Web Service discovery through a new entry point which fires the execution semantics responsible for
– checking for the existing (and not expired) user subscriptions, – executing for each subscribed goal the discovery process, and – once new services have been matched with respect to the previous subscriptions
these newly discovered services are notified to the users.
• The notification can employ two communication channels – Email notification, and – Web Service invocation.
Possible Extensions Notification Broker
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• Orchestration Engine features are – support of the dataflow in a manner consistent with WSMO/L, and – Adoption of the explicit concept of performance, and introduction of a new type of
mediator to mediate between performances.
• Orchestration Engine solves following issues – mediation in any connection, including dataflow, between heterogeneous components; – extraction and aggregation in the consumption and production of messages according
to the WSML grounding approach – execution of service discovery and service invocation within composed services.
Possible Extensions Orchestration
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Summary
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Summary
• Clear separation of SWS, SESA, SEE and WSMX notions. • WSMX is reference implementation of WSMO. • WSMX contributes to solving scalability issues by automating various
service-related tasks. • WSMX consists of various components dedicated to solving particular
steps in the overall service life cycle orchestrated by Core Management. • Execution semantics is a formal description of the operational behavior
of the system in terms of computational steps
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References
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References
• Mandatory reading – Dieter Fensel, Mick Kerrigan, Michal Zaremba (Eds.), Implementing Semantic Web
Services: The SESA Framework. Springer-Verlag, 2008. • Chapters 4,5, and 6.
• Optional reading – Charles Petrie, Tiziana Margaria, Holger Lausen, Michal Zaremba (Eds.), Semantic
Web Services Challenge: Results from the First Year. Springer-Verlag, 2008
• Online resources: – http://see.sti-innsbruck.at – http://sws-challenge.org
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Next Lecture
# Title 1 Introduction
2 Web Science
3 Service Science
4 Web services
5 Web2.0 services
6 Semantic Web
7 Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO)
8 Web Service Modeling Language (WSML)
9 Web Service Execution Environment (WSMX)
10 OWL-S and others
11 Light-weight Annotations
12 Applications
13 Mobile Services
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Questions?
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