Web Services Lifecycle Management
A number of vendors are starting to talk about this - but they are not all talking at the same level.
Some vendors focus on the life cycle of a deployed service, which follows the W3C account (http://www.w3.org/TR/wslc/). For example, Cape Clear deals with the need to ensure that web services are properly initialized before they are invoked (that is, before they service a request), and are destroyed in a controlled fashion.
Meanwhile, HP is operating at a higher management level, involving real users (LOBM – line of business managers).
For a preliminary analysis, see David Sprott's piece HP's Strategy for Managing the Adaptive Enterprise (CBDI Journal, June 2004, subscribers only).
Some vendors focus on the life cycle of a deployed service, which follows the W3C account (http://www.w3.org/TR/wslc/). For example, Cape Clear deals with the need to ensure that web services are properly initialized before they are invoked (that is, before they service a request), and are destroyed in a controlled fashion.
Meanwhile, HP is operating at a higher management level, involving real users (LOBM – line of business managers).
For a preliminary analysis, see David Sprott's piece HP's Strategy for Managing the Adaptive Enterprise (CBDI Journal, June 2004, subscribers only).
Update
See my report on SOA LifeCycle Management (CBDI Journal, July/August 2004, subscribers only).Labels: lifecycle



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