58,792 research outputs found
Formal certification and compliance for run-time service environments
With the increased awareness of security and safety of services in on-demand distributed service provisioning (such
as the recent adoption of Cloud infrastructures), certification and compliance checking of services is becoming a key element for service engineering. Existing certification techniques tend to support mainly design-time checking of service properties and tend not to support the run-time monitoring and progressive certification in the service execution environment. In this paper we discuss an approach which provides both design-time and runtime behavioural compliance checking for a services architecture, through enabling a progressive event-driven model-checking technique. Providing an integrated approach to certification and compliance is a challenge however using analysis and monitoring techniques we present such an approach for on-going compliance checking
Customizing BPMN Diagrams Using Timelines
BPMN (Business Process Model and Notation) is widely used standard modeling technique for representing Business Processes by using diagrams, but lacks in some aspects. Representing execution-dependent and time-dependent decisions in BPMN Diagrams may be a daunting challenge [Carlo Combi et al., 2017]. In many cases such constraints are omitted in order to preserve the simplicity and the readability of the process model. However, for purposes such as compliance checking, process mining, and verification, formalizing such constraints could be very useful. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for annotating BPMN Diagrams with Temporal Synchronization Rules borrowed from the timeline-based planning field. We discuss the expressivity of the proposed approach and show that it is able to capture a lot of complex temporally-related constraints without affecting the structure of BPMN diagrams. Finally, we provide a mapping from annotated BPMN diagrams to timeline-based planning problems that allows one to take advantage of the last twenty years of theoretical and practical developments in the field
Web Services: A Process Algebra Approach
It is now well-admitted that formal methods are helpful for many issues
raised in the Web service area. In this paper we present a framework for the
design and verification of WSs using process algebras and their tools. We
define a two-way mapping between abstract specifications written using these
calculi and executable Web services written in BPEL4WS. Several choices are
available: design and correct errors in BPEL4WS, using process algebra
verification tools, or design and correct in process algebra and automatically
obtaining the corresponding BPEL4WS code. The approaches can be combined.
Process algebra are not useful only for temporal logic verification: we remark
the use of simulation/bisimulation both for verification and for the
hierarchical refinement design method. It is worth noting that our approach
allows the use of any process algebra depending on the needs of the user at
different levels (expressiveness, existence of reasoning tools, user
expertise)
Enhancing the Guidance of the Intentional Model "MAP": Graph Theory Application
The MAP model was introduced in information system engineering in order to
model processes on a flexible way. The intentional level of this model helps an
engineer to execute a process with a strong relationship to the situation of
the project at hand. In the literature, attempts for having a practical use of
maps are not numerous. Our aim is to enhance the guidance mechanisms of the
process execution by reusing graph algorithms. After clarifying the existing
relationship between graphs and maps, we improve the MAP model by adding
qualitative criteria. We then offer a way to express maps with graphs and
propose to use Graph theory algorithms to offer an automatic guidance of the
map. We illustrate our proposal by an example and discuss its limitations.Comment: 9 page
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