2 research outputs found
Web services synchronization health care application
With the advance of Web Services technologies and the emergence of Web
Services into the information space, tremendous opportunities for empowering
users and organizations appear in various application domains including
electronic commerce, travel, intelligence information gathering and analysis,
health care, digital government, etc. In fact, Web services appear to be s
solution for integrating distributed, autonomous and heterogeneous information
sources. However, as Web services evolve in a dynamic environment which is the
Internet many changes can occur and affect them. A Web service is affected when
one or more of its associated information sources is affected by schema
changes. Changes can alter the information sources contents but also their
schemas which may render Web services partially or totally undefined. In this
paper, we propose a solution for integrating information sources into Web
services. Then we tackle the Web service synchronization problem by
substituting the affected information sources. Our work is illustrated with a
healthcare case study.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Web services approach for ambient assisted living in mobile environments
Web services appeared as a promising technology for Web environments independent of technologies, services, and applications. First, a performance comparison study between the two most used Web service architectures, SOAP and REST, is presented, considering messages exchange between clients and a server. Based on this study, the REST architecture was chosen to deploy the system because it gets better results compared to SOAP architecture. Currently, there are some issues related with this approach that should be studied. For instance, if massive quantities of data are sent to databases it can influence significantly the performance of the whole system. The Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMPQ) appears as a promising solution to address this problem. Then, in order to evaluate the performance of this approach, this work presents a performance evaluation and a comparison study of RESTful Web services and the AMQP Protocol considering exchanging messages between clients and a server. The study is based on the averaged exchanged messages for a certain period of time. It was observed and concluded that, for large quantities of messages exchange, the best results comes from the Advanced Message Queuing Protocol. Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT) was addressed in this work because it is a similar protocol to AMQP but it can be used by mobile devices with a processing capacity smallest unlike the AMQP that needs greater processing capacity. These studies are performed in the context of Ambient Assisted Living environments, since
the work was applied to this topic in order to experiment the effectiveness and evaluate the performance of these protocols in this scenario