D. Lau, and J. Mylopoulos. IEEE International Conference on Web Services (ICWS 2004), San Diego, California, USA, (July 2004)
Abstract
Web services constitute an important new class of software applications that can be programmatically invoked over the Internet. Fundamental features of web services include loosely coupled, layered, and everchanging architectures that support user functions (e.g., making a reservation) for large communities of users. The benefits of adopting web services include software interoperability and easy integration. Not surprisingly, much investment and effort is being drawn to the design and development of such services. This paper proposes a methodology for designing web services. The methodology is based on Tropos Perini01, Castro02 and supports early and late requirements analysis, as well as architectural and detailed design. An online retailer example is used for illustration of the proposed methodology.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Lau2004
%A Lau, Diana
%A Mylopoulos, John
%B IEEE International Conference on Web Services (ICWS 2004)
%C San Diego, California, USA
%D 2004
%K web tool tropos services
%T Designing Web Services with Tropos
%U http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~nernst/papers/lau-icws04.pdf
%X Web services constitute an important new class of software applications that can be programmatically invoked over the Internet. Fundamental features of web services include loosely coupled, layered, and everchanging architectures that support user functions (e.g., making a reservation) for large communities of users. The benefits of adopting web services include software interoperability and easy integration. Not surprisingly, much investment and effort is being drawn to the design and development of such services. This paper proposes a methodology for designing web services. The methodology is based on Tropos Perini01, Castro02 and supports early and late requirements analysis, as well as architectural and detailed design. An online retailer example is used for illustration of the proposed methodology.
@inproceedings{Lau2004,
abstract = {Web services constitute an important new class of software applications that can be programmatically invoked over the Internet. Fundamental features of web services include loosely coupled, layered, and everchanging architectures that support user functions (e.g., making a reservation) for large communities of users. The benefits of adopting web services include software interoperability and easy integration. Not surprisingly, much investment and effort is being drawn to the design and development of such services. This paper proposes a methodology for designing web services. The methodology is based on Tropos [Perini01, Castro02] and supports early and late requirements analysis, as well as architectural and detailed design. An online retailer example is used for illustration of the proposed methodology.},
added-at = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
address = {San Diego, California, USA},
author = {Lau, Diana and Mylopoulos, John},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2648db56ad177bc56958036dbe35aeaab/neilernst},
booktitle = {IEEE International Conference on Web Services (ICWS 2004)},
citeulike-article-id = {121759},
description = {sdasda},
interhash = {b3d8dc7a67396f7762780cc83e1a100b},
intrahash = {648db56ad177bc56958036dbe35aeaab},
keywords = {web tool tropos services},
month = {July June-September},
priority = {0},
timestamp = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
title = {Designing Web Services with Tropos},
url = {http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~nernst/papers/lau-icws04.pdf},
year = 2004
}