New Specifications Will Ease Development and Deployment of Web Services
SAN FRANCISCO, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 01/20/2004 --
GLOBUSWORLD -- Akamai, The Globus Alliance, HP, IBM, Sonic Software and TIBCO
today proposed new Web services specifications that will integrate Grid and Web
services standards. The new WS-Notification and WS-Resource Framework represent
the first time a common, standards-based infrastructure will be available for
business applications, Grid resources and systems management. These new
specifications will help customers lower costs, speed deployment and enable
integration across and outside of the enterprise.
"These new Web services specifications will significantly extend the types of
enterprise solutions customers can easily deploy," said Karla Norsworthy,
Director of Dynamic e-Business Technologies, IBM. "These new specifications are
important for key business applications and provide customers with the ability
to utilize a common Web services based infrastructure that support of Grid and
management based solutions."
"Web services technology is a key enabler of the Adaptive Enterprise, where
business processes and IT are synchronized to capitalize on change. Customers
want information technology to behave as a highly efficient, flexible service
that can quickly accommodate change in real time," said Al Smith, chief
technology officer, Management Software Organization, HP. "The flexibility of an
open, standards-based approach is the only way to bring together heterogeneous
resources into an effective, manageable IT environment."
The WS-Notification specification and the WS-Resource Framework will provide
a scalable pub/sub messaging model and the ability to model stateful resources
using Web services. Stateful resources are elements that can be modeled
including physical entities (such as servers) to logical constructs (such as
business agreements and contracts). Access to these stateful resources enables
customers to realize business efficiencies including just in time procurement
with multiple suppliers, systems outage detection and recovery and Grid-based
workload balancing.
WS-Notification can automatically trigger an action in the IT infrastructure
once certain criteria have been met. This can include suppliers automatically
being notified to bid to replenish inventory once current inventory drops to a
set level. Several suppliers can be notified of this depletion in inventory and
WS-Notification can be set up so that only the supplier with the best bid fills
the order. The authors of WS-Notification include Akamai, The Globus Alliance,
HP, IBM, SAP, Sonic Software, and TIBCO.
"To date, Web Services standards have primarily addressed companies'
requirements around definition and management of services. WS-Notification
proposes to also specify an agreed upon definition for events," said Derek
Collison, vice president of Products and Technologies for TIBCO Software.
"Events are what bring a service-oriented architecture to life and a
standardized definition for events will accelerate delivery of real-time
business to more companies at lower cost."
The WS-Resource Framework includes:
-- Modeling Stateful Resources with Web services. A white paper
describing how to utilize the related specifications to model the resources
in the context of Web services.
-- WS-Resource Properties defines how data associated with a stateful
resource can be queried and changed using Web services technologies. This
allows clients to build applications to efficiently read and update data
associated with resources, such as contracts, servers or purchase orders.
-- WS-Resource Lifetime, which allows the user to specify the period
during which a resource definition is valid. For example, WS Resource
Lifetime can automatically update suppliers from all systems once contracts
or service level agreements expire, or deleting products from inventory
systems that are no longer being manufactured.
The authors of the new framework include, The Globus Alliance, HP and
IBM.
"Sonic Software is pleased to be part of the effort to standardize these
critical elements of enterprise infrastructure," said Gordon Van Huizen, CTO for
Sonic Software. "Scalable, distributed messaging has always been at the heart of
an enterprise service bus (ESB), allowing resilient, flexible connectivity and
interaction between applications, data sources and business partners.
WS-Notification and the WS-Resource Framework promise to speed the adoption of
ESBs by offering rich interoperability across enterprise middleware, while
supporting a unified, service-oriented fabric for application integration, data
access and resource management."
"The Globus Alliance is enthusiastic about this latest step in harmonizing
Grid services and Web services," said Ian Foster, Argonne National Laboratory
associate division director for Mathematics and Computer Science and University
of Chicago professor of computer science. "WS-Resource Framework will add clear
value for users of the Globus Toolkit and will hasten acceptance of the open
standards that are key to the Grid's broad adoption for e-Science and
e-Business."
"Akamai is excited to collaborate with these new specifications that
significantly advance the Open Services Grid Architecture," said Chris
Schoettle, Executive Vice President, Technology, Networks & Support, at
Akamai. "This effort addresses the growing need for on demand applications that
are the underpinning of a resilient, scalable and efficient e-business
infrastructure. Akamai's globally distributed computing platform is enabling
enterprises to realize new business efficiencies through Web Services and the
OSGA."
This family of new specifications provides a foundation for the Open Grid
Services Architecture. Using WS-Resource Framework and WS-Notification, Grid
infrastructures and applications can now be built using Web services
specifications. This will facilitate customers' ability to access and share
computing resources on demand over the Internet, relying on an infrastructure
that is resilient, self-managing and always available. Customers can integrate
applications and share data and processing power with huge potential cost and
efficiency savings.
These specifications provide customers with the ability to share
infrastructure across emerging business applications, systems management and
grid computing.