NOTICE: Due to a lapse in annual appropriations, most of this website is not being updated. Learn more.
Form submissions will still be accepted but will not receive responses at this time. Sections of this site for programs using non-appropriated funds (such as NVLAP) or those that are excepted from the shutdown (such as CHIPS and NVD) will continue to be updated.
An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock (
) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Composition of Engineering Web Services with Distributed Data Flows and Computations
Published
Author(s)
D. Liu, J Peng, K Law, G Wiederhold, Ram D. Sriram
Abstract
This paper describes an experimental Flow-based Infrastructure for Composing Autonomous Services (FICAS), which supports a service-composition paradigm that integrates loosely-coupled software components. For traditional software service composition frameworks, the data-flows and control-flows are centrally coordinated, and the composed service operates as the hub for all data communications. FICAS, on the other hand, employs a distributed data flow approach that supports direct data exchanges among web services. The distributed data flows can avoid many performance bottlenecks attending centralized processing. The performance and flexibility of FICAS are further improved by adopting active mediation, which distributes computations within the service framework, and reduces the amount of data traffic significantly by moving computations closer to the data. A system has been prototyped to integrate several project management and scheduling software applications. The prototype implementation demonstrates that distributed data flow, combining with active mediation, is effective and more efficient than centralized processing when integrating large engineering software services.
Liu, D.
, Peng, J.
, Law, K.
, Wiederhold, G.
and Sriram, R.
(2005),
Composition of Engineering Web Services with Distributed Data Flows and Computations, ACM Transactions on Information Systems, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=822277
(Accessed November 3, 2025)