The evolution of Jolie: From orchestrations to adaptable choreographies

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Abstract

Jolie is an orchestration language conceived during Sensoria, an FP7 European project led by Martin Wirsing in the time frame 2005– 2010. Jolie was designed having in mind both the novel –at project time– concepts related to Service-Oriented Computing and the traditional approach to the modelling of concurrency typical of process calculi. The foundational work done around Jolie during Sensoria has subsequently produced many concrete results. In this paper we focus on two distinct advancements, one aiming at the development of dynamically adaptable orchestrated systems and one focusing on global choreographic specifications. These works, more recently, contributed to the realisation of a framework for programming dynamically evolvable distributed Service- Oriented applications that are correct-by-construction.

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Lanese, I., Montesi, F., & Zavattaro, G. (2015). The evolution of Jolie: From orchestrations to adaptable choreographies. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Including Subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), 8950, 506–521. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15545-6_29

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