Decentralising a service-oriented architecture

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Abstract

Service-oriented computing is becoming an increasingly popular paradigm for modelling and building distributed systems in open and heterogeneous environments. However, proposed service-oriented architectures are typically based on centralised components, such as service registries or service brokers, that introduce reliability, management, and performance issues. This paper describes an approach to fully decentralise a service-oriented architecture using a self-organising peer-to-peer network maintained by service providers and consumers. The design is based on a gradient peer-to-peer topology, which allows the system to replicate a service registry using a limited number of the most stable and best performing peers. The paper evaluates the proposed approach through extensive simulation experiments and shows that the decentralised registry and the underlying peer-to-peer infrastructure scale to a large number of peers and can successfully manage high peer churn rates. © 2009 The Author(s).

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Sacha, J., Biskupski, B., Dahlem, D., Cunningham, R., Meier, R., Dowling, J., & Haahr, M. (2010). Decentralising a service-oriented architecture. Peer-to-Peer Networking and Applications, 3(4), 323–350. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12083-009-0062-6

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