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Introduction
    Overview
    Service Inventory Blueprints
    Service-Oriented Analysis
    Service-Oriented Design

Service Models
    Service Layers
    Entity Services
    Task Services
    Utility Services

Delivery Processes
    Top Down vs. Bottom Up
    The Inventory Analysis
Cycle (Part I)
    The Inventory Analysis
Cycle (Part II)
    The Inventory Analysis
Cycle (Part III)
    Choosing a Delivery Strategy

The Service-Oriented
Analysis Process
    Process Overview
    Information Gathering Steps
    Service Modeling Process (Part I)
    Service Modeling Process (Part II)

Service-Oriented
Design Processes
    Process Overview
    Design Processes and
Service Models
    Design Processes and Service-Orientation

Additional Resources
    Web Sites
    Book Series
    Training
    Consulting


Introduction

Service-Oriented Design

Note: This definition was copied from www.WhatIsSOA.com.

The service-oriented design process uses a set of predefined service candidates from the service inventory blueprint as a starting point from which they are shaped into actual physical service contracts.

When carrying out service-oriented design, a clear distinction is made between service candidates and services. The former represents a conceptual service that has not been implemented, whereas the latter refers to a physical service.

As shown in the following figure, the traditional (non-standardized) means by which Web service contracts are generated results in services that continue to express the proprietary nature of what they encapsulate. Creating the Web service contract prior to development allows for standards to be applied so that the federated endpoints established by Web services are consistent and aligned.


Figure: Unlike the popular process of deriving Web service contracts from existing components, SOA advocates a specific approach that encourages us to postpone development until after a custom designed, standardized contract is in place.

This "contract first" approach lies at the heart of service-oriented design and has inspired separate design processes for services based on different service models.

This page contains excerpts from:

SOA Principles of Service Design
by Thomas Erl

(ISBN: 0132344823, Prentice Hall/PearsonPTR, Hardcover,
240+ Full Color Illustrations, 573 pages)

Free Color Poster (see www.soaposters.com).
For more information about this book, visit
www.soabooks.com/psd/.
The Prentice Hall Service-Oriented Computing Series from Thomas Erl
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