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Published Articles >> Table of Contents >> Abstract
27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference
p. 544
Just What Could Possibly Go Wrong In B2B Integration?
Dean Kuo, CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences, Australia
Alan Fekete, University of Sydney, Australia
Paul Greenfield, CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences, Australia
Julian Jang, CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences, Australia
Doug Palmer, CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences, Australia
Full Article Text:
 
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/CMPSAC.2003.1245393
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| Abstract |
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One important trend in enterprise-scale IT has been the increasing use of business-to-business integration (B2Bi) technologies to automate business processes that cross organisational boundaries, such as the interactions between partner companies along a supply chain. It is relatively easy to describe a pattern of interaction, or choreography, in the case where everything proceeds smoothly. However, the abnormal cases, such as where a process fails or a message is lost, are much more complicated, and risk introducing data and process inconsistencies into computer-based systems. Current B2Bi technologies do not supply an infrastructure that can provide reliability without considerable sophistication from the architects and developers As a first step towards guiding architects to the design of B2Bi systems that maintain consistency despite failures, this paper describes a variety of types of failure that can arise in practice, based on a realistic e-procurement scenario. We describe these failures in terms of the different types of state that naturally occur within the distributed system. Understanding the types of failure that need to be handled, or prevented, is essential to an architect or developer who must design and write handlers for all the exceptions that can occur in their workflows.
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Citation:
Dean Kuo, Alan Fekete, Paul Greenfield, Julian Jang, Doug Palmer,
"Just What Could Possibly Go Wrong In B2B Integration?,"
compsac,
p. 544,
27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference,
2003
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