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Introduction to
Service-Orientation
    Services (Part I)
    Services (Part II)
    The Service-Orientation
Design Paradigm
    Origins and Influences of Service-Orientation (Part I)
    Origins and Influences of Service-Orientation (Part II)

Service-Orientation
Design Principles
    Standardized Service Contracts
    Service Loose Coupling
    Service Abstraction
    Service Reusability
    Service Autonomy
    Service Statelessness
    Service Discoverability
    Service Composability
    Service-Orientation and Interoperability

Effects of Service-Orientation on the Enterprise
    Service-Orientation and the Concept of "Application"
    Service-Orientation and the Concept of "Integration"
    The Service Composition

Service-Orientation
in the Real World
    Life Before
Service-Orientation (Part I)
    Life Before
Service-Orientation (Part II)
    The Need for
Service-Orientation (Part I)
    The Need for
Service-Orientation (Part II)
    Challenges Introduced by Service-Orientation (Part I)
    Challenges Introduced by Service-Orientation (Part II)
    Additional Considerations

Additional Resources
    SOA Sites
    SOA Book Series
    SOA Training & Certification
    Free SOA Principles Poster
    Notification


Service-Orientation Design Principles

Service-Orientation and Interoperability

One item that may appear to be absent from the preceding list is a principle along the lines of "Services are Interoperable." The reason this does not exist as a separate principle is because interoperability is fundamental to every one of the principles we just described. Therefore, in relation to service-oriented computing, stating that services must be interoperable is just about as evident as stating that services must exist. Each of the eight principles supports or contributes to interoperability in some manner. Below are just a few examples:
- Service contracts are standardized to guarantee a baseline measure of interoperability associated with the harmonization of data models.
- Reducing the degree of service coupling fosters interoperability by making individual services less dependent on others and therefore more open for invocation by different service consumers.
- Abstracting details about the service limits all interoperation to the service contract, increasing the long-term consistency of interoperability by allowing underlying service logic to evolve more independently.
- Designing services for reuse implies a high-level of required interoperability between the service and numerous potential service consumers.
- By raising a service’s individual autonomy its behavior becomes more consistently predictable, increasing its reuse potential and thereby its attainable level of interoperability.
- Through an emphasis on stateless design, the availability and scalability of services increase, allowing them to interoperate more frequently and reliably.
- Service Discoverability simply allows services to be more easily located by those who want to potentially interoperate with them.
- Finally, for services to be effectively composable they must be interoperable. The success of fulfilling composability requirements is often tied directly to the extent to which services are standardized and cross-service data exchange is optimized.
A fundamental goal of applying service-orientation is for interoperability to become a natural by-product, ideally to the extent that a level of intrinsic interoperability is established as a common and expected service design characteristic.

Of course, as with any other design characteristic, there are levels of interoperability a service can attain. The ultimate measure is generally determined by the extent to which service-orientation principles have been consistently and successfully realized (and, of course, the maturity level of the underlying technology platform).

Note that increased intrinsic interoperability is one of the key strategic goals associated with service-oriented computing.

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

Download the free Color SOA Principles Poster at www.soaposters.com.
For more information about this book, visit
www.soabooks.com.
The Prentice Hall Service-Oriented Computing Series from Thomas Erl
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