Team for Research in
Ubiquitous Secure Technology

Extensible Web Services Architecture for Notification in Large-Scale Systems
Krzysztof Ostrowski and Ken Birman

Citation
Krzysztof Ostrowski and Ken Birman. "Extensible Web Services Architecture for Notification in Large-Scale Systems". International Conference on Web Services (ICWS 2006), IEEE, September, 2006.

Abstract
Existing web services notification and eventing standards are useful in many applications, but embody serious limitations precluding large-scale deployments. Within the standards, it is impossible to use IP multicast, or for recipients to forward messages to others. Scalable notification trees must be configured manually. We propose a design free of such limitations that could serve as a basis for complementing or extending these standards. The approach emerges from our prior work on Quicksilver, a new web services eventing platform that can scale to extremely large environments.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Krzysztof Ostrowski and Ken Birman. <a
    href="http://www.truststc.org/pubs/46.html"
    >Extensible Web Services Architecture for Notification in
    Large-Scale Systems</a>, International Conference on
    Web Services (ICWS 2006), IEEE, September, 2006.
  • Plain text
    Krzysztof Ostrowski and Ken Birman. "Extensible Web
    Services Architecture for Notification in Large-Scale
    Systems". International Conference on Web Services
    (ICWS 2006), IEEE, September, 2006.
  • BibTeX
    @inproceedings{OstrowskiBirman06_ExtensibleWebServicesArchitectureForNotificationInLargeScale,
        author = {Krzysztof Ostrowski and Ken Birman},
        title = {Extensible Web Services Architecture for
                  Notification in Large-Scale Systems},
        booktitle = {International Conference on Web Services (ICWS
                  2006)},
        organization = {IEEE},
        month = {September},
        year = {2006},
        abstract = {Existing web services notification and eventing
                  standards are useful in many applications, but
                  embody serious limitations precluding large-scale
                  deployments. Within the standards, it is
                  impossible to use IP multicast, or for recipients
                  to forward messages to others. Scalable
                  notification trees must be configured manually. We
                  propose a design free of such limitations that
                  could serve as a basis for complementing or
                  extending these standards. The approach emerges
                  from our prior work on Quicksilver, a new web
                  services eventing platform that can scale to
                  extremely large environments.},
        URL = {http://www.truststc.org/pubs/46.html}
    }
    

Posted by Bill Hogan on 5 Apr 2006.
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