Personal tools
You are here: Home Knowledge Model REPOSITORY of Terms S Service Deployment

Service Deployment

by Benedikt Liegener last modified Apr 25, 2012 17:43
— filed under:

Definitions

Term:
Service Deployment
Domain: Cross-cutting issues
Engineering and Design
(KM-ED)
Adaptation and Monitoring
(KM-AM)
Quality Definition, Negotiation and Assurance
(KM-QA)
Generic
(domain independent)
D
o
m
a
i
n
:
L
a
y
e
r
s

Business Process Management
(KM-BPM)




Service Composition and Coordination
(KM-SC)




Service Infrastructure
(KM-SI)




Generic
(domain independent)
Service Deployment is the process of concretely associating services to devices in a real-world system and of publishing their descriptions. [PO-JRA-2.3.1][CD-JRA-2.3.4] {SPC:Automatic Service Deployment, Manual Service Deployment}

According to the Open Grid Forum’s CDDLM Foundation document [Bell et al. 2005] the deployment can be defined as follows: “Deploying any complex, distributed service presents many challenges related to service configuration and management. These range from how to describe the precise, desired configuration of the service, to how we can automatically and repeatedly deploy, manage and then remove the service. Deployment description challenges include how to represent the full range of service and resource elements, how to support service “templates” (where some description files can be used later on as a base for future deployment), service composition, correctness checking, and so on. Deployment challenges include automation, correct sequencing of operations across distributed resources, service lifecycle management, clean service removal, security, and so on. Addressing these challenges is highly relevant to Grid computing at a number of levels, including configuring and deploying individual Web Services (including WS-RF and other dialects), and composite systems made up of many co-operating Web Services.”

 

Competencies

 

Scenarios

 

References



Document Actions
  • Send this
  • Print this
  • Bookmarks

The Plone® CMS — Open Source Content Management System is © 2000-2017 by the Plone Foundation et al.