- From: Cutler, Roger (RogerCutler) <RogerCutler@chevrontexaco.com>
- Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2004 16:26:34 -0600
- To: "He, Hao" <Hao.He@thomson.com.au>, "Champion, Mike" <Mike.Champion@SoftwareAG-USA.com>, www-ws-arch@w3.org
Well, since Hao agrees with me, let me question the relevance of the grid computing example. Does grid computing really use WSDL and SOAP? If not, it is out of scope. -----Original Message----- From: He, Hao [mailto:Hao.He@thomson.com.au] Sent: Monday, January 12, 2004 3:32 PM To: Cutler, Roger (RogerCutler); Champion, Mike; www-ws-arch@w3.org Subject: RE: Proposed replacement text for Section 1.6 +1 I think Roger has summarised very well. We are not prescribing. We are just telling people the consequences if they want to things in a way that is not intended, which can be totally ok under certain circumstance, for example, legacy integration. Hao -----Original Message----- From: Cutler, Roger (RogerCutler) [mailto:RogerCutler@chevrontexaco.com] Sent: Tuesday, January 13, 2004 3:13 AM To: He, Hao; Champion, Mike; www-ws-arch@w3.org Subject: RE: Proposed replacement text for Section 1.6 A lot of people, myself included, think that trying to do "distributed objects" using Web services is a big mistake. I seem to recall people saying that one of the goals of an architecture is to limit alternatives, or something like that. Surely a reasonable thing for an architecture to articulate would be something like, "You can try to implement objects in an SOA if you want, but that's not what it's for". -----Original Message----- From: www-ws-arch-request@w3.org [mailto:www-ws-arch-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of He, Hao Sent: Sunday, January 11, 2004 10:26 PM To: 'Champion, Mike'; 'www-ws-arch@w3.org ' Subject: RE: Proposed replacement text for Section 1.6 hi, Mike, It appears to me that most people have, at least, agreed with the following: 1. The architectural goal of SOA (and WS in general) is to "achieve loose-coupling between interacting software agents in order to preserve the benefits of reusability, extensibility and simplicity." 2. Two main architectural constraints of SOA: 1) A small set of simple and ubiquitous interfaces to all participating software agents. 2) Descriptive messages delivered through the interfaces. I, personally, would also add extensibility as part of the constraints but Dave O would argue it is just a best practise (however, he believes that extensibility is important and has written a number of articles on it). As to the relationships among the terms "distributed system", "service oriented architecture," and "web service", I believe there are just two main kinds, those based on OO and those based on SOA. The confusion comes when one tries to do "distributed objects" using Web services. Hao -----Original Message----- From: Champion, Mike [mailto:Mike.Champion@SoftwareAG-USA.com] Sent: Saturday, January 10, 2004 8:26 AM To: 'www-ws-arch@w3.org ' Subject: RE: Proposed replacement text for Section 1.6 > -----Original Message----- > From: He, Hao [mailto:Hao.He@thomson.com.au] > Sent: Friday, January 09, 2004 4:20 PM > To: 'Champion, Mike '; 'www-ws-arch@w3.org ' > Subject: RE: Proposed replacement text for Section 1.6 > I still think we need to define/explain SOA by formally listing the > architectural constraints. You sort of did it but I am strongly in > favor of explicitly listing them as constraints. That's what the previous draft tried to do. I struggled with that because I'm not at all sure how many of the SOA principles are core definitions, which are really architectural constraints, and which are best practices for developing *good* SOAs (e.g. coarse granularity). What would you suggest as the list of constraints? > Can we also replace "There is considerable confusion in the computing > industry about the relationships among the terms "distributed system", > "service oriented architecture," and "web service", as well as to > related technologies such as ..." with something more positive? OK, propose something! I don't have a problem with changing it, but I think there *is* immense confusion about this stuff. > > BTW, I predicted in my article > (http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/09/30/soa.html) > that someone would soon replace the original meaning of SOAP > with Service Oriented Architecture Protocol. Now, you did it. :) I was trying to remember who I stole that from! I should have cited your article too, because I remember reading it and getting a lot out of it a few months ago. I remember thinking about stealing your CD-playing service example when I first started wrestling with this action item, but decided that it was too informal for this document.
Received on Monday, 12 January 2004 17:26:52 UTC