Ph.D. Dissertation Defense
Automatic Service Search and Composability
Analysis in Large Scale Service Networks
Yunsu Lee
10:00am Wednesday 25 November 2015, ITE 346, UMBC
Currently, software and hardware system components are trending toward modularized and virtualized as atomic services on the cloud. A number of cloud platforms or marketplaces are available where everybody can provide their system components as services. In this situation, service composition is essential, because the functionalities offered by a single atomic service might not satisfy users’ complex requirements. Since there are already a number of available services and significant increase in the number of new services over time, manual service composition is impractical.
In our research, we propose computer-aided methods to help find and compose appropriate services to fulfill users’ requirement in large scale service network. For this purpose, we explore the following methods. First, we develop a method for formally representing a service in term of composability by considering various functional and non-functional characteristics of services. Second, we develop a method for aiding the development of the reference ontologies that are crucial for representing a service. We explore a bottom-up-based statistical method for the ontology development. Third, we architect a framework that encompasses the reference models, effective strategy, and necessary procedures for the services search and composition. Finally, we develop a graph-based algorithm that is highly specialized for services search and composition. Experimental comparative performance analysis against existing automatic services composition methods is also provided.
Commitee: Drs. Yun Peng (chair), Tim Finin, Yelena Yesha, Milton Halem, Nenad Ivezic (NIST) and Boonserm Kulvatunyou (NIST)