Abstract |
| Preuner M., Eichinger C., Schrefl M..: |
Organizations usually handle their business cases by requesting external services
that are integrated with internal procedures to a composite business process.
External services may be atomic activities or, more often, arbitrarily complex
processes.
In the simplest case, all business cases of a particular kind follow the same external services and internal procedures. Then, a composite service can be statically predefined without regarding peculiarities and requirements of single business cases. Such compositions ensure that processing business cases follows exact specifications. Yet in a highly dynamic environment, the actual processing may involve different services for each business case depending on its properties, such that appropriate services must be selected during runtime.
In this paper, the requirements of static and dynamic environments are naturally
combined: Those parts of processing that are known in advance form the "frame"
of processing. This frame comprises services that must be used in any case and
comprises semantic rules that specify which requirements must be fulfilled by
the services that are selected dynamically during processing. Correctness criteria
define how static and dynamic composition can be appropriately integrated.