NEWS >> << NEWS
Return to Home Page

Fundamental Design
Terminology and Concepts
    Introduction
    Design Characteristic
    Design Principle
    Design Paradigm
    Design Pattern
    Design Standard
    Best Practice

Elements of
Service-Oriented Computing
    Introduction
    Service-Oriented
Architecture (SOA)
    Services and
Service-Orientation
    Service Compositions
    Service Inventory
    A Conceptual View of
Service-Oriented Computing
    A Physical View of
Service-Oriented Computing

Goals and Benefits of
Service-Oriented Computing
    Introduction
    Increased Intrinsic Interoperability
    Increased Federation
    Increased Vendor Diversification Options
    Increased Business and Technology Alignment
    Increased ROI
    Increased
Organizational Agility
    Reduced IT Burden

Service-Oriented Computing
in the Real World
    Services as Web Services
    About Web Services (Part I)
    About Web Services (Part II)
    Service Models and
Service Layers
    Service Inventory Blueprints
    Service-Oriented Analysis
    Service-Oriented Design

Resources
    SOA Book Series
    SOA Training & Certification
    Free SOA Principles Poster
    Notification
    SOAPatterns.org
    SOAPrinciples.com
    SOA Visio Stencil


Service-Oriented Architecture

Home > Elements of Service-Oriented Computing > Service-Oriented Architecture

SOA establishes an architectural model that aims to enhance the efficiency, agility, and productivity of an enterprise by positioning services as the primary means through which solution logic is represented in support of the realization of the strategic goals associated with service-oriented computing.

On a fundamental basis, the service-oriented computing platform revolves around the service-orientation design paradigm and its relationship with service-oriented architecture. In fact, the term "service-oriented architecture" and its associated acronym have been used so broadly by the media and within vendor marketing literature that it has almost become synonymous with service-oriented computing itself. It is therefore very important to make a clear distinction between what SOA actually is and how it relates to other service-oriented computing elements.

As a form of technology architecture, an SOA implementation can consist of a combination of technologies, products, APIs, supporting infrastructure extensions, and various other parts. The actual face of a deployed service-oriented architecture is unique within each enterprise; however it is typified by the introduction of new technologies and platforms that specifically support the creation, execution, and evolution of service-oriented solutions. As a result, building a technology architecture around the service-oriented architectural model establishes an environment suitable for solution logic that has been designed in compliance with service-orientation design principles.


Figure: Container symbols are used to represent architectural implementation environments.



The Prentice Hall Service-Oriented Computing Series from Thomas Erl
Home    SOA Books    SOA Magazine    SOA School    SOA Principles    SOA Patterns    SOA Methodology    SOA Glossary    SOA Specs    Legal
Copyright © 2007-2009 SOA Systems Inc.