Service Component Architecture
Service Component Architecture (SCA) is a software technology created by major software vendors including IBM, Oracle and TIBCO. SCA provides a model for composing applications that follow Service-Oriented Architecture principles.[1] The technology encompasses a wide range of disparate technologies and as such is specified in various independent specifications in order to maintain programming language and application environment neutrality.[1]
Partners
Partner vendors include:
- the original members: BEA Systems, IBM, IONA Technologies, Oracle Corporation, SAP AG, Sybase, Xcalia and Zend Technologies
- the additional members announced on July 26, 2006: Cape Clear, Interface21, Primeton Technologies, Progress Software, Red Hat, Rogue Wave Software, Software AG, Sun Microsystems and TIBCO Software.[2]
- Siemens AG, which joined the collaboration of companies working on the technology on September 18, 2006.
Supporters
In addition to the partners above, the SCA community has a significant set of formal supporters.[3] The Supporters Program remains open for any interested vendor, ISV, customer or user of the SCA technology to contribute to its evolution.
Definition
On March 21, 2007, the OSOA Collaboration released the V1.0 level of specification.[4] The specifications specify that an application designed with SCA should have the following advantages:
- Decoupling of application business logic from the details of its invoked service calls
- Target services in a multitude of languages including C++, Java, COBOL, and PHP as well as XML, BPEL, and XSLT
- The ability to seamlessly work with various communications constructs including One-Way, Asynchronous, Call-Return, and Notification
- The ability to "bind" to legacy components or services, accessed normally by technologies such as Web Services, EJB, JMS, JCA, RMI, RPC, CORBA and others
- The ability to declare (outside of business logic) the Quality of Service requirements, such as Security, Transactions and the use of Reliable Messaging
- Data could be represented in Service Data Objects
The value proposition of SCA, therefore, is to offer the flexibility for true composite applications, flexibly incorporating reusable components in an SOA programming style. The overhead of business logic programmer concerns regarding platforms, infrastructure, plumbing, policies and protocols are removed, enabling a high degree of programmer productivity.
Further analysis
Gartner Group has published a short brief that concluded that the SCA included technology of Service Data Objects (SDO) will enjoy more rapid adoption due to its maturity.[5]
Advantages:
- caters for all existing Java platform technologies and C++
- less technology dependence - does not have to rely on the Java programming language, nor XML
- SDO, which is a technology specification for data access
Disadvantages:
- lack of support by Microsoft reduces the relevancy of SCA for a large number of potential users.
- Specification does not address performance of SOA applications, which continues to be a detractor of adoption.
- Focusing on portability (instead of interoperability),[6] making it vulnerable to repeating CORBA's mistakes.[7]
SCA is said to provide interoperability through an approach called "Activation". It is the method that provides the highest degree of component autonomy, compared to older "mediation" (e.g. JBI) or "Invocation" method used in JCA, as explained by an architect at SAP.[8]
SCA artifacts
The SCA Assembly Model consists of a series of artifacts, which are defined by elements contained in XML files. An SCA runtime may have other non-standard representations of the artifacts represented by these XML files, and may allow for the configuration of systems to be modified dynamically. However, the XML files define the portable representation of the SCA artifacts.
The basic artifact is the Composite, which is the unit of deployment for SCA and which holds Services which can be accessed remotely. A composite contains one or more Components,[9] which contain the business function provided by the module. Components offer their function as services, which can either be used by other components within the same module or which can be made available for use outside the module through Entry Points. Components may also depend on services provided by other components — these dependencies are called References. References can either be linked to services provided by other components in the same module, or references can be linked to services provided outside the module, which can be provided by other modules. References to services provided outside the module, including services provided by other modules, are defined by External Services in the module. Also contained in the module are the linkages between references and services, represented by Wires.
A Component consists of a configured Implementation, where an implementation is the piece of program code implementing business functions. The component configures the implementation with specific values for settable Properties declared by the implementation. The component can also configure the implementation with wiring of references declared by the implementation to specific target services.
Composites are deployed within an SCA System. An SCA System represents a set of services providing an area of business functionality that is controlled by a single organization. As an example, for the accounts department in a business, the SCA System might cover all financial-related functions, and it might contain a series of modules dealing with specific areas of accounting, with one for customer accounts and another dealing with accounts payable. To help build and configure the SCA System, Composites can be used as component implementations, in the same way as Java classes or BPEL processes. In other words, SCA allows a hierarchy of composites that is arbitrarily deep - such a nested model is termed recursive.
The capture and expression of non-functional requirements, such as security, is an important aspect of service definition, and has an impact on SCA throughout the lifecycle of components and compositions. SCA provides the Policy Framework to support specification of constraints, capabilities and Quality of Service (QoS) expectations, from component design through to concrete deployment.
Open Source Communities
There are 5 independent open source communities implementing SCA:
- Apache Tuscany
- Fabric3
- FraSCAti
- Service Conduit
- SwitchYard
- TRENTINO A C++-based lightweight and modular SCA runtime that is specifically designed for the peculiarities of the embedded domain.
Transition to a standards body
After several years of incubation under an informal industry collaboration, early (V1.0) implementations of the specification are now coming to market. The collaboration partners have now indicated that formal industry standardization is the appropriate next step and announced their intentions in March 2007. The chosen Standards Development Organization is the OASIS organization, and a new OASIS Open CSA Member Section has been established.[10] Charters for six new Technical Committees (TCs) have been submitted to OASIS[11] and a Call for Participation for Technical Committee members has been issued within the OASIS organization. The Technical Committees will start their work in September 2007. Participation in these OASIS SCA TCs remains open to all companies, non-profit groups, governments, academic institutions, and individuals. Archives of the work will be accessible to both members and non-members, and OASIS will offer a mechanism for public comment.[12]
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Edwards, Mike. "Service Component Architecture". OASIS. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
- ↑ Technology srinivas vendors extend collaboration on SOA technologies http://www.hoise.com/primeur/06/articles/monthly/AE-PR-08-06-92.html
- ↑ OSOA Technology Supporters http://www.osoa.org/display/Main/Current+OSOA+Supporters+Community
- ↑ Service Component Architecture Specifications - Open SOA Collaboration
- ↑ http://www.gartner.com/resources/136600/136687/new_soa_specification_will_f_136687.pdf
- ↑ SCA & SDO, the next Corba?
- ↑ The rise and fall of CORBA
- ↑ "community.user: Comparing SCA, Java EE and JBI | SCN". Sdn.sap.com. 2005-12-12. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
- ↑ Bell, Michael (2008). "Service-Oriented Conceptualization http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470141115.html". Service-Oriented Modeling: Service Analysis, Design, and Architecture. Wiley & Sons. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-470-14111-3.
- ↑ "OASIS Open CSA Member Section for SCA".
- ↑ "Six Technical Committees Proposed for the OASIS Open CSA Member Section".
- ↑ "Six OASIS Committees Form to Standardize Service Component Architecture (SCA) for SOA".
See also
- Semantic service oriented architecture
- service-oriented modeling
Books on SCA
- Understanding SCA
- SOA for the Business Developer: Concepts, BPEL, and SCA—ISBN 978-158347-065-7
- Apache Tuscany in Action, ISBN 978-1-933988-89-4
- Open Source SOA, ISBN 1-933988-54-1
External links
- Introduction to programming for SCA Dr. Dobb's
- Current SCA Specifications from the Industry Collaboration
- Open Service Oriented Architecture -- official site for information about the SCA & SDO technology
- Fabric3 open source SCA runtime
- Apache Tuscany - Open Source implementation of the SCA specification
- SALT - Enterprise ready SCA runtime for C++, Python, Ruby, and PHP
- PocoCapsule for WS and SCA An open source C++ SCA container based on inversion-of-control (IoC) and domain-specific-modeling (DSM)
- Newton open source distributed SCA & OSGi runtime
- A French public research project, which includes a SCA runtime called FraSCati
- SCA Home Page at OASIS web site
- Current SCA Resources & Collateral
- Latest SCA & SDO News
- Introducing SCA -- A tutorial by David Chappell, Chappell & Associates
- Relationship of SCA and JBI
- Eclipse STP/SCA sub project An Open Source Eclipse project that provides a set of tools for SCA