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JACIII Vol.14 No.5 pp. 523-530
doi: 10.20965/jaciii.2010.p0523
(2010)

Paper:

A BPEL-Based Fault-Handling Architecture for Telecom Operation Support Systems

Ing-Yi Chen*, Guo-Kai Ni*, Cheng-Hwa Kuo**,
and Chau-Young Lin***

*Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan

**Department of Commerce Technology and Management, Chihlee Institute of Technology, Taiwan

***Telecommunication Laboratories, ChungHwa Telecom Co., Ltd., Taiwan

Received:
November 25, 2009
Accepted:
June 2, 2010
Published:
July 20, 2010
Keywords:
Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), Business Process Execution Language (BPEL), fault handling, layer architecture, Next Generation Operations System and Software (NGOSS)
Abstract
Exception handling is an important issue in dependable software computing. This paper presents a system architecture and explains the role of responsibility of each component that is introduced in the architecture. The design is used to ensure the constructed service-oriented applications remain in a stable state. Service-Oriented Architecture is a paradigm for constructing current enterprise applications. It uses service composition technology to induce existing service components to provide advanced services. The most important concept in this methodology is that of reusing existing components. Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) is widely used for achieving service composition, providing basic capability for developers to deal with faults using defined activities standard in BPEL. No sufficient design, however, supports developers in implementing fault-handling components efficiently. The architecture proposed in this paper provides the design approach to explain how to reuse the fault-handling components. Additionally, the paper also provides an empirical case study that illustrates how this design was used by the Chunghwa Telecom Company in an effort to improve efficiency in implementing fault-handling components and in constructing service-oriented applications. The number of fault-handling components required was reduced from 38 to 3, implying a 92.10% efficiency rate.
Cite this article as:
I. Chen, G. Ni, C. Kuo, and C. Lin, “A BPEL-Based Fault-Handling Architecture for Telecom Operation Support Systems,” J. Adv. Comput. Intell. Intell. Inform., Vol.14 No.5, pp. 523-530, 2010.
Data files:
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