News Desk
Virtualization, SaaS & SOA: Introducing Service Oriented Programming
Unifying Grid Virtualization, SaaS and SOA
Feb. 25, 2008 10:15 AM
Digg This!
The advent of SOA and standard-base Web services together
with Internet based delivery models has provided the essential base for facilitating
new software platform innovations. One of these innovations is a breakthrough
software componentization technique that we have coined Service Oriented
Programming (SOP). While SOA focuses on communication between systems using
“service operations,” SOP provides a new technique to build agile application
modules using in-process, native service operations as the “units of assembly.”
Instead of using services just to go across systems, SOP provides a model-driven
technique that uses an in-memory image of services to run an entire
application. Since these in-memory services can transparently externalize
through Web service standards or any proprietary protocol, SOP automatically
brings SOA inside the application modules and enables real-time integration
from “inside,” thus eliminating the need for costly data replication. SOP
modules can adapt to change and integrate orders of magnitude faster and easier
than it’s possible with SOA alone.
Model-Driven SOP Development & the Multi-Tenant Service
Virtual Machine
SOP combines an in-memory service composition technique with
service-oriented and model-driven programming constructs to create application
modules as services without coding or scripting. SOP with “SOA inside,” unifies
application componentization and integration functionality and, thus, eliminates
the need for a bundle of application and SOA integration servers. Because the
SOP paradigm is already model-driven, there is no need for tens of complex
add-on “middleware” products ranging from Workflow and Business Process
Management (BPM) tools to Data Exchange tools. Model-driven SOP changes the
economics of software automation by eliminating the need for the entire SOA middleware
stack. SOP models, defined through a
single design-time environment, are automatically run and managed by a Multi-tenant
Service Virtual Machine (SVM) at runtime.
SOP implements hierarchical software modules, with the
lowest level, the atomic service, representing the smallest unit of work; and
the highest level, the composite service, containing a stack of nested service
modules. Business logic consists of composite services that are automatically
multithreaded and virtualized at a molecular level across multiple cores,
processors and servers at runtime. A service like “Get Annual Customer Service
Orders” may contain a hundred nested services. Instead, by executing these
services serially, the Service Runtime Environment automatically dispatches
them across multiple cores, greatly reducing execution time. It understands the
whole gamut of parallelization issues, like data dependencies, and addresses
them behind the scenes without any user input. This fully utilizes the parallel
computing capability of an HPC system without burdening the programmer with
thread creation.
Convergence Through the Power of “Transparent Externalization”
In SOP, service interfaces form the unit of in-memory
encapsulation and can be transparently externalized at runtime regardless of
where they are used in the hierarchical stack of composition. This transparent
ability to externalize any sub service-component of a higher level service
module is at the heart of the convergent property of SOP. It is the key to
built-in virtualization of all the subcomponents across multiple cores and
servers, inside-out SOA integration, and many other innovative mechanisms that
are enabled through SOP.
SaaS 2.0: The Convergence of SOA, SaaS and Service
Virtualization Through SOP
Today, the main platform differentiation between traditional
applications delivered on-premise and the one used by a SaaS application vendor
is in the multi-tenancy of the SaaS application platforms. Besides the multi-tenant
delivery model, the paradigm and techniques used for development of SaaS and
on-premise applications is fundamentally the same. Using a multi-tenant SOP
platform for developing and running SaaS application components brings the
advantages of 100% model-driven development, inside-out SOA, and automatic
component virtualization to the existing economics of SaaS delivery. SOP is the
convergence point of SaaS, SOA, and Virtualization.
Example of Migrating to an SOP Platform
Ventyx supplies ERP applications for Service Delivery Management
used by corporations to manage customers, workforce, spare parts inventory,
tools and documentation. They serve more than 400 companies in over 40
countries, including nuclear power companies who operate energy facilities that
generate and distribute electricity. Because their customers typically
customize the business logic in the application software, Ventyx migrated to an
SOP platform that could better support customers by ensuring a high level of
integration while maintaining optimal computer performance.
Ventyx deployed the Hyperservice Business Platform and
Service Runtime Environment (SRE) from NextAxiom, which helped them migrate
legacy code and develop new applications to run on an SOP platform. Hyperservice™
Studio provides a full featured semantic-based environment for building,
managing and customizing software modules called services, while Service
Runtime Environment provides a managed runtime environment for automating the
parallel execution of services. Legacy code can either be converted to the SOP
model or encapsulated in “wrappers” so they run as before, with only minor
software modifications.
With NextAxiom’s SOP platform, developing business logic is
visual like creating flowcharts. Users drag and drop native service interfaces,
add visual programming constructs and connect them together with lines. “Now,
our customers can snap together services to tailor and integrate solutions on demand,”
says Fernando Alvarez, Director of Product Architecture at Ventyx. Instead of
writing code, users create services semantically which are executed
automatically by the platform. This means services can be created by
experienced business process experts as well as software programmers. Because
code is neither written nor generated, solutions remain flexible throughout
their lifecycle.
NextAxiom’s customers can run a combination of single-thread
legacy code and multithreaded composite services, both of which Intel
Architecture processors execute exceptionally well. This benefits applications
that demand high compute performance across a wide array of workloads. This
application software is optimized to run on HP Integrity rx6600 servers powered
by Dual-Core Intel Itanium 2 processors.
About Ash MassoudiAsh Massoudi is the CEO and co-founder of NextAxiom and member of the Itanium Solutions Alliance. Before founding NextAxiom, he delivered the real-time assimilation of Red Pepper Advance Supply Chain Planning products within the PeopleSoft technology platform as a result of PeopleSofts first major acquisition. While working for Red Pepper Software, he invented a semantic-based network transaction system for recoverability and high-availability of in-memory supply-chain planning and optimization servers. Ash holds a BA in computer science from the University of California at Berkeley.