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Published byElaine Gardner Modified over 8 years ago
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Initiating UK OOI CI Project 7 th /8 th March 2011
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Red Hat / Scribble Timetable
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SAVARA & Testable Architecture
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SAVARA: How is Scribble used? ● Testable architecture is about understanding whether artifacts defined at different stages of the lifecycle are compatible ● Scribble used to provide common representation of interaction based behaviour ● Aim to leverage static type validation within design time tools ● Aim to leverage scribble based monitoring at runtime
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Red Hat ● Red Hat provide subscription based support agreements for “platforms” ● A platform consists of one or more open source project, that goes through a QA procedure and is certified to run in a range of supported environments ● When new technology is being introduced, it first appears as a “technical preview” within a platform, and a fully supported technology in the subsequent release
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Timetable ● SAVARA is currently planned to tech preview as part of the SOA Platform ● Date has not been finalized yet, but likely to be near end of 2011 ● Due to duration of QA cycle, tech preview would be based on stable community release 3 months prior to tech preview release (e.g. estimate September 2011) ● This means that candidate release ideally required in July 2011, with stable notation and features
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What needs to be done? ● SAVARA Tech Preview requires: ● Upgrade from Scribble 1 (original version from 2008) to Scribble 2 (new version) - completed ● Improved conformance checking ● Some static validation ● Ideally BPMN2 to Scribble conversion (currently just supports WS-CDL) ● Migration of simulation and monitoring to Scribble based monitor, in place of pi4soa WS-CDL monitoring
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Scribble Tool Support
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Project Hosting ● Hosted at: www.scribble.orgwww.scribble.org ● Uses subversion for source code control, although will be moving to git (on github) shortly ● Issue tracking (bugs, feature requests, tasks, etc) using Jira ● Forums (user and developer) ● Mailing list: (closed group) – https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/scribble-research https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/scribble-research ● Maven used to build software ● Hudson used for continuous integration – build and test (http://hudson.jboss.org/hudson/job/scribble/)http://hudson.jboss.org/hudson/job/scribble/
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Project Hosting (2) ● Easy to become involved ● Just need a jboss.org user account to be able to use the forums and jira ● Mailing list (scribble-research) subscription needs approval from Kohei, as currently closed group ● Project contribution (i.e. committing code to svn) requires a signed contributors license agreement – When moved to github, signed agreement will still be required (for the foreseeable future) – However, changes will be made in users own forked repositories, with contributions submitted with a pull request
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SVN Source code structure ● Development ● Java – Location of current tool development – Other languages can be supported in the future, possibly not full tool chain, but may be some components (e.g. runtime monitor) ● Research ● Intended as a workspace for individuals or groups to collaborate on components that may eventually migrate into the development branch
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GitHub Source code structure ● Development ● Separate repositories for – Core – shared modules that will be published to Nexus – Eclipse Tools – plugins released via an update site – Command line Tools – CLI for invoking capabilities ● Research ● Can be carried out in user/research groups own github account with forked repositories
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Java Tools ● Main components (e.g. parser, endpoint projection, validation, monitor, etc) implemented as OSGi bundles ● Enables use in an Eclipse environment ● Command line support using Apache Felix ● Use within OSGi compliant server ● Provides hot-deployment of new implementations by dropping bundle into OSGi environent – e.g. add new validation rules
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Parser ● Uses ANTLR to describe syntax and generate a parser ● The syntax is available from herehere ● Custom adapter used to convert the Abstract Syntax Tree representation into a Scribble Protocol Object Model
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Scribble Protocol Descriptio n ANTL R Parser Generic Abstract Syntax Tree Protocol Object Model ANTLR Custom Adapter ProtocolModel Import Protocol Interaction RoleList
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Validation ● Mechanism defines a simple set of rules for providing validation of a protocol description ● e.g. has a role, used in an interaction, previously been defined ● Higher level forms of validation still required ● Validators simply implement the org.scribble.protocol.validation.ProtocolValidator interface and register the implementation as an OSGi service
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Protocol Object Model Protocol Validation Manager Protocol Validator Protocol Validator Register Model Changed Validate Journal Log errors
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Endpoint Projection ● Projects the endpoint (or local model) representation of a role defined in a global Protocol model ● Represents the responsibilities/behaviour of the endpoint in respect of the global model ● Can be used for code generation purposes (e.g. WS- BPEL, Java code, service interfaces such as WSDL, etc) ● Can be used for conformance checking of an endpoint implementation (statically or dynamically)
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Protocol Object Model GlobalLocal Project to role
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Select the 'project' action associated with the protocol
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This shows a local model projected from the global protocol description
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Monitoring/Simulation ● Concise XML based state machine representation generated from Protocol local model ● XSD schema available herehere ● Language independent ● Monitor can be used for simulation ● Supplying list of events, e.g. ● sendMessage,{http://www.example.org}Order,Broker ● receiveChoice,Ok,Broker ● receiveMessage,{http://www.example.org}Confirmation,Broker
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Protocol Object Model Local Scribble Protocol Monitor Descriptio n Protocol Monitor Export to XML Monitoring Representation EVENTS
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Select the protocol to be simulated
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Define the list of events to be simulated
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Select the 'simulate' action associated with the protocol
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Select the events file to drive the simulator
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And the results........
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