Journal Article


Consumer-centric QoS-aware selection of web services

Abstract

There exist many web services which exhibit similar functional characteristics. It is imperative to provide service consumers with facilities for selecting required web services according to their non-functional characteristics or quality of service (QoS). However, the selection process is greatly complicated by the distinct views of service providers and consumers on the services QoS. For instance, they may have distinct views of the service reliability-wherein a consumer considers that a service is reliable if its success rate is higher than 99%, while a provider may consider its service as reliable if its success rate is higher than 90%. The aim of this paper is to resolve such conflicts and to ensure consensus on the QoS characteristics in the selection of web services. It proposes a QoS Consensus Moderation Approach (QCMA) in order to perform QoS consensus and to alleviate the differences on QoS characteristics in the selection of web services. The proposed approach is implemented as a prototype tool and is tested on a case study of a hotel booking web service. Experimental results show that the proposed approach greatly improves the service selection process in a dynamic and uncertain environment of web services.

Attached files

Authors

Lin, W-L
Lo, C-C
Chao, K-M
Younas, M

Oxford Brookes departments

Faculty of Technology, Design and Environment
Faculty of Technology, Design and Environment\Department of Computing and Communication Technologies

Dates

Year of publication: 2008
Date of RADAR deposit: 2010-08-17



Related resources

This RADAR resource is a version of Consumer-centric QoS-aware selection of web services

Details

  • Owner: Unknown user
  • Collection: Outputs
  • Version: 1 (show all)
  • Status: Live
  • Views (since Sept 2022): 90