This paper presents results of the analysis of security-relevant semantics of business processes being defined by WS-BPEL (Web Services Business Process Execution Language, BPEL for short) scripts. In particular, security issues arising when such scripts defining cross-organisational business processes on top of Web services are deployed across security domain boundaries, give rise to this investigation. The analysis of security-relevant semantics of this scripting language will help to overcome these security issues making further exploitation of BPEL as a standard for defining cross-organisational business processes more acceptable. Semantic patterns being combinations of particular language features and Web services with specific access ...
Business process management is designed to make business activity coordination easier and more cost ...
Web services' features of autonomy, platform-independence, readiness to be described, published, dis...
In recent years, several WS-* specifications have been proposed to address the middleware requiremen...
Business processes involving several partners in different organisations impose demanding requiremen...
In this technical report we present an abstract operational semantics for the Business Process Execu...
The Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL) has emerged as a standard for specif...
Business process management is designed to make business activities and trade easier and more cost e...
Business process management is designed to make business\ud activities and trade easier and more cos...
Web service composition languages promise a cheap and effective means for application integration ov...
In recent years, several WS- * specifications have been pro-posed to address the middleware requirem...
The Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL) is an emerging standard for specifyi...
BPEL provides a language for the formal specification of business processes and business interaction...
In a Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) process definition the sequence of exchanged message...
Business Processing Execution Language (BPEL) is a core part of the Web Services protocol and a serv...
This document defines a notation for specifying business process behavior based on Web Services. Web...
Business process management is designed to make business activity coordination easier and more cost ...
Web services' features of autonomy, platform-independence, readiness to be described, published, dis...
In recent years, several WS-* specifications have been proposed to address the middleware requiremen...
Business processes involving several partners in different organisations impose demanding requiremen...
In this technical report we present an abstract operational semantics for the Business Process Execu...
The Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL) has emerged as a standard for specif...
Business process management is designed to make business activities and trade easier and more cost e...
Business process management is designed to make business\ud activities and trade easier and more cos...
Web service composition languages promise a cheap and effective means for application integration ov...
In recent years, several WS- * specifications have been pro-posed to address the middleware requirem...
The Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL) is an emerging standard for specifyi...
BPEL provides a language for the formal specification of business processes and business interaction...
In a Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) process definition the sequence of exchanged message...
Business Processing Execution Language (BPEL) is a core part of the Web Services protocol and a serv...
This document defines a notation for specifying business process behavior based on Web Services. Web...
Business process management is designed to make business activity coordination easier and more cost ...
Web services' features of autonomy, platform-independence, readiness to be described, published, dis...
In recent years, several WS-* specifications have been proposed to address the middleware requiremen...