This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workflow management system. We show how distribution and scalability are obtained by the use of a distributed object model, a client/server architecture, and a distributed workflow server architecture. Specific attention is paid to the extended transaction support and active rule support subarchitectures
Supporting enterprise-wide or even cross-organizational business processes is a characteristic chall...
If the number of users within a workjlow management system (WFMS) increases, a central workflow serv...
With the advent of Service Oriented Architectures, more applications are built in a distributed mann...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workflow management system. We show how...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workflow management system. We show how...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workjlow management system. We show how...
Workflow management systems require advanced transaction support to cope with their inherently long-...
Standard client-server workflow management systems are usually designed as client-server systems. Th...
Standard client-server workflow management systems have an intrinsic scalability limitation, the cen...
Database Support for Workflow Management: The WIDE Project presents the results of the ESPRIT WIDE p...
Research on workflow technology has been promoting the development of workflow management systems (W...
With limitations in nature, current workflow management systems are insufficient to meet the arising...
This chapter shows how flexibility can be realized for distributed workflows. The capability to dyna...
This paper presents five run-time architectures for implementing a Workflow Management System (WFMS)...
This paper presents a workflow specification language developed in the WIDE project. The language pr...
Supporting enterprise-wide or even cross-organizational business processes is a characteristic chall...
If the number of users within a workjlow management system (WFMS) increases, a central workflow serv...
With the advent of Service Oriented Architectures, more applications are built in a distributed mann...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workflow management system. We show how...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workflow management system. We show how...
This paper presents the distributed architecture of the WIDE workjlow management system. We show how...
Workflow management systems require advanced transaction support to cope with their inherently long-...
Standard client-server workflow management systems are usually designed as client-server systems. Th...
Standard client-server workflow management systems have an intrinsic scalability limitation, the cen...
Database Support for Workflow Management: The WIDE Project presents the results of the ESPRIT WIDE p...
Research on workflow technology has been promoting the development of workflow management systems (W...
With limitations in nature, current workflow management systems are insufficient to meet the arising...
This chapter shows how flexibility can be realized for distributed workflows. The capability to dyna...
This paper presents five run-time architectures for implementing a Workflow Management System (WFMS)...
This paper presents a workflow specification language developed in the WIDE project. The language pr...
Supporting enterprise-wide or even cross-organizational business processes is a characteristic chall...
If the number of users within a workjlow management system (WFMS) increases, a central workflow serv...
With the advent of Service Oriented Architectures, more applications are built in a distributed mann...