CA2275190C - A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes - Google Patents

A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2275190C
CA2275190C CA002275190A CA2275190A CA2275190C CA 2275190 C CA2275190 C CA 2275190C CA 002275190 A CA002275190 A CA 002275190A CA 2275190 A CA2275190 A CA 2275190A CA 2275190 C CA2275190 C CA 2275190C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
site
process definition
node
public
private
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002275190A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2275190A1 (en
Inventor
Gregory R. Olsen
Hildreth Robert Frost
Chelliah Thirunavukkarasu
Mitchell W. Nibbelink
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Peregrine Extricity Inc
Original Assignee
Peregrine Extricity Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Peregrine Extricity Inc filed Critical Peregrine Extricity Inc
Publication of CA2275190A1 publication Critical patent/CA2275190A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2275190C publication Critical patent/CA2275190C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06QINFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06Q10/00Administration; Management
    • G06Q10/10Office automation; Time management
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F15/00Digital computers in general; Data processing equipment in general
    • G06F15/16Combinations of two or more digital computers each having at least an arithmetic unit, a program unit and a register, e.g. for a simultaneous processing of several programs
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/01Protocols
    • H04L67/10Protocols in which an application is distributed across nodes in the network
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L9/00Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols
    • H04L9/40Network security protocols

Abstract

A system and method for creating, executing, and maintaining shared, automat ed business processes across distributed organizations comprises capabilities that enable interoperation among heterogeneous information systems. The syst em includes a plurality of independent communicating subsystems called sites th at have a server with common means of representing and executing shared public process definitions and private process definitions. Process execution comprises coordinated inter-site message exchanges that are coupled with controlled sequences of actions that are local to each of the sites. The public process definition or module captures interactions among the independent sites. Interactions include communication events in which one si te sends a message of a known type to another site. Each definition specifies a set of valid sequences of communication events among the participating sites . Associated with any public process definition is a set of lower level or private process definitions or modules. The private process definition specifies a set of possible local actions that can be executed at the site when that particular public process node is executed. In the preferred embodiment, the private process definition is defined in terms of constructs such as operating parameters and software application interactions.

Description

1 A System and Method for Creating, E~;ecuting and Maintaining Cross-2 Enterprise Processes 1. FIELD OF THE INVENTION
6 The present invention relates generally to information systems, and in particular to a 7 system and methods that enable the coordination of activity among distributed information 8 systems.

2. Description of the Related Art 11 The recent change in the structure of business organizations, from the independent 12 monolithic entity to multiple interdependent businesses, mirrors a similar evolution in computer 13 systems from the single mainframe to distributed networks of personal computers and 14 workstations. Since computer networks are extremeiy efficient in communicating information I S and performing activities between distributed sites, modern networks should be the obvious 16 beneficiaries of this revolution in technology. For e~,;ample, such routine activities as ordering 17 and confirming purchases could be performed automatically between existing systems by a 18 shared computer network. Numerous shortcomings in the state of the art, however, prevent 19 full exploitation of conventional network technology for inter-enterprise purposes.
The most pressing problems presented by the use of shared networks between business 21 partners are ( 1 ) the heterogeneity of the partner computer systems, (2) the heterogeneity of the 22 data used by the partner systems, (3) communication security and reliability between systems, 23 and (4) the legal, organizational and cultural boundaries among partners.
24 With respect to system heterogeneity, organi2:ations often use combinations of operating systems, middleware systems, and software applications that are incompatible with one another.
26 Widespread middleware deployment is now underway, but interoperation among the leading 27 camps has yet to be fully defined. Especially problematic are differences at the application 28 Level, which are fundamental and will continue to challenge implementers for some time.
29 With respect to the second problem, data heterogeneity, different applications and users of those applications often represent information in different ways or use different kinds of 1 information to accomplish the same task. These gaps can be particularly significant when the 2 applications and their users are distributed among different enterprises.
Bridging the associated 3 syntactic and semantic gaps in information can require a mixture of transformation capabilities 4 as well as neutral objects.
With respect to the third problem, communication security and reliability, any 6 interaction among the systems of a business network requires the presence of reliable and secure 7 communication pathways between the participants. The concern for security is especially 8 prominent when the Internet is used as a link in the communication pathway, since this medium 9 is susceptible to eavesdropping and other forms of security attacks.
With respect to the fourth problem, any attempt to automate business processes between 11 multiple partners must overcome the numerous non-technical barriers associated with 12 management of a project distributed among multiple organizations. These challenges include 13 mismatches between project priority and resource allocation, language barriers, time zone 14 differences and both corporate and governmental regulations. These challenges limit the levels of coordination that are achievable. Any technical solution, therefore, must focus on 16 minimizing the scope and complexity of the mutual commitments required to implement the 17 solution.
18 Currently, there are at least five known methods for extending interdependent processes 19 beyond one computer system to other systems connected by conventional computer networking resources. The first is the manual approach in which users of multiple computer systems 21 communicate information between one another via telephone, fax, or other media. The 22 communicated information is then entered by hand into the respective computer systems. The 23 manual approach may be used to bridge gaps in automation, but is obviously limited in its 24 ability to tightly couple processes among partners in both reliable and efficient manner.
The second approach, which arose in the era of home-grown mainframe applications, is 26 known as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI). EDI is a broadly defined term, but most often 27 refers to a particular set of standards, technologies (Value-Added Networks, Direct Dial-ups, 28 mapping software), and practices used for electronic data exchange among companies. In EDI, 29 a collection of business information (e.g., a purchase order) may be exported from one application system, mapped into a neutral format, transmitted to a partner via a VAN (Value-1 Added Network), mapped by the partner into a format suitable for its application, and imported 2 into the partner application. Alternatively, direct dialing may be substituted for the VAN. EDI, 3 however, is generally batch oriented, requires extensive format customization and does not 4 support processes.
The third approach, used when business requirements do not fit the EDI model, is to use 6 a custom system designed and implemented to the users' specifications. This approach is 7 costly, requires a mixture of network programming and system integration tasks, and serves a 8 specific purpose for specific users only. Furthermore, it is inflexible and difficult to modify.
9 Recently, two trends in technology have radically changed the ways in which application systems may be intertwined. As a result, a fourth and fifth approach, as well as an adaptation of 11 EDI, must be added to the three discussed above. Thc: first trend is the rapid expansion of 12 network infrastructure. The most visible component of this infrastructure is the ubiquitous 13 connectivity provided by the Internet. Nearly all organizations are, or soon wilt be, connected to 14 the Internet. Coupled with this connectivity is an expanding set of middleware technologies and 1 S services such as distributed object frameworks and message oriented middleware that facilitate 16 more tractable distributed applications and promise far greater interoperability of software 17 components.
18 The second trend involves advances in the enterprise application systems that are used 19 by companies. Key advances in these systems include; development of object interfaces and the development of workflow/process modeling capabilities. Object interfaces provide a more 21 flexible and less taxing method of moving information to and from applications than prior 22 methods such as SQL (Structured Query Language) or file-based interfaces.
Several application 23 vendors now provide the ability to design and implement workflow among different application 24 modules. This capability allows companies to more easily focus on their business processes and makes more obvious the need to connect the processes; of business partners.
26 The most visible impact of these trends, and the fourth approach to extending business 27 interdependency, is the use of the World Wide Web for business-to-business interactions. In 28 this model, an employee in one business accesses information, such as catalog or shipping 29 information, pertaining to the business applications of another company by using a standard Web browser. This approach, however, is ill-suited to many extended enterprise processes that 1 require dependent interactions among the application systems of different organizations.
2 The fifth approach exploits recent middleware technology which makes possible the 3 creation of high-performance distributed applications that are logically integrated. Though the 4 same technology may be used to provide interoperation among application suites from different vendors and among systems at different businesses, significant challenges limit feasibility.
6 Foremost, employing middleware technology is a programming task that requires significant 7 programming skill and special understanding of security, synchronization, and other network 8 issues. The cost of such an endeavor may be justified for the vendor of a distributed application, 9 but companies wishing to engage in a specific extended enterprise process are unlikely to devote the capital required to build distributed systems from the ground up.
11 Finally, the adaptation of EDI, referred to as Internet-EDI, is actually a number of 12 methods that attempt to move the traditional EDI approach discussed above to an Internet 13 transport medium. These methods are motivated by the desire to reduce high transport costs 14 associated with Value-Added Networks (VAN'S). Effectively, these methods diverge very little from traditional EDI. The same message formats, mapping software, and even enveloping 16 constructs are employed. Use of an open network, however, requires additional security, 17 reliability and auditing capabilities that were formerly part of a VAN
service. In addition, the 18 use of these additional services in an open network configuration must be supported by software 19 at the endpoints of an information exchange. Internet-EDI, therefore, suffers from key limitations such as a lack of process support, an unwieldy representation formalism, and an 21 integration model that does not mesh with new practices.
22 The approaches above fail to meet the increasing demand to implement between 23 disparate systems complex, automated processes that are both secure and maintainable. Thus, a 24 system and method to plan and control extended business interdependency are needed that (1) focuses specifically on peer-to-peer interactions among existing business application systems, 26 (2) supports secure and reliable communication, (3) minimizes custom software development, 27 (4) has functionality to handle heterogeneous data representation formalisms and (5) has the 28 ability to support complex processes that extend into and out of enterprise applications.

1 SUMMARY OF THE 1.NVENTION
2 The present invention is a system and methodi.s for creating, executing, and maintaining 3 cross-enterprise processes. Cross-enterprise processes are shared automated business processes 4 or workflows among distributed information systems that include specific provisions for S automation of these processes across organizational boundaries and among heterogeneous 6 information systems.
7 The system is comprised of a plurality of independent communicating subsystems called 8 sites with common capabilities. Each of the sites inciludes a server with common means of 9 representing and executing shared process definitions.. These sites act in concert in the course of executing shared inter-system processes. Process execution comprises coordinated inter-site 11 message exchanges that are coupled with controlled sequences of actions that are local to each 12 of the sites. In addition, each site may include any one of a number of applications programs 13 and operating systems for executing the inter-system processes and internal processes on the 14 server.
1 S Automated inter-system processes are represented in the system of the present invention 16 in a two-level process model. The top level or public: process definition/module captures 17 interactions among the independent sites (each typically representing an organization or 18 business unit). Interactions include communication events in which one site, designated in the 19 public process definition by a node, sends a message of a known type to another site. The public process definition, then, is a logical grouping or directed graph of interdependent 21 communication events among a set of sites. Each definition specifies a set of valid sequences of 22 communication events among the participating sites.
23 Associated with any public process definition is a set of lower level or private process 24 definitions or modules. A separate private process definition is bound to each node in a public 2S process. The private process definition specifies a set of possible local actions that can be 26 executed at the site when that particular public process node is executed.
In the preferred 27 embodiment, the private process definition is defined in terms of constructs such as operating 28 parameters and software application interactions specific to the node or site.

S

In accordance with one aspect of the present invention there is provided a method for coordinating a process between a first site and a second site using a public process definition capturing interaction between the first site and the second site and comprised of a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc connected to the first and second nodes, comprising:
executing the first node of the public process definition at the first site by executing a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node; and, upon receiving a message defined by the arc, executing the second node of the public process definition at the second site by executing a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method for coordinating a process between a first site and a second site, comprising:
creating at the first site a public process definition capturing interaction between the first site and the second site and including a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc interposed between the first node and the second node;
distributing the public process definition to the second site;
creating at the first site a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node in which an action preceding the transmission of a message from the first site is defined;
creating at the second site a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node in which an action following the reception of the message by the second site is defined;
executing the first node of the public process definition by executing the first private process definition at the first site; and, upon receiving the message, executing the second node of the public process definition by executing the second private process definition at the second site.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method for creating a process definition governing a process between a first site and a second site, comprising:
creating at the first site a public process definition capturing interaction between the Sa first site and the second site and including a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc interposed between the first node and the second node;
distributing the public process definition to the second site;
creating at the first site a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node in which an action preceding the transmission of a message from the first site is defined; and, creating at the second site a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node in which an action following the reception of the message by the second site is defined.
5b 2 Figure 1 is a block diagram of an extended enterprise including a plurality of sites 3 having public process definitions and private process definitions in accordance with the present 4 invention.
Figure 2 is a graphical representation of a public process definition including node, arcs 6 and connections between them in accordance with the present invention.
7 Figure 3 is a flow diagram of the process for executing a private process definition in 8 accordance with the present invention.

Figure 4 is a block diagram of a system in accordance with the present invention.
11 Figure 5 is a flow diagram of a method for distributing a public process definition in 12 accordance with the present invention.
13 Figure 6 is a flow diagram of a method for the installation of a public process def nition 14 in accordance with the present invention.
Figure 7 is a flow diagram of a method for executing an instance of a specific process 16 type in accordance with the present invention.
17 Figure 8 is a graphical representation of a display device showing a graphical user 18 interface for editting the public process definition.
19 Figure 9 is a graphical representation of a display device showing a graphical user interface for editting the private process definition.

23 Referring to Figure 1, a preferred embodiment of an extended enterprise system 100 is 24 shown. The extended enterprise system 100 of the preferred embodiment of the present invention preferably comprises a plurality of sites 101, 102 and 103 installed at distinct 26 organizations that are coupled by a communications network 104. These sites 101-103 form an 27 extended enterprise 100 in which the internal processes of each site 101-103 are coupled with 28 the internal processes of other sites 101-103 via coordinated sequences of information 29 exchanges. For example, sites 101-103 may be business enterprises that comprise three elements of a supply chain: supplier, manufacturer and customer. Those skilled in the art, 31 however, will recognize that the sites 101-103 could for any type of business unit or function, 1 that there may be any number of site, and three sites 101-103 are provided only by way of 2 example.
3 Each of these sites 10I-103 represents a zone of control and is comprised by a set of 4 application systems that store information and contain logic for retrieving and modifying that S information. Example applications include ERP (Envterprise Resource Planning) application 6 suites, Product Data Management (PDM) systems, logistics applications, and advanced planning 7 systems (APS).
8 Operation of the present invention includes coordinated sequences of actions within each 9 site 101-103 that are linked with coordinated sequences of information exchanges among different sites101-103. The actions executed within <:ach site 101-103 include primarily the 11 movement of information into and out of the applications associated with sites 101-103. Each 12 exchange of information between sites 101-103 is preceded by a sequence of actions within the I3 sending site and is followed by another sequence of actions within the receiving site.
14 Accordingly, these site-specific sequences of actions serve as the connections that bind a set of information exchanges into a single coordinated sequence of interactions.
16 The possible sequences of local actions and site to site exchanges are specified through a 17 process definition language. This language allows for complex branching and looping logic and 18 can capture constraints that govern the relationships between local action sequences and site to 19 site exchanges. More formally, the process definition language of the preferred embodiment includes node and arc elements that are combined with a specific ordering and logic to create a 21 directed graph (such as depicted in Figure 2 and as wiill be described below). A single source 22 node 205-225 and a single destination node 205-225 define each arc element.
Each node 205-23 225 includes a set of input arcs and associated logic connecting it to antecedent nodes 205-225 24 and a set of output arcs and associated logic connecting it to consequent nodes 205-225. The relationship between the input arcs for a given node 205-225 is defined by a logical sentence, 26 containing possibly nested conjunctive and disjunctive propositional connectives, in which each 27 arc is represented by a distinct propositional symbol. The output arcs for a given node are 28 related by a separate logical sentence of equivalent form. Node 201 has no input arcs and is 29 referred to as an initial node. Nodes 299 that have no output arcs are referred to as terminal nodes.

WO 98/33!25 PCT/US98/01403 1 In the preferred embodiment, a two-level process model is used to represent the 2 collection of site-to-site information exchanges and site-specific sequences of actions. A public 3 process definition or module 116a specifies the relationship between all site-to-site information 4 exchanges. The sequence of possible actions within a single site 101, 102, 103, for a particular node in a public process definition 116a, is specified by a private process definition or module 6 118a, 118b, 118c. Both the public and private process definitions 116a, I
18a, 118b, 118c are 7 built on top of the process definition language with special interpretations for node 205-225 and 8 arc elements. In a public process definition 116a, each node element represents a specific site 9 101, I02, 103 and each arc element represents a message with specific information contents that are sent from the site 101, 102, I03, represented by the arc's source node to the site represented 11 by the arc's destination node. The graph for a public process can include only a single initial 12 node. The public process defnition 116a, then, is a specification of "who does what when"
I3 among a set of sites 101-103 for a particular purpose. Each public process definition 116a 14 specifies a set of valid sequences of communication events among the participating sites 101, 102, 103. More specifically, the same public process definition 116a is provided to each site 16 101, 102, 103 having an action in the public process definition 116a. As shown in Figure 1, 17 each site 101, 102, 103 may have one or more public process definitions 116a, one for each 18 inter-site process. In a private process definition 118a, 118b, 118c, node elements represent 19 specific programmatic actions and arc elements specify the order in which these actions are executed. The private process definition 118a, 118b, 118c specifies how sites 101-103 process 21 received messages and construct outgoing messages. Moreover, private process definitions 22 118a, 118b, 118c specify what happens within a node of public process definition 116a. Thus, 23 the private process definitions 118a, 118b, 118c include routines and processes that are tailored 24 to the particular site 101, 102, 103 to which the private process definitions 118a, 118b, 118c is assigned or operates upon. Still more particularly, the private process definitions 118a, 1 I8b, 26 118c are designed for interaction using the operating systems, applications and resources of the 27 site to which it is assigned. Thus, as depicted in Figure 1 each of the private process definitions 28 118a, 118b, 118c is different for each site 101, 102, 103. Nonetheless, when sites 101, 102, 103 29 are similarly configured (e.g., have the same operating systems, applications and resources) the private process definitions 118a, 1 IBb, 118c may be used or shared. Those skilled in the art will 31 recognize that each site 101, 102, 103 may also include a plurality of private process definitions 32 118a, 1 I8b, 118c as depicted in Figure 1. The plurality of private process definitions 118a, 1 118b, 118c may be for one public process definition 116a or different public process definitions 2 116a.
3 The preferred embodiment models the infonr~ation contained in the messages sent 4 between sites 101, 102 and 103 as objects with restricted structure and behaviors. These objects are data containers whose possible contents are specified by object definitions i20a, 120b, 120c.
6 In the preferred embodiment, an object definition 121Ja, I20b, 120c takes the form of an XML
7 (Extensible Markup Language) DTD (Document Type Definition). This definition specifies the 8 lexical and grammatical form of all objects of that type. Object definitions 120a, 120b, 120c are 9 referenced by both public and private process definitions.
Referring now to Figure 2, an exemplary public process definition 200 is shown. The I 1 public process definition 200 is represented graphically as a flow chart.
Figure 2 shows a public 12 process definition 200 that specifies a set of possible interactions among sites 101-103. Process 13 200 comprises a set of nodes 205 through 225 and a set of communication events 230 through 14 250. Each node corresponds with a specific site 101-103, and associated with each node 205 through 225 of public process definition 200 is a private process definition 118a, 118b; 1 I 8c.
16 Figure 3 shows an exemplary private process definition 300 associated with node 210.
17 Each communication event 230-250 that conrvects one node to another in a public 18 process definition 200 represents the exchange of a message of a known object type. For 19 example, the known objects may be any one of the conventional types of business objects such as a purchase order object, an confirmation messages object, etc. Such objects 120a, 120b, 120c 21 are defined in the object definition 120a, 120b, 120c so that each site 101, 102, 103 may use the 22 object definitions 120a, 120b, I20c as needed to process objects on either the public level or the 23 private level. In other words, public process definition 200 is a logical grouping or a directed 24 graph of interdependent communication events 230-x.50 among the sites I01-103 shown in Figure 1. This grouping specifies a set of valid sequences of communication events among the 26 participating sites 101, 102, 103. Specifically, public: process definition 200 describes at 27 communication event 230 a purchase order sent from site 101 to site 102.
This purcha$e order 28 is generated by the private process of site 101 associated with node 205.
Node 210 is a 29 branching node, and two communication events, 235 and 240, are produced at that node.
Depending on a specified branch condition, either one of the events occurs or both evet<ts occur.
31 The conditions under which these two events trigger are not indicated by public definition 200, 1 since they are known only to the site 102. These conditions are contained in private process 2 definition 118b associated with node 210, and thus site 102. Those skilled in the art will also 3 recognize that the private process definition 118b may be a set of private process definitions that 4 correspond to an instance of a public process definition 116a.
The occurrence of events 235 and/or 240 causes the execution of the nodes) that 6 immediately follow and execution proceeds downward on the Figure. Node 225 represents a 7 branch junction node that can wait for one or all events of a set that connect to it. Following 8 execution of node 225 the public process terminates at terminal 299.
9 Associated with each node 205 through 225 of public process definition 200 is a private process definition 118a, 118b, 118c. For example, Figure 3 shows a private process definition 11 300 associated with node 210. Unlike the public process definition 200, the content of private 12 process definition 300 is determined and known solely by the corresponding site, site 102 in this 13 case. Private process definition 300 includes a number of actions 305 through 330 that are 14 controlled according to a specified logic. Possible actions include external business application interactions, script execution, user notification and approval, time delay, output object 16 specification, and sub-process execution. All instances of the private process definition 300 17 have access to the object of type 'Purchase Order' that is contained in communication event 18 230. Any action in private process definition 300 can reference this object. Private process 19 definition 300 is constrained to produce a object either of type 'Acknowledgment' or of type 'Purchase Order' corresponding to communication events 235 and 240 respectively.
21 Referring now to Figure 3, one exemplary embodiment for a private process definition 22 300 is shown. Private process definition 300 begins at initiator action 301 that executes after 23 communication event 230 completes. Those skilled in the art will recognize that the process 24 would be similar for a variety of other private process definitions such that once the object is transferred to or received by the site 101, 102, 103, the private definition corresponding to the 26 node following the communication event is automatically started. Private process 300 continues 27 to action 305. Action 305 execution entails posting an information block corresponding to the 28 received purchase order into business application 113. Following completion of action 305 29 execution continues to action 310. Action 310 entails querying business application 114 to determine if the item associated with the Purchase Order of communication event 230 is locally 31 stocked or if the item is outsourced. The result of this query is put into a variable named 1 'OUTSOURCED' in a set of variables associated wi h private process 300.
Action 315 is 2 executed subsequent to action 310. Action 315 entails an IF-THEN-ELSE
conditional test on 3 the value of OUTSOURCED inside of a script action. Results of this conditional test determine 4 whether path A or path B is followed subsequent to action 315 completion.
Path A execution proceeds to action 320, which entails the construction of a object of type 'Acknowledgment' 6 and its designation as an output of the private process. Path B execution proceeds to action 325, 7 which entails the construction of a object of type 'Pu.rchase Order' and its designation as an 8 output of the private process. Paths A and B termin2~te in action 330, which entails notification 9 of a designated user via electronic mail of certain status information associated with the running process. This information includes identifying characteristics of the purchase order and results 11 of business application queries. Following execution of action 330, the private process 12 terminates, and control returns to the public process level. The use of such private definitions is 13 particularly advantages because it provides uniform control and regulation of the inter-site 14 processes, while allowing maximum flexibility through the use of private definitions that allows the controller of a particular site to implement the private definition in any number of ways 16 according to parameters, resources, and other constraints for a particular site.
17 Each site of the preferred embodiment includes a combination of components that 18 support the design, implementation and maintenance: of public and private processes and the 19 runtime components that support the execution of these processes. Figure 4 shows the preferred configuration of an example site 102.
21 The standard site 102 is comprised by a single server 480 and one or more clients 460, 22 470 that communicate with the server over a network 409. Clients 460 and 470 and server 480 23 run on separate host computers. Clients 460 and 470 contain graphical user interfaces (GUI's) 24 465 and 475 respectively. In addition, server 480 includes or has access to database 410 and applications 420 and 430. In the preferred embodiment, database 410 resides on a host 26 computer that is separate from the one on which sender 480 is Iocated.Clients 460 and 470 and 27 server 480 share common representations of relevano information by interacting over network 28 409 according to a specified and conventional commmnication protocol. Such shared 29 information representations include public and private process definitions, object definitions, process execution histories, as well as information about other sites with which the site interacts.
31 Human users 440 and 450 interact with site 102 via client GUI's 465 and 475 to view, create, 1 edit, and manage the shared information representations delimited above. For example, users 2 440 and 450 are able to view and edit graphical representations of public process 200 and 3 private process 300 on GUI's 465 and 475. Figures 8 and 9 shown a screen shot of the GUIs 4 corresponding to the public and private process definition described above with reference to Figures 2 and 3, respectively.
6 The server 480 of the preferred embodiment is comprised of a middle-tier manager set 7 482, an execution engine 484, a transport manager 486 and adapters 488 and 489. The middle-8 tier manager set 482 controls the access and flow of information between network 409, engine 9 484, and database 410. In addition, it implements associated application logic, and insures the consistency of information between these elements. With respect to network 409, set 482 11 mediates access to information from concurrently operating clients and other components of 12 server 480.
13 As discussed in detail below, the installation of public and private processes 200 and 300 14 requires the prior approval of user 440 or 450. Once this approval is received, it is entered by the appropriate user into client 460 or 470 via the respective GUI. A local install signal is then 16 relayed over network 409 to server 480. Manager set 482, acting upon the received signal, 17 initiates the installation of the process definitions into engine 484.
During installation, the 18 execution engine 484 transforms the process definitions it receives into executable state 19 machines which are saved in database 410. This transformation extracts from the public process definition all nodes connected to arcs involving the target site. The resulting state machine 21 contains all information necessary for a single site to participate in the execution of the original 22 public process. Once the installation is complete, manager set 482 provides engine 484 with 23 any additional information stored in database 410 or received from clients 460 and 470 needed 24 to perform process execution. Persistence of shared data is maintained by communication with database 410.
26 Once the installation of private and public process definitions 200 and 300 is complete, 27 engine 484 controls their execution.. During execution, the execution engine 484 manages two 28 key activities: inbound and outbound communication with other sites via transport manager 486 29 and interactions with applications 420 and 430 via adapters 488 and 489.
The engine 484 also manages through manager set 482 several auxiliary activities including the sending and 1 receiving of messages to and from users 440 and 450 and the storage of log information in 2 database 410.
3 During the execution of a public process definition, such as definition 200, transport 4 manager 486 manages communications to and from lfnternet 104. For example, public process definition 200 anticipates the reception of purchase order 230 and acknowledgment 245 by site 6 102, as well as the sending of acknowledgment 235 and purchase order 240. In this capacity, 7 manager 486 preferably handles retry and acknowledgment logic (based on the properties of the 8 service it is using). Messages are created outside of .any specific transport service and 9 communication security is message based. Non-repudiation receipts for both origin and delivery are supported.
11 During execution, adapters 488 and 489 mediate the flow of data between the execution 12 engine 484 and external applications 420 and 430.For example, referring to step 31 S of private 13 process definition 300, engine 484 may transmit a request through adapter 488 or 489 that 14 application 420 or 430 determine whether the item in question is outsourced. In turn, the I S application will respond through the respective adapter. Adapter configuration options for 488 I 6 and 489 are set by authors of private processes for the associated site.
These adapters 488 and 17 489 communicate their acceptable configuration options to the middle-tier manager set 482 at 18 the time of their installation. The configuration interface for adapters 488 and 489 allows a 19 private process to insert data into an external application, retrieve data from an external application or listen for a specific event produced by the external application, where the 2I inserted, retrieved or listened for data is represented by an object definition. Adapters 488 and 22 489 also insure uniform properties of state/consisten.cy management and auditing behavior 23 across the different applications that can be integrated with the system.
During process 24 execution, adapters 488 and 489 map the insertion, retrieval and listened for actions specified in a private process into specific interactions with target applications 420 and 430.
26 Operation of a site of the preferred embodiment revolves around the life cycle of a 27 public process definition and the associated private 'process and object definitions. Shown in 28 figure 5, this cycle begins with the creation of a public process definition and referenced object 29 definitions then continues with the distribution of the public process definition and object 1 definitions, creation of the necessary private process definitions, installation of the process, and 2 ends with process execution.
3 In step 502, the user creates a public process definition. The site at which the public 4 process definition 200 is created is referred to as the authoring site.
Creation of the public process definition 200 includes the creation of all object definitions that represent site-to-site 6 messages in the public process definition. In the preferred embodiment, both public process and 7 object definitions are created by users 440 and 450 interacting with manager set 482 through 8 client GUI's 465 and 475. During creation of public process definition 200, for example, user 9 440 specifies the sequence of interactions among all participating sites 101, 102 and 103 and the logic connecting these interactions. In this example, GUI 465 would present definition 200 as a 11 set of icons interconnected by flow indicators that would appear much as the diagram in figure 12 2. Definitions for the purchase order, acknowledgment and rejection objects would also be 13 created by user 440 via GUI 465 if they did not pre-exist.
14 After the public process and necessary objects have been defined, the user proceeds with distribution of the process. In step 504, the authoring site sends over the Internet 104, the 16 authored public process definition and referenced object definitions to all sites participating in 17 the public process. Those skilled in the art will recognize that intemet 104 may be a intranet on 18 a local area network (LAN), an Internet on a wide area network (WAN), or the Internet. In this 19 case, site 102 is the authoring site and sites 101 and 103 are the participant sites. In order for site 102 to send public process definition 200 and associated object definitions over the Internet, 21 the definitions are sent from manager set 482 to transport manager 486 and from there to the 22 transport managers of the participant sites. Upon receipt of public process definition 200 and 23 object definitions by the participant site transport managers, in this case sites 101 and 103, the 24 definitions are passed from the transport manager to the middle-tier managers for persistent storage in the site database. After reviewing received public process definition 200 and object 26 definitions via a client GUI, users at the participant sites 101 and 103 must approve or 27 disapprove the public process definition, said approval or disapproval being sent via the 28 transport managers of the partner sites to the authoring site. While public process definition 200 29 is being reviewed at participant sites 101 and 103, authoring site 102 waits for the approval or disapproval votes to be received by transport manager 486 in step 508. The approval or 31 disapproval by sites 101 and 103 is likely to turn on commercial, rather than technical, concerns.

I If a partner site finds the commercial arrangements described in definition 200 acceptable, it 2 returns an approval signal to the authoring site, in this case site 102. In step 508, the system 3 tests for universal approval, if either participant site 101 or 103 disapproves of public process 4 200, authoring site 102 will distribute an abort message through transport manager 486 to partner sites 101 and 103, thus reaching step 510. In this case, public process definition 200 is 6 abandoned and sites 101, 102 and 103 may start negotiating for a new public process definition.
7 If the public process definition is universally accepted in step 508, the authoring site 102 8 distributes a commit message to each of the partner sites .
9 After the commit messages have been transmitted by the authoring site and received by the participant sites, both the authoring site and participant sites proceed with creation of the I 1 private processes associated with the public process nodes owned by each site. This is 12 represented by step 514 in figure 5. Each site user creates a private process definition for each 13 node of the public process definition associated with t:he user's site. For example, user 440, 14 creates private process definition 300 for node 210 and an accompanying private process definition for node 220, since nodes 210 and 220 are each associated with site 102. Likewise, a 16 user at site 101 would create private process definitions for nodes 205 and 225, while a user at 17 site 103 would create a definition for node 215.
18 After successfully implementing the necessary private process definitions, each 19 participant site sends a message to the authoring site signally the completion of private process implementation. In step S 16, the authoring site gathers private process completion signals from 21 all sites. If any site fails to implement one or more private processes, it will send a failure 22 message to the authoring site. In this case, the implementation process will be aborted (step 23 518), and process definition 200 will be abandoned. Once the authoring site has received 24 messages from all participant sites indicating successful private process implementation, and has successfully implemented its own private processc;s, the authoring site can begin the 26 installation process (step 520).
27 Process installation (step 520) begins with the authoring site sending installation 28 messages to all participant sites. After receiving the installation message, each participant site 29 locally installs the public process. Figure 6 shows a flow diagram of a process for installing at a single site the private process definitions associated with a public process definition. In step 31 602, the public process definition and associated private process definitions are passed from 1 manager set 482 to execution engine 484. In step 604, the public process definition is compiled 2 to produce a state machine that contains states only for the site in question. For example, the 3 process of compiling public process definition 200 at site 102 will result in states associated 4 with nodes 210 and 220. Recorded in the state machine is a triggering event for each state.
Continuing with the example of public process definition 200, site 102 records that event 230, a 6 purchase order from site 101, triggers the state associated with node 210, and that event 245, an 7 acknowledgment from site 103, triggers the state associated with node 220.
In step 606, each 8 state of the state machine is bound by a "call" command with an associated private process 9 definition. For example, site 102 will bind private process definition 300 with the state associated with node 210. The result of this binding is that when the state associated with node 11 210 is triggered by a purchase order from site 101, private process definition 300 is called and 12 executed. In step 608, a determination is made as to whether the site in question is the initiator 13 of the public process. If not, as in the example of site 102, the execution engine determines the 14 triggering message to be received and registers it in the transport manager. In the example of site 102, the two triggering messages are purchase order 230 from site 101 and acknowledgment 16 245 from site 103. If the site is the initiator of a public process, the triggering event for the first 17 private process is internal to the site and is registered in step 612 as an event trigger, a scheduled 18 startup, or as a subprocess trigger.
19 After successfully installing the public process, each participant site sends an installation confirmation message back to the authoring site. In step 522, the authoring site collects 21 installation confirmation messages from all participant sites. If any site is unable to install the 22 public process, the process is aborted 524 as described above. Successful installation at the 23 authoring site triggers the transmission of messages to all participants indicating that the public 24 process has been installed at all involved sites. At this point the process is ready for execution (step 526).
26 As discussed above, the execution of a public process is actually performed by the 27 interactive executions of the associated private processes at the partner sites. The execution of 28 an installed public process by a single site is shown in figure 7.
Execution begins in step 702 29 with an initiating event that can include the following: receipt of a message from a partner site, an event associated with an application, a scheduled startup, or a subprocess trigger. For 31 example, node 210, of public process definition 200, is triggered by the receipt of a purchase WO 98/33125 . PCT/US98/01403 1 order message from site 101. In step 704, the execution engine at the triggered site creates an 2 instance in the appropriate state machine and sets the machine to the initial state. In step 706, 3 the execution engine fetches the private process associated with the associated public process 4 node. For example, upon the triggering of node 210, private process definition 300 is accessed.
In step 708, the execution engine passes appropriate data including the contents of the event 230 6 to the private process and initiates its execution. In step 710, the private process executes and 7 returns data to the execution engine, and in step 712, l:he execution engine acts upon the basis of 8 the returned data. For example, private process 300 returns to execution engine 484 either an 9 instruction to send an acknowledgment to site 101 or .a purchase order to site 103. It is noted that during the execution of the private process in step 710, engine 484 may make use of 11 applications 420 and 430. Execution engine 484 responds accordingly. In step 714, a 12 determination is made by the execution engine as to whether a local terminal state of the public I3 process definition has been reached. This determination is a local determination and is limited I4 to the participation of the site in the public process. For example, the completion of node 220 is a local terminal state for site 102, since it is the final node in process 200 that corresponds with 16 site 102. Likewise, depending on the outcome of the accompanying private process, the 17 completion of node 210 may be a local terminal state :for site 102. If local termination is 18 encountered, the public process ends for the site in step 716. Step 716 is not complete until a 19 two-phase commit protocol has been executed among sites 101, 102, and 103 ensuring mutual completion of process 200 execution. .
21 If the local terminal state is not encountered in step 714, the transport manager waits for 22 triggering messages from partner sites (step 718). For example, if the result of node 210 is the 23 transmission of a purchase order in event 240, transport manager 486 waits for the 24 acknowledgment of event 245 to trigger the private process associated with node 220. Once the triggering message is received in step 720, the execution engine looks up the associated process 26 state in step 722. The private process then begins execution at step 706 and is performed as 27 described above.

Claims (10)

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A method for coordinating a process between a first site and a second site using a public process definition capturing interaction between the first site and the second site and comprised of a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc connected to the first and second nodes, comprising:
executing the first node of the public process definition at the first site by executing a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node; and, upon receiving a message defined by the arc, executing the second node of the public process definition at the second site by executing a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the arc is a business object.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising:
at the first site, creating the public process definition;
distributing the public process definition to the second site;
at the first site, associating with the first node by shared information a first private process definition containing an action preceding the transmission of the message from the first site; and, at the second site, associating with the second node by shared information a second private process definition containing an action following the reception of the message by the second site.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the step of distributing further comprises:
reviewing the public process definition at the second site;
in the event of an approval of the public process definition at the second site, transmitting an approval signal from the second site to the first site; and, in the event of a disapproval of the public process definition at the second site, transmitting a disapproval signal from the second site to the first site.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the step of distributing further comprises:
in the event of receiving at the first site an approval signal from the second site, transmitting a commit message to the second site;

installing the public process definition and the first private process definition at the first site; and, in the event of receiving at the second site the commit message from the first site, installing the public process definition and the second private process definition at the second site.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of distributing further comprises:
in the event of receiving at the first site a disapproval signal from the second site, transmitting an abort message to the second site.
7. The method of claim 3, further comprising:
at the first site, transforming the public process definition into a first state machine;
and, at the second site, transforming the public process definition into a second state machine.
8. The method of claim 3, further comprising:
recording in a first process execution history the execution of the first node of the public process definition;
recording in a second process execution history the execution of the second node of the public process definition; and auditing the first and second process execution histories.
9. A method for coordinating a process between a first site and a second site, comprising:
creating at the first site a public process definition capturing interaction between the first site and the second site and including a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc interposed between the first node and the second node;
distributing the public process definition to the second site;
creating at the first site a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node in which an action preceding the transmission of a message from the first site is defined;
creating at the second site a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node in which an action following the reception of the message by the second site is defined;

executing the first node of the public process definition by executing the first private process definition at the first site; and, upon receiving the message, executing the second node of the public process definition by executing the second private process definition at the second site.
10. A method for creating a process definition governing a process between a first site and a second site, comprising:
creating at the first site a public process definition capturing interaction between the first site and the second site and including a first node associated with the first site, a second node associated with the second site, and an arc interposed between the first node and the second node;
distributing the public process definition to the second site;
creating at the first site a first private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the first site and associated by shared information with the first node in which an action preceding the transmission of a message from the first site is defined; and, creating at the second site a second private process definition specifying a set of possible local actions at the second site and associated by shared information with the second node in which an action following the reception of the message by the second site is defined.
CA002275190A 1997-01-24 1998-01-23 A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes Expired - Fee Related CA2275190C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US3638597P 1997-01-24 1997-01-24
US60/036,385 1997-01-24
PCT/US1998/001403 WO1998033125A1 (en) 1997-01-24 1998-01-23 A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2275190A1 CA2275190A1 (en) 1998-07-30
CA2275190C true CA2275190C (en) 2003-03-25

Family

ID=21888325

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002275190A Expired - Fee Related CA2275190C (en) 1997-01-24 1998-01-23 A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes

Country Status (13)

Country Link
US (1) US6519642B1 (en)
EP (1) EP0954799B1 (en)
JP (2) JP2000511674A (en)
CN (1) CN1244267A (en)
AU (1) AU714340B2 (en)
BR (1) BR9809557A (en)
CA (1) CA2275190C (en)
DE (1) DE69801420T2 (en)
DK (1) DK0954799T3 (en)
ID (1) ID23434A (en)
IL (1) IL130736A0 (en)
NZ (1) NZ336275A (en)
WO (1) WO1998033125A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (48)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2003528358A (en) * 1998-08-24 2003-09-24 富士通株式会社 Workflow system and method
JP4712191B2 (en) * 1998-10-16 2011-06-29 オープン インヴェンション ネットワーク リミテッド ライアビリティ カンパニー Definition of commercial documents and their document-based interfaces in trading partner networks
US6125391A (en) * 1998-10-16 2000-09-26 Commerce One, Inc. Market makers using documents for commerce in trading partner networks
US7594167B1 (en) * 1998-10-16 2009-09-22 Open Invention Network, Llc System and method for schema evolution in an e-commerce network
US8006177B1 (en) 1998-10-16 2011-08-23 Open Invention Network, Llc Documents for commerce in trading partner networks and interface definitions based on the documents
JP2001125959A (en) * 1999-10-25 2001-05-11 Industrial Bank Of Japan Ltd Electronic transaction system and its method
US7124356B1 (en) * 1999-12-03 2006-10-17 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Methods for initiating activity in intelligent devices connected to an in home digital network using extensible markup language (XML) for information exchange and systems therefor
US6647420B2 (en) * 2001-01-18 2003-11-11 Reynolds And Reynolds Holdings, Inc. Enterlink for providing a federated business to business system that interconnects applications of multiple companies
US7231433B1 (en) 2000-01-19 2007-06-12 Reynolds And Reynolds Holdings, Inc. Enterlink for providing a federated business to business system that interconnects applications of multiple companies
AU2001227735A1 (en) * 2000-01-28 2001-08-07 Commerce One, Inc. System and method for schema evolution in an e-commerce network
US6591260B1 (en) * 2000-01-28 2003-07-08 Commerce One Operations, Inc. Method of retrieving schemas for interpreting documents in an electronic commerce system
US20010047387A1 (en) * 2000-03-27 2001-11-29 Exoplex, Inc. Systems and methods for providing distributed cross-enterprise portals
US6895403B2 (en) * 2000-03-31 2005-05-17 James Cardwell Method and software for identifying and creating connections and accountability in a business organization
JP2002024325A (en) * 2000-07-07 2002-01-25 Takenaka Komuten Co Ltd Construction supporting method
WO2002005508A2 (en) * 2000-07-11 2002-01-17 Sap Aktiengesellschaft Method, apparatus, and system for network-based peer-to-peer business transactions
JP3373191B2 (en) * 2000-07-31 2003-02-04 ウッドランド株式会社 Computer cooperation method and control device
US6862564B1 (en) * 2000-10-26 2005-03-01 Sycamore Networks, Inc. Network emulator
US6993506B2 (en) 2000-12-05 2006-01-31 Jgr Acquisition, Inc. Method and device utilizing polymorphic data in e-commerce
US7236939B2 (en) * 2001-03-31 2007-06-26 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Peer-to-peer inter-enterprise collaborative process management method and system
US7146370B1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2006-12-05 Ncr Corp. Copying a portion of a database structure associated with a query
US7409403B1 (en) * 2001-10-30 2008-08-05 Red Hat, Inc. Alert management data infrastructure and configuration generator
CN101110021A (en) * 2002-03-25 2008-01-23 数据质量解决公司 Method for visually programming instruction set for process
US6925305B2 (en) * 2002-05-15 2005-08-02 Airband Communications, Inc. Information management system
US20040090613A1 (en) * 2002-07-17 2004-05-13 Goix Philippe J. Method for measuring the volume of cells or particles
US20040225657A1 (en) * 2003-05-07 2004-11-11 Panacea Corporation Web services method and system
US20100145752A1 (en) * 2004-05-11 2010-06-10 Davis James E Adaptable workflow and communications system
WO2004102438A2 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-11-25 Sap Aktiengesellschaft Business process management for a message-based exchange infrastructure
US9495652B1 (en) 2003-06-23 2016-11-15 Daniel M. Cook Autonomic discrete business activity management method
CA2442799A1 (en) * 2003-09-26 2005-03-26 Ibm Canada Limited - Ibm Canada Limitee Generalized credential and protocol management of infrastructure
US20050080644A1 (en) * 2003-10-08 2005-04-14 Microsoft Corporation Self-describing business document collaboration protocols
US7330903B2 (en) * 2003-11-17 2008-02-12 International Business Machines Corporation Method, computer program product, and system for routing messages in a computer network comprising heterogenous databases
US20050165822A1 (en) * 2004-01-22 2005-07-28 Logic Sight, Inc. Systems and methods for business process automation, analysis, and optimization
US7421546B2 (en) * 2004-02-12 2008-09-02 Relaystar Sa/Nv Intelligent state engine system
WO2005111834A1 (en) * 2004-05-13 2005-11-24 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Information processing system and method thereof
US20070027734A1 (en) * 2005-08-01 2007-02-01 Hughes Brian J Enterprise solution design methodology
US8126768B2 (en) 2005-09-13 2012-02-28 Computer Associates Think, Inc. Application change request to deployment maturity model
US8886551B2 (en) * 2005-09-13 2014-11-11 Ca, Inc. Centralized job scheduling maturity model
EP1974236A2 (en) 2006-01-20 2008-10-01 Bookham Technology Plc. Optical beam steering and sampling apparatus and method
US20070256082A1 (en) * 2006-05-01 2007-11-01 International Business Machines Corporation Monitoring and controlling applications executing in a computing node
US8073880B2 (en) * 2006-11-10 2011-12-06 Computer Associates Think, Inc. System and method for optimizing storage infrastructure performance
US20080114700A1 (en) * 2006-11-10 2008-05-15 Moore Norman T System and method for optimized asset management
US9589240B2 (en) * 2010-05-14 2017-03-07 Oracle International Corporation System and method for flexible chaining of distinct workflow task instances in a business process execution language workflow
US9852382B2 (en) 2010-05-14 2017-12-26 Oracle International Corporation Dynamic human workflow task assignment using business rules
US9741006B2 (en) 2010-05-14 2017-08-22 Oracle International Corporation System and method for providing complex access control in workflows
US8819055B2 (en) 2010-05-14 2014-08-26 Oracle International Corporation System and method for logical people groups
US10037197B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2018-07-31 Oracle International Corporation Flexible microinstruction system for constructing microprograms which execute tasks, gateways, and events of BPMN models
US10354264B2 (en) * 2014-03-24 2019-07-16 Salesforce.Com, Inc. Contact recommendations based on purchase history
CN112651715A (en) * 2020-12-29 2021-04-13 太极计算机股份有限公司 Cross-organization business collaborative flow map construction method, device and equipment

Family Cites Families (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4993014A (en) * 1989-05-30 1991-02-12 At&T Bell Laboratories Dynamic shared facility system for private networks
AU662805B2 (en) * 1992-04-06 1995-09-14 Addison M. Fischer A method for processing information among computers which may exchange messages
US5557780A (en) * 1992-04-30 1996-09-17 Micron Technology, Inc. Electronic data interchange system for managing non-standard data
GB2271002B (en) * 1992-09-26 1995-12-06 Digital Equipment Int Data processing system
US5355365A (en) * 1993-03-31 1994-10-11 Multi-Tech Systems, Inc. Intelligent local area network modem node
US5513126A (en) * 1993-10-04 1996-04-30 Xerox Corporation Network having selectively accessible recipient prioritized communication channel profiles
IL113259A (en) * 1995-04-05 2001-03-19 Diversinet Corp Apparatus and method for safe communication handshake and data transfer
US5812669A (en) 1995-07-19 1998-09-22 Jenkins; Lew Method and system for providing secure EDI over an open network
US5778178A (en) * 1995-11-13 1998-07-07 Arunachalam; Lakshmi Method and apparatus for enabling real-time bi-directional transactions on a network
US5862325A (en) * 1996-02-29 1999-01-19 Intermind Corporation Computer-based communication system and method using metadata defining a control structure
US5818921A (en) * 1996-03-14 1998-10-06 Siemens Business Communication Systems, Inc. Signaling system and method for enabling PBX-PBX feature transparency across a switched public network
US5815665A (en) * 1996-04-03 1998-09-29 Microsoft Corporation System and method for providing trusted brokering services over a distributed network
US6009458A (en) * 1996-05-09 1999-12-28 3Do Company Networked computer game system with persistent playing objects
US6072870A (en) * 1996-06-17 2000-06-06 Verifone Inc. System, method and article of manufacture for a gateway payment architecture utilizing a multichannel, extensible, flexible architecture
US6058250A (en) * 1996-06-19 2000-05-02 At&T Corp Bifurcated transaction system in which nonsensitive information is exchanged using a public network connection and sensitive information is exchanged after automatically configuring a private network connection
US6052711A (en) * 1996-07-01 2000-04-18 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Object-oriented system, method and article of manufacture for a client-server session web access in an interprise computing framework system.
US6101543A (en) * 1996-10-25 2000-08-08 Digital Equipment Corporation Pseudo network adapter for frame capture, encapsulation and encryption
US6055575A (en) * 1997-01-28 2000-04-25 Ascend Communications, Inc. Virtual private network system and method

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DK0954799T3 (en) 2002-03-04
CN1244267A (en) 2000-02-09
JP3090435U (en) 2002-12-13
EP0954799A1 (en) 1999-11-10
AU714340B2 (en) 1999-12-23
WO1998033125A1 (en) 1998-07-30
IL130736A0 (en) 2000-06-01
US6519642B1 (en) 2003-02-11
CA2275190A1 (en) 1998-07-30
DE69801420D1 (en) 2001-09-27
AU6317198A (en) 1998-08-18
BR9809557A (en) 2000-10-17
EP0954799B1 (en) 2001-08-22
ID23434A (en) 2000-04-20
JP2000511674A (en) 2000-09-05
NZ336275A (en) 2002-02-01
DE69801420T2 (en) 2002-07-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2275190C (en) A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes
EP1381186B1 (en) Deployment of configuration information
Meng et al. Achieving dynamic inter-organizational workflow management by integrating business processes, events and rules
US7415715B2 (en) Transaction execution system interface and enterprise system architecture thereof
Georgakopoulos et al. Managing process and service fusion in virtual enterprises
US5835911A (en) Software distribution and maintenance system and method
CN101471961B (en) Exposing process flows and choreography controllers as web services
US8032635B2 (en) Grid processing in a trading network
EP1438672B1 (en) Method, apparatus and system for a mobile web client
Khalaf et al. Business processes for Web Services: Principles and applications
US20130332524A1 (en) Data service on a mobile device
US7469217B2 (en) Product toolkit system and method
WO2001025918A2 (en) Frameworks for methods and systems of providing netcentric computing
WO2007084735A2 (en) Customer service management
JP2004530194A (en) Method and bridge for combining servers and clients of different object types
US8402433B2 (en) Method and system for performing automated transactions using a server-side script-engine
KR102375966B1 (en) Integrated system including scenario
Ogush et al. A template for documenting software and firmware architectures
Wang et al. Supporting workflow using the open hypermedia approach
MXPA99006796A (en) A system and method for creating, executing and maintaining cross-enterprise processes
Beasley et al. Establishing co-operation in federated systems
Ouzounis et al. An agent-based life cycle management for dynamic virtual enterprises
Beasley et al. Federation manifesto
Bicocchi et al. 36 INTERNET BASED ICT PLATFORM FOR SUPPORTING VIRTUAL ENTERPRISES
Jain et al. Integrating the OSS Platform

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKLA Lapsed

Effective date: 20170123