Model Transformation Recommendations for
Service-Oriented Architectures
Dmitri Valeri Panfilenko
1
, Katsiaryna Hrom
2
, Brian Elvesæter
3
and Einar Landre
4
1
DFKI GmbH, Saarbrücken, Germany
2
T-Systems International GmbH, Saarbrücken, Germany
3
SINTEF, Oslo, Norway
4
Statoil, Stavanger, Norway
Keywords: SOA, MDA, Model Transformations, Recommendations, CIM, PIM, M2M, BPMN, SoaML.
Abstract: Services for service-oriented architectures can be modelled in different ways, including well-known existing
OMG standard SoaML and an IBM methodology SOMA. Involving domain expert stakeholders in the
system specification and development process plays an important role and is often inevitably combined with
model transformations between different levels of abstraction. Recommendations for those supporting users
during the modelling process along the chosen methodology can aid the development performance and thus
reduce model transformation efforts. This paper shows how bidirectional model transformations between
OMG MDA’s CIM and PIM levels can be enhanced through recommendations and which obstacles on the
way to a comprehensive framework for model-driven development are still to overcome.
1 INTRODUCTION
Nowadays it is impossible to think away from the
software systems in the enterprise workaday life
because they are facilitating a supportive role for the
enterprise management in the market competition.
The need for software solutions in the business
practice faces increasing complexity of these
solutions and permanently rising requirements for
performance, reliability and shorter technology
cycles. In addition, the changing requirements and
pressure for cost reduction count as well. The new
concepts and techniques for software engineering as
an actual problem are not to be undervalued.
The core principles of SOA – loose coupling,
atomicity and consistency (Erl, 2007) – are aspects
present in every system developed in this way, but
transferring the information from the higher levels of
abstraction as domain knowledge to the technical
system specification has always been an issue
researched upon (Kleppe, 2003); (Petrasch, 2006).
An MDA approach provides a basic scheme of
separation of concerns of domain experts and
technical specialists, giving them an opportunity of
working together and not having to get much
involved with concerns of other domains or
abstraction levels (research projects SHAPE:
www.shape-project.eu, REMICS: www.remics.eu).
The problem of transferring the information
between different abstraction levels is the
background of the present paper. We try to amend
the existing approaches for the model
transformations by engineering recommendations
for the end-users facilitating more automation in the
information propagation.
The paper flow proceeds as follows: section 2
describes the existing work in the areas of model
transformation and recommendation engineering.
Section 3 describes model transformation
application for engineering of service-oriented
systems. Section 4 presents a case study elaborated
in SHAPE project and evaluation of it. We discuss
strengths and weaknesses as well as implications
from the existing approaches to the model
transformation and recommendation engineering in
section 5. The section 6 provides conclusions and
sketches the future work plans in these areas.
2 RELATED WORK
The implementation of the MDA approach on the
CIM and PIM level is a field of interest for industry
and science. According to the literature survey of
248
Panfilenko D., Hrom K., Elvesæter B. and Landre E..
Model Transformation Recommendations for Service-Oriented Architectures.
DOI: 10.5220/0004445602480256
In Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS-2013), pages 248-256
ISBN: 978-989-8565-60-0
Copyright
c
2013 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
existent MDA and MDA-based implementations the
most of them ignore the CIM level and therefore the
related model transformations (ATLAS, 2005);
(Jeary, 2008); (Petrasch, 2006). At the same time
CIMs and PIMs present business and analysis level
of software systems correspondingly and the models
of this level have a big impact on the software
development effort and the quality of software.
Quite recently many authors have mentioned that
automatic transformations from PIM to CIM are not
possible (Kahl, 2005); (Kleppe, 2003); (Koch,
2006). One of the last published practical researches
about CIM-to-PIM transformations showed that the
examined transformations could not be completely
automated “because it is needed both to add
information concerning the context and to make
decisions” (Lemrabet, 2010).
In the last few years there have been done many
research attempts aiming to apply MDA (or MDD)
paradigms to business processes and services. One
of the most similar works to our research is that one
from (Delgado, 2010) where MINERVA’s tool
support for service oriented development from
business processes is presented. This tool support
includes QVT automated model transformations
from BPMN to SoaML. De Castro et al. describe the
transformations between CIM and PIM models for
model-driven process (De Castro, 2011). In their
previous work (Rodríguez, 2007); (Rodríguez, 2008)
have proposed a CIM to PIM transformation
composed of QVT rules. (Touzi, 2009) designed
collaborative SOA according to MDA principles. As
a part of work the BPMN-to-UML transformations
were defined and implemented using ATL. In
(Roser, 2006) the model transformations from
business level ARIS models to platform-independent
ICT system models have been described.
The potential of the intelligent support and
recommendations for the enhancement of process
modelling has been recently recognized (Smirnov,
2009). However, the few implemented modelling
support tools have very restricted functionalities.
Existing work in the area of intelligent support and
recommendations for the process modelling can be
split up in 2 categories: 1) methods for process
analysis incl. model checking; 2) auto-completion of
models (e.g. auto-completion of model elements
identifiers, pattern recognition, auto-completion
based on the methods of information retrieval).The
most of implemented modelling support
functionalities are used for conformity checking of
models and based on auto completion of model
elements identifiers (e.g. process editor Signavio
(Fellmann, 2010)).
Another popular type of modelling support
presents the model syntax checking. In the
aforementioned Signavio the syntax checking has
been implemented for EPC, BPMN 1.2 /2.0. With
model checking different other model parameters
like performance, reliability, security, maintenance,
portability of models can be checked (Rech, 2009).
The different information criteria can be also
aggregated and used for the building of key figures
like the similarity of models or the coverage rate of
domain by one model (Fellmann, 2010).
More advanced modelling support systems
contain functionality for validation and verification
of process models as well as business process
optimization. There are a lot of examples in the
literature for the analysis of processes designed with
BPMN by means of Petri net, which present the
formal description of processes (e.g. (Desel, 2000)).
So, (Raedts, 2007) has used BPMN-to-Petri net
transformation for the validation and verification of
industrial models. (Dijkman, 2007) has described an
approach for the semantic correctness checking of
process models with the help of Petri net.
Further type of auto completion functionality for
modelling support systems is based on pattern
recognition. Nowadays there are empirical
researches dealing with the occurrence of patterns in
the process models, e.g. in (Lau, 2009); (Smirnov,
2009); (Thom, 2009). There are also tools which are
able to recognize patterns automatically and to
propose the variants of completion like for example
ProWAP (Thom, 2008).
The comprehensive concept of recommendation
based editor for the business process modelling has
been presented in (Hornung, 2008) and implemented
by (Koschmider, 2010). In contrast to the described
approaches this concept relates to the usual
recommendation systems from information retrieval.
This idea in the process modelling is that the
designed model is compared with known models and
the proposal for the extension or enhancement of
this model is generated.
The described approaches have mostly indirect
relation to service model transformation and
recommendations for them, but all of them can be
adapted to this field. Our proposal described in this
work is to bring all together: model-driven approach,
service orientation and intelligent (cross-level)
modelling support concept.
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3 MODEL TRANSFORMATIONS
FOR SERVICE MODELS
3.1 CIM2PIM Transformation
for SOA
Below we shortly sketch what kinds of models are
defined on which abstraction level in the scope of
this paper and how we intend to transform the
models between those abstraction levels.
On the highest abstraction level CIM, business
models encompass business rules, processes,
services and other issues such as contracts involving
humans and organizations to achieve business goals.
These conform to the metamodel of CIMFlex
prototype. The middle layer – PIM – contains the
results of the proposal as transformation engines,
extended SOA models, the standardized UPMS
(SoaML).
The transformation engine should also support
visualization of services in business models (provide
transformation support both ways, top-down and
bottom-up between CIM and PIM levels). This
should provide a basis for service development for
different application domains that covers the life-
cycle of services from business goals and
requirements to platform specific models for various
platforms (Hahn, 2009).
Thus, the scope of this paper targets CIM
modelling and bidirectional consistent CIM-to-PIM
transformations.
3.2 Recommendations for Service
Model Transformations
The background for the idea of intelligent modelling
support system for transformations consists of 2
issues: 1) runtime of transformation for large models
and 2) necessity for model verification and
validation in time of their building. With the
intelligent modelling support the user can get the
information about how the changes made within one
modelling level affect the process model within
another modelling level, where the relation between
modelling levels is transformation (see Figure 1).
Change analysis can be used for round-trip
engineering, as repeating of MDA cycles with model
changes on different abstraction levels results in the
entanglement of the models for the user (Delgado,
2010).
The modelling support can cover a big spectrum
of aspects – from business level with process cost
and durability analysis as well as the appropriateness
of model changes up to technical level with the
analysis of data consistency in the database or the
changes of the methods in java class. A large
analysis coverage can give the user much important
information about models, but it is very risky to
provide the good level of usability of such analysis
tool at the same time (Fellmann, 2010). In our case
study one can see that, using a relatively small set of
analysis criteria, the analysis report can be very
large.
Figure 1: Implementation framework.
We examined all types of modelling support and
considering also the specifics of technical
implementation defined how different types of
support can be implemented for the service model
transformation in the MDA conceptually and on the
technical level. The tool architecture is presented on
the Figure 2. Transformation has been implemented
in ATL, as a BPMN model editor CIMFlex and as a
SoaML editor Modelio (www.modeliosoft.com) has
been used correspondingly, recommendations have
been implemented partly in ATL and in Java. We
have chosen Eclipse and the compatible plug-ins for
the implementation because the framework can be
simply extended and provide the certain flexibility
for developers (open source); moreover there are
many components for Eclipse which can be used for
the MDA.
Figure 2: The idea of modelling cross-level support.
To restrict the recommendation coverage we
have chosen for the implementation elements of 3
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types of modelling support: 1) model checking
(compliance with specification), 2) analysis of
models by means of aggregated key figures and 3)
analysis of model/process changes based on pattern
recognition. The cross-level analysis can be done as
follows: the basis input CIM is transformed in PIM
and saved. Whenever the changes in CIM are done
and they should be analysed on the PIM level, the
new PIM is created, compared with the basis variant
and the information about changes is return to the
user.
The first idea here was to separate the
comparison and analysis logic especially as there
exist a lot of mature tools and approaches for the
comparison of models. For our implementation
framework the EMFT Compare looks like the most
suitable tool for the model comparison. It provides
generic support for any kind of metamodel in order
to compare and merge models in the EMF
framework. But because of many disadvantages like
complex handling of profiles using EMFT Compare,
no direct support of comparison of CIMFlex models,
etc. we left this idea for the future work. The other
existing tools for the model comparison operate on
the low technical level (XML) and cannot be used
for the implementation of our idea because we
cannot provide 1:1 mapping of model elements
repeating transformation between levels. The
comparison of models within the MDA should be
done on the level of model elements. To provide the
high level of usability for our modelling support tool
the most important details of models for the different
types of analysis were chosen as the base for model
analysis (usually it depends on the end user
demand). For the model analysis by means of
different key figures the model transformation has
already been used. Many implemented examples of
transformation of type model-to-measure can be
found in the ATL transformations Zoo or for
example in (Vépa, 2005). Such analysis is a time
consuming solution due to the metamodel for the
key figures and model-to-measure transformation.
All known approaches can be applied only for
existent models and thus not very efficient for the in
time modelling cross-level support. The approach
which we have developed has a technical
background and it is based on ATL Queries. Query
is a special type of routines to compute a primitive
value, such as a string or an integer, from source
models. The advantage of the usage of queries for
the cross-level model analysis is obvious: the query-
logic is separated from transformation logic; the
comparison of models is done on the model
elements level; it is not complicated to describe the
cross-level model changes only using the source
models. The last statement is based on the property
of queries to use the same elements of code as the
transformation; therefore, this approach minimises
the development effort and error rate of the analysis
results. The remaining issue in this case is the
interpretation of the analysis data and providing it
the user in intelligent way.
4 MODEL TRANSFORMATIONS
APPLICATION
4.1 Instantiation for BPMN2SoaML
To illustrate our concept we developed bidirectional
BPMN-to-SoaML transformation in ATL and
showed how the recommendations for the intelligent
modelling support for transformation can be
implemented using the selected tools.
The BPMN and SoaML models belong to the
different abstraction levels, have different objects
and key aspects. Furthermore, the complexity level
of BPMN and SoaML is not identical. The study of
(Recker, 2009) has shown that the complexity of full
BPMN specification is higher as the complexity of
full UML specification. Hence, different restrictions
are inevitable for BPMN-to-SoaML transformations.
The description of mapping rules for BPMN-
elements into the corresponding UML/ SoaML
elements presented in (Hahn, 2010) as well as in
SHAPE project documentation. We enhanced and
specified the transformation rules more precisely
and adjusted them to the newer BPMN and
SoaML/UML specifications.
To illustrate our transformation and following
transformation support based on recommendations
we chose the business case “Voyage travel agency”
(presented at ECMFA’10 as a tutorial “Service
Modeling with SoaML”: http://www.ecmfa-
2010.org/index.php/tutorials),which includes 4 lanes
representing the client, the partner, the payment
centre and the travel agency itself. The client gets
information about the current travel offer and
chooses a travel. The client should provide personal
information to the travel agency and confirm the
order. Then the agency checks the client solvency
with the collaboration of the payment centre and if
the check is successful makes the reservations of
travel for the client.
The specific feature of our transformation is that
the CIM model built in BPMN contains 3 different
views: the structural, behavioural and data view.
This separation means that our BPMN-to-SoaML
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transformation contains 3 different transformation
types in one and the result will be consolidated in
one resulting target model. The challenge of such
transformation was how to integrate all views in one
target model. The mapping rules from (Elvesæter,
Panfilenko, 2010); (Hahn, 2009); (Hahn, 2010)
include no integration aspects. Therefore, we have
defined view integration rules, which are collected
in the Table 1.
The target SoaML model contains also 3 views,
but indirectly in contrast to the source BPMN model.
These views can be seen in Modelio in 3 different
diagrams: structural model as the SoaML participant
diagram, behavioural model as the UML activity
diagram and the data model as UML class diagram.
Table 1: The integration rules for SoaML models.
View
SoaML/UML element superordinate
element
Struc-
tural
Model
ServiceArchitecture Model
Participant Model
ServiceContract Model
ServicePoint Participant
RequestPoint Participant
Beha-
vioural
Activity ServiceArchitecture
Activity Partition Activity
other behavioural
elements
Activity Partition
Data
All data elements Participant
All of the services from the BPMN model appear
in the SoaML model. The graphical correspondence
of the models is not evident on the level of services
because of incomplete compatibility of used tools,
but the correspondence of structure of models on the
internal XML level is satisfactory.
We don’t cite the transformation of BPMN
behavioural view into UML activity model in this
paper, because this transformation is trivial and was
described and implemented by the other authors (e.g.
(Lemrabet, 2010)). The only difference between our
and the other BPMN-to-SoaML transformations is
the mapping set and rules.
The second part of our transformations is the
inverse transformations. As mentioned above, a lot
of researchers are in doubt about the possibility of
PIM-to-CIM transformation. The challenge is that
whenever the business models are transformed into
service models, only the structural information is
transformed, but not dynamical. The bidirectionality
is only obtainable if the expression power of the
both languages is identical (Kleppe, 2003).
In the case of bidirectional transformations the
information is either lost (if the transformation
function is a surjective function) or added (if the
transformation function is an injective function)
after the transformation step; to define a bijective
model transformation function is almost impossible,
particularly for the model transformations used in
industry. There exists a method to solve this problem
by using a tracing-technique, but in general it is hard
solvable (Küster, 2004). In our research we have
determined that the loss of information happens
while changing the modelling level, but it can be
reduced to the minimum.
In our scenario there could be the following
information loss while transforming BPMN models
into SoaML models (CIM-to-PIM):
the direction of associations from DataObjects to
Tasks in patterns Lane1Lane2 und
Role1Role2(table 7 in (Hahn, 2010) und 9 in
(Hahn, 2009) );
the relationship between Roles and Tasks from
the pattern Role1Role2;
the type of Gateways;
the source and target of Message Flows between
Pools (table 27 in (Hahn, 2009)).
The loss of information is the cause of incomplete
transformation definition, i.e. not every element
from the CIM has a corresponding element on the
PIM level. On the conceptual level we don’t need to
take into account all of the details defining the
transformation rules, but in implementation stage
these details can be important and must be included
in the set of transformation rules. In our work we
determined that using the appropriate traceability
mechanism it is possible to achieve the complete
restorable mapping.
We used the ATLAS transformation language,
which does not support the extern traceability
directly. One method of ensuring the traceability
support in ATL was provided by (Jouault, 2005).
The traceability information is considered as a
special model and is described by means of
traceability metamodel. This method was
implemented as a special program – TracerAdder. It
allows automating the extern traceability partially,
because the program works in a special refining
mode which is not fully supported by ATL yet.
Nevertheless, this method has a big potential
because the tracing and transformation logic are
independent from each other as well as no additional
language constructs or ATL engine modifications
are needed, therefore its implementation is only the
matter of time.
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The similar technique can be implemented using
profiles. This method was developed for UML-to-
UML transformations (Vanhooff, 2005), but can be
also adjusted for the other transformations.
In our concrete case we detected also another
type of information loss which deals with the
concept of “3 views”-representation of models
described above. In BPMN models these views are
integrated, whereas in UML/SoaML models they are
completely independent. A lot of model elements
can be assigned to different views, and therefore
they are contained in the resulting SoaML models
twice or even threefold (e.g. DataObject
“ClientDefinition” appears in all three views), i.e.
the target models of BPMN-to-SoaML
transformation contain much more objects as the
source models. This should be taken into account by
the inverse SoaML-to-BPMN transformations.
Because there is no relationship between such
elements having “the same origin” in the SoaML, we
need to think about the enhanced tracing technique
which should be applied to all elements of models.
To sum up, the problem of the information loss
by the bi-directional CIM-to-PIM transformations is
solvable with one of the described traceability
methods, but it still requires the adjustment of the
whole concept and architecture.
4.2 SHAPE Project Case Study
Evaluation method in this paper refers to the
evaluation conducted within the scope of the
SHAPE project (Elvesæter, 2010). Evaluation
should be split into two parts due to the nature of
software development in companies like Saarstahl
(www.saarstahl.com), having their own IT-
department responsible for business process
modelling. Firstly, a system architect asserts whether
the solution proposed works and if it helps.
Secondly, management has to assert the proposed
solution fulfils the company guidelines for ROI. The
evaluation conducted in SHAPE project is a subject
to time and resource constraint and thus restricts the
complete evaluation volume to performance
measures definition, which in turn provides basis for
answering the questions whether the solution works
and whether it helps the development.
The full description of the Saarstahl use case
realisation can be seen in (Elvesæter, 2010), whereas
the scope of this paper is on the CIM level
modelling and CIM-to-PIM transformations with
recommendations for the latter. As for these the
evaluation report states that on the CIM level
CIMFlex allows modelling of business processes in
an abstract manner. As for CIM-to-PIM
transformations, these generate a skeleton SoaML
model that needs further manual refinements. The
recommendations for the model transformations are
the research point, especially given attention in this
paper. Using these techniques Saarstahl was able to
model its business processes on different abstraction
levels, whereas the produced source code and
system reflect the business models on the top
abstraction level, which in turn proves that the
proposed technology works. Another part of the use
case was to wrap the existing legacy systems behind
the web services, which also has been successfully
evaluated. The modelling as described and the
wrapping of the legacy systems lead to increased
interoperability of the complete IT landscape at
Saarstahl, which proves the consistency of the
SHAPE technology. The complete list of
performance measures that provide basis for
answering the question about ROI can be seen in
(Elvesæter, 2010).
5 DISCUSSION AND
IMPLICATIONS
Of course, the described work is a trial version of
BPMN-to-SoaML transformation to evaluate our
concept of intelligent cross-level modelling support
and review the gaps in it. The described
transformations are implemented with the pre-
defined tools and big restrictions to be solved in the
future:
1) The set of mapping rules does not cover all
elements of metamodels which are the basis of the
used modelling editors. The consequence is that the
source models should be manually checked and
restricted to include only the elements described in
transformation rules. It causes the additional
difficulties in testing and validation of
transformations particularly for the models with a lot
of elements.
2) The mapping rules are usually defined on the
conceptual level and do not contain a specific
technical information. This requires extending the
set of transformation rules with additional ones,
which complicates the understanding of the
transformations. We defined additional rules (see
Table 1) to achieve the unique structural
representation of PIMs in our transformation,
because the initial set of mapping rules did not
includ the integration aspect of different view in
SoaML models.
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3) The transformation rules of type pattern-to-
element require a lot of implementation effort. We
used the linear search approach to identify the
patterns and tested our transformation on the models
containing not more as 120 elements. Probably it can
be necessary in the future to think of a special
optimisation algorithm for larger models.
4) Further problem with patterns consists in the
interpretation of patterns combination (Elvesæter,
Panfilenko, 2010), (Hahn, 2009), (Hahn, 2010). We
detected only some combinations which require
more precise description, but it can be identified
more. So it is necessary to include the interpretation
of patterns combinations in the mapping rules or
define the patterns more exactly.
5) The implemented model transformation and
generation of the recommendations for the
transformations are only partly automated due to the
existing tools not achieving such level of maturity
yet. In our case the testing tool, the validation and
verification environments are missing. It is possible,
though, to find more appropriate technologies to
automate the desired concept.
6) The implemented recommendations cover only
some aspects of possible intelligent cross-level
modelling support. It is possible to extend the
number of recommendations by including other
types of model analysis or extending the existent
recommendations for the bigger set of model
elements.
7) The transformations and recommendations were
implemented with big restrictions, which are the
cause of compatibility problems between different
tools we used in our research. These problems are
solvable by means of different techniques indeed,
but make the transformations very complicated to
understand, to modify and to reuse.
6 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE
WORK
MDA is a powerful concept which can be used in
many fields like process analysis, process
optimisation, model validation, model driven testing,
etc. However, there are a lot of problems (e.g. model
transformation) on the way of the MDA
implementation mentioned in the literature and
verified in our work as well.
The technology for the implementation of model
transformations should be chosen very carefully. All
known transformation languages have such level of
maturity at the moment that they cannot satisfy all
requirements for the model transformations in the
MDA. Further aspect, which makes the development
of model transformations time-consuming, is that
there is no integrated implementation framework for
the transformation, i.e. validation, testing and
debugging should be done manually. Moreover, all
of the existent model editors do not support the
automatic arrangement and alignment of the
graphical elements for the exported models.
Our concept, including the implementation
technique, allows for strict distinction between the
transformation and analysis logics, but they use the
same functions at the same time, which guarantees
the synchronisation of model transformations and
the analysis of transformed models. This way does
not require any complicated modifications in other
tools. However, the recommendations coverage
should be still defined. Once all necessary
formalisms are defined, the model analysis can be
easily applied on different modelling levels as well
as in the cross-level field.
The unique architecture for the transformation
and cross-level recommendations in the MDA
should still be elaborated. The concept of model
validation should be implemented; a big advantage
would be an appropriate traceability mechanism for
the transformation as well as an automated test
environment. The smooth interaction of all
necessary components still requires a lot of work on
the both conceptual and technical levels.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This research was co-funded by the European Union
in the frame of the SHAPE FP7 project (ICT- 2007-
216408). The authors would like to express their
acknowledgments to SHAPE colleagues.
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