Title: Service-oriented network architecture: significant issues and principles of communication
Authors: Bhawana Rudra; A.P. Manu; O.P. Vyas
Addresses: Department of Information Technology, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Allahabad – 211 012, India ' Department of Information Science, Sahyadri College of Engineering and Management, Mangalore – 575 007, India ' Department of Information Technology, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Allahabad – 211 012, India
Abstract: The internet is not designed for any specific application purposes, rather it is for generic and evolve purposes. Although the architecture of the internet is based on a number of principles including self-describing, datagram packet, the end-to-end argument, diversity in technology, and global addressing, but David D. Clark along with J.H. Saltzer highlighted end-to-end arguments amongst the most influential of all the communication protocol design goals. Also that internet adopted a method of patchwork approach to cope with the needs of evolution and revolution of technology growth with acceptable cost and speed. The future network is expected to host much more than today's applications in an efficient manner but experts predicted rigidity as one of the failure factors for current internet (CI). In this paper the authors discuss various issues involved in the flexible network architecture - SONATE (Reuther and Henric, 2008) while incorporating security functionality 'inside' the architecture.
Keywords: service-oriented network architecture; SONATE; flexible networking; service-oriented architecture; SOA; future internet; web services; network security.
DOI: 10.1504/IJCSE.2015.068838
International Journal of Computational Science and Engineering, 2015 Vol.10 No.3, pp.306 - 314
Received: 13 Nov 2012
Accepted: 10 Jan 2013
Published online: 15 Apr 2015 *