Principles of SOA

There is a common set of principles most associated with service orientation.

As a result of research the author performed for SOA Systems (during which service orientation, as a design paradigm, was studied within the context of all major vendor platforms and existing frameworks and blueprints) this set of common service-orientation principles has been identified and defined. 

Below are brief descriptions of each. 

Services are autonomous — The logic governed by a service resides within an explicit boundary. The service has control within this boundary, and is not dependent on other services for it to execute its governance. 

Services share a formal contract — In order for services to interact, they need not share anything but a collection of published metadata that describes each service and defines the terms of information exchange. 

Services are loosely coupled — Dependencies between the underlying logic of a service and its consumers are limited to conformance of the service contract. 

Services abstract underlying logic — Underlying logic, beyond what is expressed in the service contract metadata, is invisible to the outside world. 

Services are composable — Services may compose others, allowing logic to be represented at different levels of granularity. This promotes reusability and the creation of service abstraction layers. 

Services are reusable — Regardless of whether immediate reuse opportunities exist, services are designed to support potential reuse. 

Services are stateless — Services should be designed to maximize statelessness even if that means deferring state management elsewhere. 

Services are discoverable — Services should allow their descriptions to be discovered and understood by humans and service requestors that may be able to make use of their logic. 

Of these eight, autonomy, loose coupling, abstraction, and the need for a formal contract can be considered the core principles that form the baseline foundation for SOA, directly supporting the realization of others (as well as each other).

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