BPEL2oWFN ********* About this document: This manual is for BPEL2oWFN, Version 1.1, a tool translating business processes described in BPEL to open workflow nets (oWFN), last updated 24 February 2006. This manual does not explain how to setup or install BPEL2oWFN. For this information please read the Installation Manual which is part of the distribution or can be downloaded from the website of BPEL2oWFN (`http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/tools4bpel/bpel2owfn'). Copyright (C) 2005, 2006 Niels Lohmann Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. BPEL2oWFN is licensed under the GNU General Public License. Copyright (C) 2005, 2006 Niels Lohmann, Christian Gierds and Dennis Reinert. BPEL2oWFN is part of the Tools4BPEL project funded by the Bundesministerium fu"r Bildung und Forschung. See `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/tools4bpel' for details. Table of Contents ***************** BPEL2oWFN 1 Overview 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Translation Process 1.3 Concepts of BPEL2oWFN 1.3.1 Abstract Syntax Tree 1.3.2 Pattern Database 1.3.3 Petri Net Class 2 Invoking BPEL2oWFN 2.1 Options 2.1.1 Modes 2.1.2 Additional parameters 2.1.3 Output formats 2.2 Examples 2.3 Exit Values 3 File Formats 3.1 Petri Net File Formats 3.2 Info-files 3.2.1 Naming Conventions 3.3 Dot Graphics 4 Petri Net Patterns 4.1 Petri net semantics from [Sta05] 4.1.1 Overview 4.1.2 Limitations of the semantics 4.1.3 Changes and Modulation 5 Petri Net-related Functions 5.1 Structural Simplification 5.2 Abstractions 5.3 Markings 6 Limitations and Bugs 6.1 Limitations 6.2 Known Bugs 6.3 Reporting Bugs 6.4 Contact Person 7 Future Work Appendix A References Appendix B GNU General Public License 1 Overview ********** 1.1 Introduction ================ BPEL2oWFN is a compiler translating a business processes expressed in BPEL (Business Process Execution Language for Web Services) [ACD^+03] to an oWFN (open Workflow Net) [MRS05]. This oWFN can be used to: * check controllability [Mar03, Wei04], * generate the operating guidelines [MRS05], * check for deadlocks, or * check any temporal logic formula with the model checking tools. BPEL2oWFN uses static analysis to make the generated oWFN as compact as possible to analyze a chosen property. This is called flexible model generation (see *Note Future Work::). BPEL2oWFN is the successor from BPEL2PN [SHS05], a Java-based compiler generating low-level Petri nets. BPEL2oWFN can be understood as a re-implementation for extensibility and performance issues. Its functionality is a superset of the functionality of BPEL2PN. (1) BPEL2oWFN was written by Niels Lohmann, Christian Gierds and Dennis Reinert. It is part of the Tools4BPEL project funded by the German Bundesministerium fu"r Bildung und Forschung. See `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/tools4bpel' for details. 1.2 Translation Process ======================= The translation process of the BPEL business process is performed in six steps which we describe briefly in this section: 1. Lexical and syntactical analysis. BPEL2oWFN parses the input process according to the specification of BPEL4WS version 1.1 [ACD^+03]. All information about the process is collected in a symbol table for further use. 2. Semantic analysis. The input file is checked against the constraints of the specification, e.g. that each defined link has to be used as source and target exactly once. BPEL processes violating these constraints are rejected. 3. AST generation. For further analysis steps the exact syntax (indentation etc.) is not used any more. The input process is represented as an AST (abstract syntax tree). While generating the AST, the implicit transformation rules of BPEL (e.g. the presence of an `otherwise'-branch with an empty activity) are applied. 4. Net generation. The nodes of the AST are used to create the Petri net using the pattern database by applying `unparse'-rules (rules associating each node with a pattern). 5. Net optimization (optional). To reduce the generated net several structural reduction rules can be applied, e.g. to merge sequences. 6. Net output. The generated Petri net can be exported in several file formats. 1.3 Concepts of BPEL2oWFN ========================= In this section we describe the main concepts of BPEL2oWFN used to realize the translation. Reading this section is not necessary for using BPEL2oWFN, yet knowing the underlying algorithms and data structures not only helps to locate bugs, but also helps you to customize BPEL2oWFN or request a feature. 1.3.1 Abstract Syntax Tree -------------------------- The AST (abstract syntax tree) is an abstraction of the syntax tree generated while parsing the BPEL process: any unnecessary information (e.g. indention, brackets or other "syntax-supporting" elements) is omitted. It is the central data structure of BPEL2oWFN. The nodes of the AST are annotated during the analysis steps. These annotations are used to select the most compact Petri net pattern from the pattern database to check a given property. 1.3.2 Pattern Database ---------------------- The idea of flexible model generation is to find the most compact model to check a given property. The patterns of the Petri net semantics of [Sta05] are designed to fit in any given context. However when the context is known some behavior modeled in the patterns (i.e. some of the nodes) can be safely removed without changing its semantics. BPEL2oWFN is designed to hold several sets of Petri net patterns each suitable in certain contexts. These patterns are collected in a pattern database. 1.3.3 Petri Net Class --------------------- BPEL2oWFN provides many algorithms and data structures to build, represent, modify and simplify Petri nets and open workflow nets, resp. They are the interface between the pattern database and the file output for the model checking tool. The functions are collected in an extensible class allowing to add more output file formats, structural simplification rules (optimized to preserve certain properties such as deadlock freedom or liveness) or abstractions (e.g. abstraction from variables, abstraction from external behavior). ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) In fact, BPEL2oWFN can simulate the behavior of BPEL2PN with a command-line parameter (see *Note Invoking BPEL2oWFN::). 2 Invoking BPEL2oWFN ******************** The standard invocation of BPEL2oWFN is: bpel2owfn -i inputfile.bpel -f owfn -o where `inputfile.bpel' is a BPEL process. The option `-f owfn' cause BPEL2oWFN to generate an open workflow net. This net is written to a file named `inputfile.owfn', because of the option `-o'. For more examples, see *Note Examples::. BPEL2oWFN can be called without any parameter. In this case, it acts as a parser for BPEL, that reads its input from the standard input (`stdin'). 2.1 Options =========== BPEL2oWFN supports the following command-line options: `--help' `-h' Print an overview of the command-line options and exit. `--version' `-v' Print version information and exit. `--input=FILENAME.bpel' `-i FILENAME.bpel' Read BPEL input from file `FILENAME.bpel'. If this parameter is omitted, input is read from standard input (`stdin'). `--output[=FILENAME]' `-o' The generated files are written to a file called FILENAME. If the short form is used or the FILENAME is omitted, the input file name is taken and extended by the suffix of the chosen file format(s). If this parameter is omitted, the output is passed to the standard output (`stdout'). `--log[=FILENAME]' `-l' All additional information like warnings and processing information are written to a file called FILENAME. If the short form is used or the FILENAME is omitted, the output file name is taken and extended by the suffix `.log'. If this parameter is omitted, the information is passed to the standard error output (`stderr'). `--debug=1-4 | flex | bison' `-d 1-4 | flex | bison' This option triggers different debug levels, and can enable additional information from Flex and Bison about how the input is lexed and parsed. `--bpel2pn' This option makes BPEL2oWFN behave like its predecessor, BPEL2PN: it generates a Petri net LoLA format and an information file. The option `--bpel2pn' is a shortcut for `--mode=petrinet --format=lola --format=info --output'. 2.1.1 Modes ----------- When invoking BPEL2oWFN several modes are possible. `--mode=MODUS' `-m MODUS' BPEL2oWFN supports four different modes for handling BPEL, so `MODUS' can be one of the following options: `ast' Outputs the AST (abstract syntax tree) generated while parsing the input file to standard output. This option is mostly used for debugging reasons since it shows the implicit transformations and the phylum names used when generating the Petri net. `petrinet' Generates a Petri net representing the semantics of the given process. Other options can be added to simplify or modify that generated Petri net (see below). `pretty' Outputs the parsed BPEL file in XML representation. Any unnecessary attributes are omitted. This option is mostly used for debugging reasons as it shows the implicit transformations and the identifiers of the BPEL constructs. Please note that you can only use at most one mode. 2.1.2 Additional parameters --------------------------- These options control some Petri net-related options. See *Note Petri Net-related Functions:: for more details. `--parameter=PAR' `-p PAR' `simplify' Structurally simplify the generated Petri net. `finishloop' Add an extra loop transition to the final place of the generated Petri net to live-lock the system in order to find deadlocks. `nostandardfaults' When the parameter is set, only used-defined faults using the `' activity can occur. `cyclicwhile' When the parameter is set, the pattern for the `' activity is cyclic as depicted in Fig. 18 of [Sta05]. If the parameter is not set (standard case), the pattern is acyclic: the activity embedded in the `' activity is at most executed once, chosen non-deterministically. If you want to enable more than one parameter you have to add `-p'/ `--parameter' to each parameter. 2.1.3 Output formats -------------------- Especially for the Petri net mode, a variaty of output formats are supported, see *Note File Formats:: for more information. There are invoked by the following option: `--format=FILEFORMAT' `-f FILEFORMAT' `apnn' Create a Petri net in APNN (Abstract Petri Net Notation). Implies the mode `petrinet'. `dot' Create a Dot representation of the structure generated in the current mode which can be any kind of Petri net (mode `petrinet'). `info' Create an additional information file. Implies the mode `petrinet'. `lola' Create a LoLA place/transition net. Implies the mode `petrinet'. `owfn' Create a low-level oWFN in LoLA file format. Implies the mode `petrinet'. `pep' Create a Petri net in low-level PEP notation. Implies the mode `petrinet'. `pnml' Create a PNML Petri net. Implies the mode `petrinet'. `xml' Create an XML (Extensible Markup Lanuage) file. Implies the mode `pretty'. If you want to use more than one output file format you have to add `-f'/ `--fileformat' to each file format. Please note that the underlying modes of the given file formats are the same, i.e. you cannot create XML and LoLA files together since XML uses the mode `pretty' whereas LoLA uses the mode `petrinet'. 2.2 Examples ============ In this section we show some examples how BPEL2oWFN can be invoked. `bpel2owfn -i sample.bpel -flola -finfo -o -p simplify' Reads the file `sample.bpel', generates a structural simplified low-level Petri net and saves it in a LoLA file `sample.lola'. For further information a file `sample.info' is generated. `bpel2owfn -i sample.bpel -fowfn -d3 -o' Reads the file `sample.bpel', generates a low-level open workflow net and saves it in an oWFN file `sample.owfn'. For further information a file `sample.info' is generated. During the conversion several debug messages are printed to standard output. `PROG | bpel2owfn -fdot -m petrinet | dot -Tpng -osample.png' Runs the program PROG and reads its output as BPEL process, generates a Petri net and outputs its Dot representation. This stream is read by Dot which layouts the Petri net and creates an output PNG (Portable Network Graphic) file `sample.png'. `bpel2owfn -i sample.bpel -m ast' Reads the file `sample.bpel' and prints the abstract syntax tree (AST) to standard output. 2.3 Exit Values =============== When BPEL2oWFN is invoked and run without any error, the exit value is 0. 0 No error. The input file could be correctly opened, parsed and the output file(s) could be generated without any error. 1 Lexical or syntax error. This error occurs while lexing or parsing the input file. It is thrown by the lexer or the parser, resp. Usually the `source' of the error (i.e. the filename and line number) is indicated together with the unexpected (last read) and expected token. An example: Error while parsing syntax error, unexpected X_SLASH, expecting X_OPEN Error in `example.bpel' in line 12: token/text last read was `/' Please note that the indicated position (i.e. the line number) may be fuzzy -- it should be understood as a hint to the erroneous line. 2 `File not found' exception. The given input file was not found resp. could not be opened. An example: An error has occurred while parsing "example.bpel"! Exception #2 occurred! File `example.bpel' not found. 3 `File could not be opened' exception. An output file could not be opened for write access. You may check the appropriate for the target directory or the file if it already exists. An example: An error has occured while parsing "example.bpel"! Exception #3 occured! File "example.dot" could not be opened for writing access! 10 Option mismatch. The given command-line options cannot be processed together. An example: An error has occurred while parsing "example.bpel"! An error has occured while parsing ""! Exception #10 occured! Choose only one mode Additional information: Type ./bpel2owfn -h for more information. 30 `Dynamic cast error' exception. While building an internal scope tree an unexpected error has occurred. 40 Node not found. 41 `Node already defined' exception. While generating the Petri net a node was found having a history entry covered by another node before. An example: An error has occurred while parsing "example.bpel"! Exception #41 occurred! Place with role `1.internal.final' already defined. 42 `Merging error' exception. While generating the Petri net an error occurred while merging two nodes. It happens either when one of the nodes was not found or one of the nodes is a guarded transition--the merging of guarded transitions is not yet supported. 43 `Arc error' exception. While generating the Petri net an error occurred while adding an arc to the net. It happens either on type errors -- i.e. an arc between two transitions (or two places, resp.) should be drawn -- or when the source or target node of an arc was not found. Please report the occurrence of any exception with numbers 30-50 since it indicates a bug in BPEL2oWFN we would like to fix immediately (see *Note Reporting Bugs::). 3 File Formats ************** BPEL2oWFN can generate several file formats: 3.1 Petri Net File Formats ========================== These file formats output the generated Petri net model to various Petri net file formats to support as much model checking and analysis tools as possible. The nodes of the Petri net are named using the internal (numeric) names generated by BPEL2oWFN. For more information on the node naming conventions of BPEL2oWFN, see *Note Naming Conventions::. In all file formats, the inital place of the process, the process clock and all variable places are initially marked. LoLA place/transition net A (low-level) place/transition net as described in [LoLA]. The first entry of the history of each node is added as a comment. oWFN in LoLA format An open workflow net is a Petri net with an interface, i.e. two sets of places: input places and output places. Additionally an open workflow net has a set of final markings. To represent oWFNs the LoLA format was extended to implement this categorization. Abstract Petri Net Notation (APNN) A (low-level) place/transition net in Abstract Petri Net Notation as described in [BKK95]. An `ARCNAME' value is just added to meet the syntactic requirements and is just an enumeration of the arcs (`a1', `a2', ...). Low-level PEP Notation A (low-level) place/transition net in low-level PEP (Programming Environment based on Petri Nets) notation as described in [PEP]. 3.2 Info-files ============== The Info-files are generated when any command-line option is used which imply Petri net-generation. When reading from a file `process.bpel' a file `process.info' is generated. This file sums up all places and transitions together with their internal (numeric) name and their complete history: PLACES: ID TYPE ROLES A LIST OF PLACES TRANSITIONS: ID ROLES A LIST OF TRANSITIONS These files are generated to document the connection between the generated output file and the chosen Petri net patterns. In future distributions of BPEL2oWFN the Info-files will be used to annotate witness and counter-example paths, resp. and to "re-translate" Petri net properties (e.g. a dead transition) to the input BPEL process. 3.2.1 Naming Conventions ------------------------ BPEL2oWFN generates the output Petri net by creating and merging parameterized patterns of the Petri net semantics defined in [Sta05]. Due to merging and simplifying the Petri net nodes "belong" to more than one pattern. For example, in a sequence the initial place of the sequence and the initial place of its first activity are merged so that the final Petri net contains one place with two roles. The roles of each place are collected during the Petri net generation. They form the history of the node. It is used to locate errors of the modeled business process: If, for example, BPEL2oWFN generates a Petri net of a business process and the model checker LoLA finds a dead transition, its history helps to find which BPEL constructs are affected and in this case will never be executed. The roles are named using the following conventions: * Each BPEL activity has been assigned an identifier during the syntactic analysis of the input process. Each node added to the Petri net from the Petri net pattern of that activity begins with that identifier. For example, BPEL's activity process has the identifier `1', so that all nodes of the process pattern begin with `1.'. To find out the identifiers of a given process use the `--xml' command-line option which prints the id of each activity as an XML attribute. * In most cases each BPEL activity can be source or target of links. The semantics defined in [Sta05] organizes this link concept by several wrappers. For an activity with the identifier ID the nodes of the wrapper begin with `ID.' whereas the nodes of the actual activity begin with `ID.internal.'. * The roles of nodes of the stop pattern of a process or scope with identifier `ID' begin with `ID.internal.stop.'. The same schema is used for fault handlers (`ID.internal.faultHandler.'), compensation handlers (`ID.internal.compensationHandler.') and event handlers (`ID.internal.eventHandler.'), resp. * Labels (e.g. `initial') in a figure of [Sta05] are appended to the id string (e.g. `ID.internal.initial'). If both numeric (e.g. `p1') and textual (e.g. `initial') labels are depicted in a figure, the latter is used. * The labels of fault-throwing transitions also contain the last place of the positive control flow: If, for example, a reply activity throws a fault, the fault-throwing transition reads from the place labeled `ID.internal.running' and is labeled `ID.internal.throwFault.running'. * In parameterized patterns (e.g. an assign activity or all structured activities) the labels of the figures of [Sta05] are trailed by an numeration (e.g. `ID.internal.copy.NUMBER.running'). 3.3 Dot Graphics ================ To bugfix(1) the implemented Petri net patterns BPEL2oWFN implements a graph representation of the generate Petri net. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) The Petri nets usually have a large number of nodes so that the graphical representation of a `real world' process would not be suitable to process, read or understand. That is why the Dot output shall be seen as a means to debug small patterns. 4 Petri Net Patterns ******************** In version 1.1 of BPEL2oWFN the following Petri net patterns are implemented: 4.1 Petri net semantics from [Sta05] ==================================== The Petri net semantics for BPEL4WS from Christian Stahl (Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin) published in [Sta05]. 4.1.1 Overview -------------- Feature complete semantics covering both positive control flow with event handling and negative control flow (fault and compensation handling). 4.1.2 Limitations of the semantics ---------------------------------- * Only one instance of a BPEL process can be transformed into a Petri net. * The semantics abstracts from the connection of a BPEL process to its partner processes. The interface of a BPEL process is transformed into a set of message channels, i.e. places in the Petri net. * In our Petri net patterns we model data, but we abstract from the definition of the functions which edit the data. Furthermore, we did not specify the transition guards and so we did not specify which circumstances are necessary that a specific fault can occur. * Every activity is limited to one correlation set (except the synchronous invoke which is limited to two correlation sets). 4.1.3 Changes and Modulation ---------------------------- We tried to stick as close to the Petri net patterns of [Sta05] as possible. However, the implemented patterns in the pattern database sometimes differ to the given patterns due to discovery of bugs or implementation decisions. In this subsection we sum up these changes to help you understand the generated Petri net model. * Fault model. At most one error can occur in the positive control flow of each scope or process. Yet this confines the possible runs of the process it is only a little change of the semantics, since -- according to the specification -- only the first fault is handled anyway. While further faults occurring before the positive control flow is stopped are ignored in the original semantics of [Sta05] (in fact, the faults are collected on place `fault_in' and then consumed by a reset arc) they are prevented in the implemented semantics. In our model, exactly the first occurring fault is handled, whereas in [Sta05] one fault is chosen non-deterministically. Furthermore, all `failed' places of the activities were removed. In the original Petri net semantics, all faults of a scope were collected on the `fault_in' of the stop-pattern and then classified as being the first fault of the scope, a following fault, a fault from the fault handler, a fault from the compensation handler, or a fault from a child scope. In our implementation, new places (`fh_fault_in' and `ch_fault_in') were introduced and each activity throws its faults to the "correct" place automatically. To ensure that at most one error can occur (i.e. at most one token is produced on any fault place) the fault places are guarded by state places: To throw a fault from an activity enclosed in a scope, the state of that scope has to be `Active'. The first thrown fault changes the state to `!Active' thus preventing more faults to occur. The places `fh_fault_in' and `ch_fault_in', resp. are guarded by `!FHFaulted'/`FHFaulted' and `!CHFaulted'/`CHFaulted', resp. Moreover, the generated Petri nets have less nodes than those generated by BPEL2PN [SHS05] since an unfolding of the reset arcs in not necessary any more. * Standard faults. The "throw-fault" and "stop" transitions are generated using parametrized functions. With the command-line parameter `--parameter=nostandardfaults' all BPEL standard faults that can occur in the activites (i.e. all faults except user-defined faults in a throw activity or join failures) are suppressed. The generated models have a smaller state space and allow the analysis for controllability which is impossible without the assumption that messages can always be sent faultlessly. * 1-safety. The new modeling of the fault management yields to 1-safe Petri nets (i.e. any reachable state of the Petri net model puts at most one token on each place of the net). Beside performance (e.g. only 1 bit is needed to store the marking of a place) and compatibility issues (e.g. 1-safety is a prerequisite to use the Model-Checking Kit [MCK]), features not supported by the Petri net semantics can be discovered since the generated net will most likely violate 1-safety when an unsupported BPEL feature is used. If, for example, a scope is enclosed in a while loop (which would model instantiation which is not supported by the Petri net semantics *Note Limitations of the semantics::), the state places of that scope would not be 1-safe. * Assign activity. All copy branches of an assign activity are modeled in a single pattern (i.e. Fig. 6 and Fig. 7 are merged). Furthermore, when an error (outside that activity) occurs, an active assign-activity is not stopped until all copy branches have finished. This is described in [ACD^+03] as: The assign activities are sufficiently short-lived that they are allowed to complete rather than being interrupted when termination is forced. This change fixes a bug in the Petri net semantics. * While activity. Since the original semantics does not support instances of the BPEL process, while activities were poorly supported and usually produced non 1-safe Petri nets or deadlocks as links embedded in the while activity were evaluated incorrectly. In the implementation the while activity is acyclic: the embedded activity is now executed at most once (whether or not it is executed is decided non-deterministically). The "original" behavior can be restored with the command-line parameter `--parameter=cyclicwhile'. * Event handlers. There is one pattern for both alarm and message event handlers (i.e. Fig. 29 and Fig. 30 are merged). When no event handler is specified, an "implicit" event handler is installed which is just a stub and does not change the semantics. * Deadlocks. A transition named `1.internal.finishloop' can be added to livelock the process upon completion using the command-line parameter `--parameter=finishloop'. This leads to deadlock-free Petri nets in case of processes with "reasonable" control flow and helps to find unwanted deadlocks occurring due wrong modeling. If, for example, the links of a process model are cyclic the generated Petri net will deadlock. In future versions of BPEL2oWFN these found deadlocks shall be mapped back into the BPEL code to highlight the "unreasonable" activities (i.e. a cycle-closing link). * Unfoldings. Due to the abstraction (high-level to low-level) of the patterns some places were unfolded: the place `compScope' of Fig. 42-44 usually holding a token with a name of a scope is unfolded to `compScope.SCOPENAME' and only merged with the `ch_in'-place of that respective scope. In all other cases the places are "converted" to low-level places so the generated model completely abstracts from data. * Link semantics. The generated Petri net model always generates `negLink' places for structured activities independently of the presence of links. Anyway, the semantics is not changed since the resulting subnets are dead in this case. * Correlation sets. Correlation sets are not implemented and are simply ignored during parsing. 5 Petri Net-related Functions ***************************** Currently implemented Petri net-specific functions: 5.1 Structural Simplification ============================= * If two transitions t_1 and t_2 have the same preset and postset, one of them can be removed. * If a transition has a singleton preset and postset, the transition can be removed (sequence) and the preset and postset can be merged. * All places with empty preset and postset (isolated places) are removed. These structural reduction rules are implemented in the command-line option `--parameter=simplify', see *Note Invoking BPEL2oWFN::). 5.2 Abstractions ================ * To obtain a place/transition Petri net from an open workflow net the communication places are removed. This abstraction from communicational behavior is used in all Petri net output formats except oWFN (`--format=owfn'). * The original Petri net semantics [Sta05] consists of high-level Petri net patterns. However, the models generated from BPEL2oWFN abstract from data. Therefore all transition guards, arc inscriptions and arc types were "converted" to low-level constructs: all transition guards and arc inscriptions were removed (decisions are now made non-deterministically) and read arcs are "unfolded" to loops. Due to a new fault management (see *Note Changes and Modulation::) the semantics does not contain any reset arcs. 5.3 Markings ============ The following places are initially marked to ensure a deadlock-free model of processes with "reasonable" control-flow (e.g. with an acyclic link structure): * the initial place of the process (`1.internal.initial'), * the variable places (`variable.VARIABLENAME'), and * the clock (`1.internal.clock'). 6 Limitations and Bugs ********************** 6.1 Limitations =============== The current version of BPEL2oWFN underlies several limitations: * The pattern database consists of only one collection of patterns (i.e. the semantics of [Sta05], see `Petri Net Patterns'). However, the patterns are parametrized: using the command-line arguments `--parameter=nostandardfaults' and/or `--parameter=cyclicwhile' yield to different models using the same "base" semantics. 6.2 Known Bugs ============== As this is the first public version of BPEL2oWFN the translation from a BPEL process to an open workflow net might be unstable or incorrect in some few scenarios: * Problem: The original semantics of [Sta05] was created to support executable BPEL processes. Therefore the translation of abstract BPEL processes (business protocols) might throw an exception or even crash. Solution: Each communicating activity (i.e. `invoke', `receive', `reply') should be defined with (input/output) variables. * Problem: The implementation of the structural reduction rules might crash when applied to BPEL processes that created Petri nets with a large number of nodes. Solution: Avoid using the `--parameter=simplify' mode in this case. * Problem: The parser of BPEL2oWFN is not capable of skipping XML elements originating other namespaces than ``bpws''. Processes using these elements are rejected with a syntax error message. Solution: Try removing or commenting these elements. * Problem: LoLA does not accept the generated files and reports parse errors in the first line. Solution: This problem occurs using a pre-compiled windows version of BPEL2oWFN. The generated files are in Windows format, yet LoLA only supports files in Unix format. To overcome this limitation of LoLA, use a tool like `dos2unix' or change the file format in an editor like vi. 6.3 Reporting Bugs ================== If you find a bug in BPEL2oWFN, please first check that it is not a known bug listed in `Known Bugs'. Otherwise please send us an electronic mail to . Include the version number which you can find by running `bpel2owfn --version'. Also include in your message the input BPEL process and the output that the program produced. We will try to answer your mail within a week. If you have other questions, comments or suggestions about BPEL2oWFN, contact us via electronic mail to . 6.4 Contact Person ================== Niels Lohmann Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin Institut fu"r Informatik Unter den Linden 6 10099 Berlin, Germany Homepage `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/mitarbeiter/lohmann' E-mail Phone (+49) (30) 2093-3070 Fax (+49) (30) 2093-3067 7 Future Work ************* For future releases of BPEL2oWFN the following features are planned: * Flexible model generation. Originally, BPEL2oWFN was designed to support flexible model generation, i.e. finding the most abstract (thus smallest) model capable to check a given property. With static analysis we hope to generate the smallest Petri net possible to check properties like deadlock-freedom or controllability. * Add data aspects. In the implemented patterns we abstract from data and do not evaluate join or transition conditions. Instead all decisions are made non-deterministically. With static analysis it is possible to find the relevant ranges of values that allow a replacement of non-deterministic choices with choices made evaulating data. This technique (called abstract interpretation) might help to reduce the modelled behavior of the process yet being more precise. * Control flow analysis. In [Hei03] a control flow graph for BPEL was introduced. This control flow graph (currently implemented prototypic) is the base for more sophisticated analysis, e.g. finding unreachable activities, uninitialized variables or other problems that can occur during runtime. * More Petri net patterns. Being feature-complete the Petri nets generated from the Petri net semantics of [Sta05] consist of a large number of nodes and might be to large to be analyzed by model checkers. The elaboration of different petri net patterns specialized for certain purposes (e.g. omitting the negative control flow) does not only help to find smaller models, but is also a prerequisite for flexible model generation. * Detailed info-files. The generated info-files currently just list the nodes of the generated net. To help the retranslation of Petri net-specific properties to the input process the generated files have to be more detailed. The integration of a symbol table is currently in pre-beta state and should be finished in the next version of BPEL2oWFN. * Support for WS-BPEL. The specification of WS-BPEL (Web Service Business Process Execution Language) version 2.0 is in its final phase. As soon as the standardization is completed, WS-BPEL can be supported by BPEL2oWFN by overworking the grammar and adding appropriate patterns to the pattern database. Appendix A References ********************* [ACD^+03] Tony Andrews, Francisco Curbera, Hitesh Dholakia, Yaron Goland, Johannes Klein, Frank Leymann, Kevin Liu, Dieter Roller, Doug Smith, Satish Thatte, Ivana Trickovic, and Sanjiva Weerawarana. Business Process Execution Language for Web Services, Version 1.1. Technical report, BEA Systems, IBM, Microsoft, SAP, Siebel Systems. May 2003. [BKK95] Falko Bause, Peter Kemper, and Pieter Kritzinger. Abstract Petri Net Notation. Petri Net Newsletter 49:9-27, October 1995. (1) [Hei03] Thomas Heidinger. Statische Analyse von BPEL4WS-Prozessmodellen (in German). Studienarbeit, Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin, December 2003. (2) [LoLA] Karsten Schmidt. LoLA: A Low Level Analyser. Manual. (3) [Mar03] Axel Martens. Verteilte Gescha"ftsprozesse - Modellierung und Verifikation mit Hilfe von Web Services (in German). PhD thesis, Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakulta"t II, 2003. [MCK] Javier Esparza, Claus Schro"ter, and Stefan Schwoon. Model-Checking Kit. (4) [MRS05] Peter Massuthe, Wolfgang Reisig, and Karsten Schmidt. An Operating Guideline Approach to the SOA. Proceedings of the 2nd South-East European Workshop on Formal Methods 2005 (SEEFM05), Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia, 2005. (5) [PEP] University of Oldenburg, Department of Computing Science. PEP (Programming Environment based on Petri Nets). Manual. (6) [Sch00] Karsten Schmidt. LoLA: A Low Level Analyser. In: Mogens Nielsen, and Dan Simpson, editors: Application and Theory of Petri Nets, 21st International Conference (ICATPN 2000), pp. 465-474, Springer-Verlag (LNCS 1825), June 2000. [SHS05] Sebastian Hinz, Karsten Schmidt, and Christian Stahl. Transforming BPEL to Petri Nets. In W.M.P. van der Aalst, B. Benatallah, F. Casati, and F. Curbera, editors, Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Business Process Management (BPM 2005), pp. 220-235, Springer-Verlag (LNCS 3649), September 2005. (7) [Sta05] Christian Stahl. A Petri Net Semantics for BPEL. Informatik-Berichte 188, Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin, July 2005. (8) [Wei04] Daniela Weinberg. Analyse der Bedienbarkeit. Diplomarbeit, Humboldt-Universita"t zu Berlin, October 2004. (9) ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) `http://ls4-www.informatik.uni-dortmund.de/QM/MA/fb/publication_ps_files/APNN.ps.gz' (2) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/download/publications/heidinger03.pdf' (3) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/lola/doku.ps' (4) `http://www.fmi.uni-stuttgart.de/szs/tools/mckit' (5) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/download/publications/MassutheReisigSchmidt-OGApproach.ps' (6) `http://parsys.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de/~pep' (7) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/bpel2pn' (8) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/Institut/struktur/systemanalyse/preprint/stahl188.pdf' (9) `http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/top/download/publications/weinberg04.pdf' Appendix B GNU General Public License ************************************* Version 2, June 1991 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble ======== The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too. When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things. 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The "Program," below, refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program" means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term "modification.") Each licensee is addressed as "you." Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the Program (independent of having been made by running the Program). Whether that is true depends on what the Program does. 1. 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It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. ONE LINE TO GIVE THE PROGRAM'S NAME AND AN IDEA OF WHAT IT DOES. Copyright (C) 19YY NAME OF AUTHOR This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 20YY NAME OF AUTHOR Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program. You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. 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