• DocumentCode
    2560789
  • Title

    Towards an actor-driven workflow management system for grids

  • Author

    Berretz, F. ; Skorupa, S. ; Sander, V. ; Belloum, A.

  • Author_Institution
    Aachen Univ. of Appl. Sci., Aachen, Germany
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    17-21 May 2010
  • Firstpage
    611
  • Lastpage
    616
  • Abstract
    Currently, most workflow management systems in Grid environments provide push-oriented job distribution strategies, where jobs are explicitly delegated to resources. In those scenarios the dedicated resources execute submitted jobs according to the request of a workflow engine or Grid wide scheduler. This approach has various limitations, particularly if human interactions should be integrated in workflow execution. To support human interactions with the benefit of enabling inter organizational computation and community approaches, this poster paper proposes the idea of a pull-based task distribution strategy. Here, heterogeneous resources, including human interaction, should actively select tasks for execution from a central repository. This leads to special demands regarding security issues like access control. In the established push-based job execution the resources are responsible for granting access to workflows and job initiators. In general this is done by access control lists, where users are explicitly mapped to local accounts according to their policies. In the pull-based approach the resources actively apply for job executions by sending requests to a central task repository. This means that every resource has to be able to authenticate against the repository to be authorized for task execution. In other words the authorization is relocated from the resources to the repository. The poster paper introduces current work regarding to the mentioned security aspects in the pull-based approach within the scope of the project “HiX4AGWS”.
  • Keywords
    grid computing; workflow management software; access control; central repository; grid actor driven workflow management system; grid environments; grid wide scheduler; human interaction; human interactions; push oriented job distribution strategies; workflow engine; Access control; Authorization; Distribution strategy; Engines; Grid computing; Humans; Resource management; Scheduling; Security; Workflow management software; Grid Computing; Human Task; Job Distribution; Security; Workflow Management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Collaborative Technologies and Systems (CTS), 2010 International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Chicago, IL
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-6619-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CTS.2010.5478458
  • Filename
    5478458