Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.

BS EN ISO 19119:2016 – TC:2020 Edition

$280.87

Tracked Changes. Geographic information. Services

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2020 262
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Categories: ,

If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to our online customer service team by clicking on the bottom right corner. We’re here to assist you 24/7.
Email:[email protected]

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
150 European foreword
Endorsement notice
154 Foreword
155 Introduction
157 1 Scope
2 Conformance
2.1 Claiming conformance
2.2 General
2.3 Enterprise viewpoint
2.4 Computational viewpoint
158 2.5 Information viewpoint
2.6 Service taxonomies
2.7 Engineering viewpoint
2.8 Technology viewpoint
159 3 Normative references
4 Terms and definitions and abbreviations
4.1 Terms and definitions
161 4.2 Abbreviations
163 5 Notation
5.1 General
5.2 Conformance class
5.3 Requirements class
164 5.4 Rules
5.5 Identifiers
5.6 Conceptual schemas
5.7 Descriptions of concepts
5.8 Architecture patterns
165 6 Overview of geographic services architecture
6.1 Purpose and justification
6.2 Relationship to ISO 19101-1
166 6.3 Interoperability reference model based on ISO RM-ODP
167 6.4 Service abstraction
169 6.5 Interoperability
170 6.6 Use of other geographic information standards in service specifications
7 Enterprise viewpoint: A context for services
7.1 Enterprise viewpoint
171 7.2 Enterprise viewpoint service specifications
172 7.3 Examples of relevant standards
173 7.4 Example and tools
8 Computational viewpoint: A basis for service interfaces and chaining
8.1 Component and service interoperability and the computational viewpoint
174 8.2 Services, interfaces and operations
175 8.3 Computational viewpoint service specifications
8.3.1 Requirements class for computational viewpoint service specifications
8.3.2 Service interfaces with operations
177 8.3.3 Service behaviour and constraints
179 8.4 Service chaining
8.4.1 General
180 8.4.2 Anatomy of a service chain
181 8.4.3 Service chain modelling
183 8.4.4 Services organizer folder
8.4.5 Services to enable service chaining
184 8.4.6 Architecture patterns for service chaining
189 8.4.7 Variations on chaining patterns
190 8.5 Service metadata
8.6 Simple service architecture
191 8.7 Examples of relevant standards
8.8 Examples and tools: Service modelling with SoaML
9 Information viewpoint: A basis for semantic interoperability
9.1 Information model interoperability and the information viewpoint
192 9.2 Information viewpoint Service specifications
195 10 Service taxonomies
10.1 Need for multiple service taxonomies
196 10.2 Service taxonomies and requirements
10.3 Architectural reference model
10.4 Definition of the Architectural reference model
10.5 Uses of the Architectural reference model
197 10.6 Overview of the Architectural reference model
10.6.1 Services and service interfaces
198 10.6.2 Identifying services and service interfaces for geographic information
10.7 Types of geographic information services
10.7.1 Requirement for service taxonomy
10.7.2 Types of information technology services relevant to geographic information
200 10.7.3 Extension of service types for geographic information
10.8 Geographic architecture services taxonomy
10.8.1 Geographic architecture services taxonomy requirements
201 10.8.2 Geographic boundary/human interaction services
202 10.8.3 Geographic model/information management services
203 10.8.4 Geographic workflow/task management services
10.8.5 Geographic processing services
206 10.8.6 Geographic communication services
10.8.7 Geographic system management and security services
207 10.9 ISO suite of International Standards in geographic architecture services taxonomy
10.10 Geographic service chaining validity
208 10.11 User-perspective Lifecycle model for Services
209 10.12 User-defined service taxonomies
10.13 Services organizer folder (SOF)
10.13.1 Grouping of services
10.13.2 Image exploitation SOF
210 10.13.3 Geographic data fusion SOF
211 10.14 Semantic information models
212 10.15 Examples of relevant standards
213 10.16 Examples and tools
11 Engineering viewpoint: A basis for distribution and communication patterns
11.1 Distribution transparencies and the engineering viewpoint
214 11.2 Distributing components using a multi-tier architecture model
217 11.3 Distribution transparencies
218 11.4 Engineering viewpoint Service specifications
219 11.5 Multi-style SOA
11.6 Relevant architectural styles
11.6.1 Service-oriented architectures
220 11.6.2 Representational State Transfer (REST)
221 11.6.3 Web 2.0
222 12 Technology viewpoint: A basis for cross platform interoperability
12.1 Infrastructure interoperability and the technology viewpoint
223 12.2 Need for multiple platform-specific specifications
12.3 Conformance between platform-neutral and platform-specific service specifications
224 12.4 From platform-neutral to platform-specific specifications
12.5 Technology objects
12.6 Technology viewpoint service specifications
12.6.1 Requirements class for technology viewpoint
225 12.6.2 Technology mappings
227 12.7 Architectural classification according to cloud computing service categories
228 Annex A (normative) Conformance
234 Annex B (informative) Example user scenarios
237 Annex C (informative) Principles for mapping to distributed computing platforms
248 Annex D (informative) Use case-based methodology
251 Annex E (informative) Example — Use case template
254 Annex F (informative) Service modelling – SoaML
257 Bibliography
BS EN ISO 19119:2016 - TC
$280.87