TY - JOUR A1 - Banti, Federico A1 - Pugliese, Rosario A1 - Tiezzi, Francesco AV - none Y1 - 2011/// SN - 0747-7171 VL - 46 JF - Journal of Symbolic Computation N1 - Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved. Banti et al., This work is a revised and extended version of Banti, F., Pugliese, R., Tiezzi, F., 2009. Towards a Framework for the Verification of UML Models of Services. In: WWV. Bartoletti et al., 2008, M. Bartoletti, P. Degano, G.L. Ferrari and R. Zunino, Semantics-Based Design for Secure Web Services, IEEE Trans. Softw. Eng. 34 (1) (2008), pp. 33?49. ID - eprints402 SP - 119 IS - 2 UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0747717110001355 TI - An accessible verification environment for UML models of services N2 - Service-Oriented Architectures (SOAs) provide methods and technologies for modelling, programming and deploying software applications that can run over globally available network infrastructures. Current software engineering technologies for SOAs, however, remain at the descriptive level and lack rigorous foundations enabling formal analysis of service-oriented models and software. To support automated verification of service properties by relying on mathematically founded techniques, we have developed a software tool that we called Venus (Verification ENvironment for UML models of Services). Our tool takes as an input service models specified by UML 2.0 activity diagrams according to the UML4SOA profile, while its theoretical bases are the process calculus COWS and the temporal logic SocL. A key feature of Venus is that it provides access to verification functionalities also to those users not familiar with formal methods. Indeed, the tool works by first automatically translating UML4SOA models and natural language statements of service properties into, respectively, COWS terms and SocL formulae, and then by automatically model checking the formulae over the COWS terms. In this paper we present the tool, its architecture and its enabling technologies by also illustrating the verification of a classical ?travel agency? scenario. EP - 149 ER -