Data processing: database and file management or data structures – Database design – Data structure types
Reexamination Certificate
2000-01-28
2003-07-08
Amsbury, Wayne (Department: 2171)
Data processing: database and file management or data structures
Database design
Data structure types
C707S793000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06591260
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the exchange of electronic documents in an electronic marketplace. In particular, the invention relates to methods for retrieving schemas which are used to interpret electronic documents used in business to business transactions.
2. Description of the Related Art
Techniques exist for supporting the exchange of electronic data between trading partners. A prominent and commonly used standard is Electronic Data Interchange, more commonly referred to by its acronym EDI. EDI refers to a set of messages used for business-to-business communication. The messages are compiled into business documents, which are exchanged to facilitate transactions between trading partners.
Each organization using EDI typically stores its data in a private format. As such, trading partners employing EDI are typically required to contract in advance and develop software programs to map between their private data sets. Each time a new trading partner is added to a client list, a new translation program is required to format their data in conformance with the other trading partners on the list.
The EDI approach for supporting a commercial communications standard is to include the union of all universally required features into a global standard. EDI effectively includes a messaging standard for each transaction conducted between each set of trading partners. The inefficiencies which result from this system include the effort spent in generating a translator for every pair of trading partners and the redundancy inherent in generating original documents to facilitate largely similar transactions.
To resolve these inefficiencies, it is desirable to establish an effective communications standard for the electronic documents. This standard should allow document types to evolve in order to facilitate new transactions, while preserving the integrity of the existing document types and the transactions they support. Because the library of document types which are used in such a standard will be shared by all trading partners in the marketplace, these resources should be available throughout the marketplace.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention enables the creation of an electronic marketplace by facilitating the exchange of electronic documents between trading partners. Embodiments of the invention include communications standards for the electronic documents which enable trading partners to (1) construct documents which reflect the particular constraints of their transactions and (2) make such documents easily available throughout the marketplace. The communications standards employed in this invention optimize the efficiency of the creation and retrieval of the electronic documents, and, as such, the efficiency of the respective transactions.
In an embodiment of the invention, commercial transactions between trading partners are conducted via a computer network referred to as a transaction services network. The transaction services network is operated by a market maker interested in supporting an electronic marketplace, and the network provides services which facilitate the commercial transactions. The transactions are conducted by the exchange of electronic documents between trading partners. The transaction services network provides services for facilitating these transactions, such as matching trading partners to conduct certain types of transactions; routing documents between trading partners; providing information about trading partners; and establishing protocols to govern the transactions. The trading partners access the transaction services network via private servers which connect to the transaction services network via the Internet.
In embodiments of the invention, the documents supporting the transactions are written in an enhanced form of the Extensible Markup Language, XML. The XML standard is a markup language which allows document writers to define the tags which are used to express document instances. The ability to define the tags which are used in a document provides document writers with the facility to convey the semantic content of document instances by use of the tags embedded within the document instances, a feature which is unavailable in earlier generations of markup languages.
XML document instances are interpreted by the use of schemas which are cited in the document instances; the schemas define a collection of tags which are used to encode the document instances. As a schema may be used to interpret multiple document instances, the schema classifies a document type. The document types which are available in the invention support commercial transactions such as purchase orders, purchase order acknowledgements, order status checks, availability checks, price checks, invoices, and invoice acknowledgements. XML allows document writers to create schemas as necessary to support novel transactions.
Embodiments of the invention also support polymorphic XML documents. Polymorphism allows a document type to be explicitly defined as an extension of a pre-existing document type. Any document instance of the extending document type will also be a legal instance of the extended document type. As such, polymorphism allows the creation of an extension hierarchy of document types.
In an embodiment of the invention, the document instances contain identifiers for the schemas they cite. These identifiers are persistent and location independent. As such, the identifiers enable schemas to be identified irrespective of changes in the configuration of the underlying computer system. In some embodiments, the location identifiers are Uniform Resource Names (URNs).
In embodiments of the invention, URNs for schemas are resolved to location-specific Uniform Resource Identifiers, or URIs, which indicate the physical locations for the schemas. These physical locations may include HTTP sites, FTP sites, or file locations. In embodiments of the invention URNs are resolved to location-specific URIs by the use of a registry which maps URNs to the corresponding location specific URIs.
In embodiments of the invention, the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, version
3
(LDAP v
3
) is used to search the registry for the location-specific URI. This protocol provides an efficient tool for searching the registry. The URN registry is stored in an LDAP v
3
compliant directory server. The LDAP compliant directory server may be an x.
500
server. In some embodiments, the URN is converted to an LDAP URL. The LDAP URL is used as a key to search the LDAP directory for the location-specific URI. In an embodiment of the invention, the directory server is accessible to any trading partner server or other server on the network which interprets XML documents. The use of a central directory server eliminates the need for replicated repositories, thereby lending scalability and consistency to the URN registry. In an alternative embodiment, the registry may be federated, so that different nodes of the directory reside on separate servers, thereby allowing control over particular URNs to be vested with the parties responsible for the resources identified by the URNs.
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paten
Schwarzhoff Kelly
Venkat Ramshankar
Amsbury Wayne
Beffel, Jr. Ernest J.
Commerce One Operations, Inc.
Haynes Beffel & Wolfeld LLP
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