This special issue of Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience contains selected high-quality papers from the First International Workshop on Workflow Systems in Grid Environments (WSGE2006) which was sponsored by Hunan University of Science and Technology in China and held in the university on 23 October 2006 [1]. The WSGE workshop series aims to provide an international forum for the presentation and discussion of research and development trends to support workflow in Grid environments. WSGE2006 attracted a number of international attendants. A keynote speech entitled ‘Time Management in Workflow Systems’ was delivered by Professor Yunshun Fan from Tsinghua University in China. A panel discussion was also part of this event, comparing ‘Business Workflow’ vs ‘Grid Workflow’. One of the conclusions reached by the panel members was that a Grid workflow is not significant in any way compared to other such approaches, with the key additional aspects being the computation and data resources used (over a Grid) to enact the workflow. Grid workflow has been under investigation for several years [2–6]. In particular, GGF (Global Grid Forum) 10 was focused on it in 2004. GGF 10 was then concluded as a special issue in Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience. The title of the special issue is ‘Workflow in Grid Systems’ [7,8] and it was edited by Professor Geoffrey C. Fox and Professor Dennis Gannon from Indiana University in U.S.A. This WSGE2006 special issue is a follow-up of the GGF 10 special issue. Many existing research and development efforts have focused on the functional issues of Grid workflow, such as support for modelling languages or Grid workflow enactment engines [2,4–6]. Gradually, more and more attention is being paid to non-functional issues such as QoS (Quality of Service), time management, or verification and validation [9–12]. Accordingly, this special issue has a focus on the non-functional issues. This special issue contains six papers based on those that were presented at WSGE2006. They are listed as [13–18]. Particular attention was paid to the non-functional issues. Besides, research problems must be analysed systematically. For specific approaches or models, evaluation must be presented. Based on these, the six papers were selected and also reviewed thoroughly. They are briefed as follows. Zheng et al. [13] propose an enhanced workflow simulation model supporting the simulation of event-based interaction between composed (Grid) services. Using the proposed approach, the behaviour between composed services can be simulated and in particular evaluation of QoS for
[1]
Jinjun Chen,et al.
A taxonomy of grid workflow verification and validation
,
2008,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[2]
Rajkumar Buyya,et al.
Cost-based scheduling of scientific workflow applications on utility grids
,
2005,
First International Conference on e-Science and Grid Computing (e-Science'05).
[3]
David Abramson,et al.
An Atmospheric Sciences Workflow and Its Implementation with Web Services
,
2004,
International Conference on Computational Science.
[4]
Thomas Fahringer,et al.
A-GWL: Abstract Grid Workflow Language
,
2004,
International Conference on Computational Science.
[5]
Kaizar Amin,et al.
Analysis and Provision of QoS for Distributed Grid Applications
,
2004,
Journal of Grid Computing.
[6]
Dieter Cybok,et al.
A Grid workflow infrastructure
,
2006,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[7]
Adam Arbree,et al.
Mapping Abstract Complex Workflows onto Grid Environments
,
2003,
Journal of Grid Computing.
[8]
Chunjie Zhou,et al.
WdCM: a workday calendar model for workflows in service grid environments
,
2008,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[9]
Ivona Brandic,et al.
Specification, planning, and execution of QoS‐aware Grid workflows within the Amadeus environment
,
2008,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[10]
Jinjun Chen,et al.
Multiple states based temporal consistency for dynamic verification of fixed‐time constraints in Grid workflow systems
,
2007,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[11]
Wei Tan,et al.
Towards workflow simulation in service‐oriented architecture: an event‐based approach
,
2008,
Concurr. Comput. Pract. Exp..
[12]
Ivona Brandic,et al.
Towards Quality of Service Support for Grid Workflows
,
2005,
EGC.
[13]
Rajkumar Buyya,et al.
A taxonomy of scientific workflow systems for grid computing
,
2005,
SGMD.