DFC standard specifications
DFC Use Cases
DFC Use Cases
  • Introduction
  • Sources and licences
  • Contact and partners
  • Semantic specifications
    • Business ontology
    • Product ontology
    • Technical ontology
  • Technical specifications
    • Protocols specifications
    • Decentralized identifier matching reference system
    • Specifics API
    • Authentication strategy
    • Architecture representations
  • Prototype specifications
  • 🚧Solid client protocol
  • 🚧Connector
    • Model specifications
    • Semantizer specifications
    • Connector specifications
  • Use Cases
    • Enterprise Use Cases
    • Product Use Cases
      • Product Transformations
      • CSA Use Cases
    • Orders
    • Order Use Cases
      • Wholesale Order Processing
    • Glossary of terms
  • Appendixes
    • Appendix 1. General decisions
      • Federation vs Syndication
      • Stateless or stateful?
      • Service granularity
      • Directionality
      • Identification and authentication
      • Centralized or decentralized data storage
      • Metadata repository
    • Appendix 2. Technical decisions
      • Libraries to develop in semantic
      • Transition strategy fron current to ideal
      • Service standard
      • Serialization
      • Transport layer
      • Multi- or single-resource requests?
      • Right delegation between platforms and DFC
      • Data validity and inferences
    • Appendix 3. Practical Examples
      • Version 1.9
      • Version 1.8.2
      • version 1.7.4
      • version 1.7.3
      • version 1.7.1
      • version 1.7
      • version 1.6.2
      • version 1.6.1
      • version 1.6
      • version 1.5.1
      • version 1.5
      • version 1.3
      • version 1.2
  • Contributing
    • Procedures
      • Updates to the ontology
        • Patch releases procedure
        • Minor releases procedure
        • Major releases procedure
      • Taxonomy enrichment
        • Taxonomy updates
    • Platform Notifcations
  • Platform Register
    • Platform Register
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  1. Appendixes
  2. Appendix 1. General decisions

Federation vs Syndication

The nuance between syndication and federation applies to all the notions where several servers jointly concur to achieve an objective.

  • Federation = all servers respect the same protocol. This facilitates interaction between the actors of the federation. But if all aspects of the protocol are federated (including identification and authentication and admit a single reference system for business subject). It can make access to the federation more implacable because to enter it, All must implement the same protocol and often migrate to common servers (authentification, identification référence system).

  • Syndication = each actor has his own protocol, which is translated into the common protocol to allow interaction. Moving the complexity to the integration layer.

  • Mixed = The architecture may also be an hybrid : using common protocols (syntax, API, ontology) and centralized authentification but not centralized reference system.

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Last updated 10 months ago

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