Windows Workflow... Foundation (WF) is a Microsoft technology for defining, executing, and managing workflows. This technology was first released in November 2006 as a part of .NET Framework 3.0.
Workflows, like traditional programs, allow you to coordinate work but have some important differences.
Workflows can handle long running work by persisting to a durable store, such as a database, when idle and loading again once there is work to do
An instance of a workflow can be modified dynamically while running in the event that new conditions require the workflow to behave differently than it did when it was created
Workflows are a declarative way of writing programs by linking together pre-defined activities rather than an imperative programming model of writing lines of code
Workflows allow you to declare business rules that are separated from your code making it easier for you to modify them in the future
Workflows support different styles of systems with sequential and state machine workflows
Authoring Workflows
A new XML-based language called XAML is commonly used for declaring the structure of a workflow. However, the workflow may also be expressed in code using any .NET-targeted language (VB.NET, C#, C++/CLI, etc.).
WF provides .NET developers with the ability to separate the logic of their application from the underlying execution components, thus providing a clearer, more manageable representation of the application. This approach lends credence to the growing process-driven application methodology which aims to separate an application's logical flow from its executable components at an enterprise level.
Workflows comprise 'activities'. Developers can write their own domain-specific activities and then use them in workflows. WF also provides a set of general-purpose 'activities' that cover several control flow constructs.
Windows Workflow Foundation is supported by a companion set of extensions to Visual Studio 2005. These extensions contain a visual workflow designer which allows users to design workflows, a visual debugger which enables the users to debug the workflow designed, and a project system which enables the user to compile their workflows inside Visual Studio 2005. In Visual Studio 2008 WF functionality is included.
Moving data through Workflows
Activities that require or provide data can use properties to expose them, and enable the Workflow author to bind them to the containing workflow by declaring 'dependencies'.
Hosting Workflows
The .NET Framework 3.0 "workflow runtime" provides common facilities for running and managing the workflows and can be hosted in any CLR application domain, be it a Windows Service, a Console, GUI or Web Application.
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The host can provide services like serialization for the runtime to use when needed. It can also hook up to workflow instance's events such as their becoming idle or stopping.
Communicating with Workflows
WF provides several ways to communicate with a running instance of a Workflow:
A Windows Communication Foundation approach to workflow communication was added in .NET Framework 3.5. Workflows which include a ReceiveActivity expose a selected interface method as a WCF service. This could allow external code to, for example, make a Web Services call to a running workflow instance. WF provides infrastructure to ensure that if a WCF call is made to a workflow instance that is idle (i.e. waiting for some external event like a WCF call or a timer event), then the instance will be loaded from storage into memory so that the message can be delivered. Workflows which include a SendActivity are, in turn, able to call external services via WCF.
When a workflow instance is created, the host application can provide information in Dictionary objects. Similarly, the Workflow can pass the results of the workflow to the Host application through a Dictionary Object.
The Workflow foundation also allows the Workflow to update the Host application of the progress of the workflow. This is done by raising events in the Workflow to which the host application will subscribe.
Types of Workflows
Using the WF foundation, three different types of Workflow can be created:
Sequential Workflow (Typically Flow Chart based, progresses from one stage to next and does not step back)
State Machine Workflow (Progress from 'State' to 'State', these workflows are more complex and return to a previous point if required)
Rules-driven Workflow (Implemented based on Sequential/StateMachine workflow. The rules dictate the progress of the workflow)
Products Using Workflow Foundation
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server from the 2007 release. Versions prior to 2007 did not use WF.
Microsoft Speech Server from the 2007 release. Versions prior to 2007 did not use WF.
Microsoft Dynamics CRM from the 4.0 release. Versions prior to 4.0 did not use WF.
Microsoft BizTalk from the 2006 release. Versions prior to 2006 did not use WF.
WF Related project types in Visual Studio 2008
empty workflow project
sequential workflow library
sharepoint 2007 state machine workflow
state machine workflow library
sequential workflow console application
sharepoint 2007 sequential workflow
state machine workflow console application
workflow activity library
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