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- Science gateways enable researchers and students to use distributed 
scientific computing infrastructure (cyberinfrastructure) through Web browsers 
and Web-enabled desktop clients. This paper describes the use of the open 
source, open community Apache Rave project as the basis for developing science 
gateways. Building on Apache Shindig (for OpenSocial Gadgets) and Apache Wookie 
(for W3C Widgets), Rave provides an out-of-the box deployment that can be used 
to host reusable social Web components. Rave is based on the Spring MVC 
framework and so can also be extensively customized or extended with (for 
example) custom database back-ends and authentication modules. In this paper we 
consider Rave as a development platform for science gateways and discuss how 
the source code may be extended through three use cases that focus on gateway 
security requirements. A major consideration of this paper is how to design 
Rave as a development environment so that developers can make local 
customizations and extensions freely on both a rapidly changing code base 
(during Rave's initial development), and (later) between stable code bases 
during version upgrades. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of 
developing science gateways and other cyberinfrastructure software within the 
Apache Software Foundation and present its potential advantages.
+ Science gateways enable researchers and students to use distributed 
scientific computing infrastructure (cyberinfrastructure) through Web browsers 
and Web-enabled desktop clients. This describes the use of the open source, 
open community Apache Rave project as the basis for developing science 
gateways. Building on Apache Shindig (for OpenSocial Gadgets) and Apache Wookie 
(for W3C Widgets), Rave provides an out-of-the box deployment that can be used 
to host reusable social Web components. Rave is based on the Spring MVC 
framework and so can also be extensively customized or extended with (for 
example) custom database back-ends and authentication modules. In this 
extension we consider Rave as a development platform for science gateways and 
discuss how the source code may be extended through three use cases that focus 
on gateway security requirements. A major consideration of this paper is how to 
design Rave as a development environment so that developers can make local 
customizations and extensions freely on both a rapidly changing code base 
(during Rave's initial development), and (later) between stable code bases 
during version upgrades. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of 
developing science gateways and other cyberinfrastructure software within the 
Apache Software Foundation and present its potential advantages.
  

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