
Programming Web Services with SOAP
Description
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Content
- Intro
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Audience for This Book
- Structure of This Book
- Conventions
- Comments and Questions
- Acknowledgments
- James
- Doug
- Paul
- Introducing Web Services
- What Is a Web Service?
- Web Service Fundamentals
- What Web Services Look Like
- Intersection of Business and Programming
- Just-In-Time Integration
- The Web Service Technology Stack
- Beyond the Stack
- Discovery
- Description
- Packaging
- Transport
- Network
- Application
- The Peer Services Model
- Introducing SOAP
- SOAP and XML
- XML Messaging
- RPC and EDI
- The Need for a Standard Encoding
- SOAP Messages
- Envelopes
- RPC Messages
- The mustUnderstand Attribute
- Encoding Styles
- Versioning
- SOAP Faults
- Standard SOAP Fault Codes
- MustUnderstand Faults
- Custom Faults
- The SOAP Message Exchange Model
- Message Paths and Actors
- The SOAP Routing Protocol
- Using SOAP for RPC-Style Web Services
- Invoking Methods
- Returning Responses
- Reporting Errors
- SOAP's Data Encoding
- Understanding the Terminology
- XML Schemas and xsi:type
- SOAP Data Types
- Multiple References in XML-Encoded Data
- Structs, Arrays, and Other Compound Types
- Partially Transmitted Arrays and Sparse Arrays
- Null Accessors
- SOAP Transports
- SOAP over HTTP
- Contentious Issues
- Writing SOAP Web Services
- Web Services Anatomy 101
- SOAP Implementations and Toolkits
- Handling SOAP Messages
- Deploying Web Services
- Creating Web Services in Perl with SOAP::Lite
- Installing SOAP::Lite
- The Hello Server
- The Hello Client
- A Visual Basic Client
- Changing Transports
- Creating Web Services in Java with Apache SOAP
- Installing Apache SOAP
- The Hello Server
- Deployment Descriptor
- The Hello Client
- The TCPTunnelGui Tool
- Creating Web Services In .NET
- Installing .NET
- Introducing .NET
- Saying Hello
- Deploying the Service
- Invoking the Service Using SOAP
- Interoperability Issues
- The Publisher Web Service
- Overview
- Publisher Service Security
- The Publisher Operations
- The Publisher Server
- The Preamble
- Data Tables
- Utility Functions
- Register a New User
- Modify User Information
- User Login
- Posting an Item
- Removing Items
- Browsing
- Search
- Deploying the Publisher Service
- The Java Shell Client
- The Authentication Class
- The Client Class
- Preamble
- Authentication
- User login
- Wrappers to call the remote operations
- The main routine
- Deploying the Client
- Describing a SOAP Service
- Describing Web Services
- A Quick Example
- Anatomy of a Service Description
- Defining Data Types and Structures with XML Schemas
- Using XML Schemas in WSDL
- Describing the Web Service Interface
- Describing the Web Service Implementation
- Binding Web Service Interfaces
- Describing the Location of a Web Service
- Understanding Messaging Patterns
- Single-Message Exchange
- Multiple-Message Exchange
- Complex Multiple-Message Exchanges
- Intermediaries
- Discovering SOAP Services
- The UDDI Registry
- Business Entity
- Business Services
- Binding Templates
- TModels
- Federated UDDI Registries
- Private UDDI Registries
- The UDDI Interfaces
- The Publisher Interface
- The Inquiry Interface
- Using UDDI to Publish Services
- Registration Program
- How to Register
- The SOAP Envelope for the Registration
- Other Issues
- Using UDDI to Locate Services
- Generating UDDI from WSDL
- Interface Description
- Implementation Description
- Registering
- Using UDDI and WSDL Together
- The Web Service Inspection Language (WS-Inspection)
- WS-Inspection Syntax
- Web Services in Action
- The CodeShare Service Network
- Overview
- Prerequisites
- Fixing the bug in Apache SOAP 2.2
- Compiling Apache SOAP
- The Code Share Index
- Web Services Security
- The Security Assertions Markup Language (SAML)
- Definitions and Descriptions
- The Owner Interface
- WSDL port type definition
- Data types
- Messages
- Port type
- Protocol binding
- The Client Interface
- CodeShare login operation
- The Login Verification Interface
- The Master Index Interface
- Implementing the CodeShare Server
- The Master Index Service
- Operations
- Deployment
- The Owner Service
- The Client Service
- Creating SAML assertions
- Java keystores
- Signing the SAML assertion
- The login operation
- The Verification Service
- Implementing the CodeShare Owner
- The Owner Module
- The Server Daemon
- Implementing the CodeShare Client
- Seeing It in Action
- What's Missing from This Picture?
- Where Is UDDI?
- Presence and Asynchronous Messaging
- Developing CodeShare
- Web Services Security
- What Is a "Secure" Web Service?
- Authentication
- Privacy
- Microsoft Passport, Version 1.x and 2.x
- Drawbacks
- Microsoft Passport, Version 3.x
- Overview of Kerberos
- Give Me Liberty or Give Me .
- A Magic Carpet
- The Need for Standards
- XML Digital Signatures and Encryption
- The Future of Web Services
- The Future of Web Development
- Web Services and Existing Technologies
- The Future of SOAP
- The Future of WSDL
- Missing Pieces
- An Alternative to WSDL
- Standard Extensions
- The Future of UDDI
- Problems with UDDI
- Web Services Battlegrounds
- Development Tools
- Killer Services
- Lucrative Marketplaces
- The Enterprise
- Technologies
- Agents
- Quality of Service
- Privacy
- Security
- Trust Management
- Online Contracts
- Reliable Messaging
- Transactions
- Licensing and Accounting Services
- Web Services Rollout
- Web Service Standardization
- Packaging Protocols
- Description Protocols
- Discovery Protocols
- Security Protocols
- Transport Protocols
- Routing and Workflow
- Programming Languages/Platforms
- XML Schema Basics
- Simple and Complex Types
- Some Examples
- Simple Types
- Complex Types
- XML Spy
- Code Listings
- Hello World in Perl
- Hello World Client in Visual Basic
- Hello World over Jabber
- Hello World in Java
- Hello, World in C# on .NET
- Publisher Service
- SAML Generation
- Codeshare
- Index
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