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XML, Web Services, and the Data Revolution | ||
By Frank P. Coyle | ||
Publisher | : Addison Wesley | |
Pub Date | : March 05, 2002 | |
ISBN | : 0-201-77641-3 | |
Pages | : 400 | |
XML, Web Services, and the Data Revolution presents a revealing view of XML that places this emerging technology in the context of the ongoing Web revolution. Written for business and technical professionals, this book reveals the true value of XML for distributed information systems, explaining how it is transforming the way organizations manage data and build software systems, and the opportunities it offers for those organizations that understand its significance and impact.
This book places XML at the heart of a paradigm shift that is bridging the gap between traditional tightly coupled proprietary networks (DCOM, CORBA) and the dynamic, loosely- coupled , data-driven Web. The author explains how XML's simple rules for defining data vocabularies and protocols have opened up new possibilities for server to server interaction in the form of Web services for dynamic discovery and interaction. He goes on to discuss how frameworks such as .NET and J2EE(TM) provide important messaging, transaction, and security services for leveraging Web services in enterprise computing. The book also discusses how XML and Web services reflect a fundamental shift in software construction from monolithic applications to software based on the composition of simple parts . In addition, the book showcases XML at work in a wide array of applications, and explores how major software organizations have responded to the changes brought about by XML-based technology.
Specific topics include:
XML and its role in the expanding enterprise
The XML family of technologies including:
CSS, XFORMS, XHTML, and VoiceXML presentation technologies
DTDs and XML Schema technologies for structure and typing
XSLT, XPATH, and XQUERY technologies for manipulating XML
The three waves of XML in practice:
Vertical industry-specific data vocabularies
Horizontal industry vocabularies (SVG, SMIL, EJB descriptors)
XML protocols (XML-RPC, SOAP)
UDDI and WDSL (Web Services Definition Language)
XML security, including XML Encryption, XML Signature, and XML
Key Management Specification
How .NET and J2EE(TM) fulfill the need for transactions and security for Web services
ebXML and process-based Web interaction
A new role for mainframe-based legacy applications
A future where Web services meets P2P (peer-to-peer) computing
Containing both technical details and a broader perspective, XML, Web Services, and the Data Revolution provides the insight organizations must have to understand and harness this powerful technology for a successful venture into the evolving, Web-based enterprise computing environment.