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Web Services Platform Architecture(c) SOAP, WSDL, WS-Policy, WS-Addressing, WS-BP[. .. ] More
Web Services Platform Architecture(c) SOAP, WSDL, WS-Policy, WS-Addressing, WS-BP[. .. ] More
ISBN: N/A
EAN: N/A
Year: 2005
Pages: 176
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Web Services Platform Architecture: SOAP, WSDL, WS-Policy, WS-Addressing, WS-BPEL, WS-Reliable Messaging, and More
Table of Contents
Copyright
Praise for Web Services Platform Architecture
Foreword by Steve Mills
Foreword by Ronald Schmelzer
Preface
Who Should Read this Book?
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Part 1: Introduction
Chapter 1. Service-Oriented Architectures
Section 1.1. Virtual Enterprises
Section 1.2. The Need for Loose Coupling
Section 1.3. What Is a Service?
Section 1.4. Service-Oriented Architecture
Section 1.5. Summary
Chapter 2. Background
Section 2.1. XML
Section 2.2. World Wide Web
Section 2.3. Summary
Chapter 3. Web Services: A Realization of SOA
Section 3.1. Scope of the Architecture
Section 3.2. Transport Services
Section 3.3. Messaging Services
Section 3.4. Service Description
Section 3.5. Discovery Services
Section 3.6. Quality of Service
Section 3.7. Service Components
Section 3.8. Composeability
Section 3.9. Interoperability
Section 3.10. REST
Section 3.11. Scope of Applicability of SOA and Web Service
Section 3.12. Summary
Part 2: Messaging Framework
Chapter 4. SOAP
Section 4.1. A Brief History of SOAP
Section 4.2. Architectural Concepts
Section 4.3. SOAP Attachments
Section 4.4. Differences Between SOAP 1.1 and 1.2
Section 4.5. Summary
Chapter 5. Web Services Addressing
Section 5.1. Addressing Web Services
Section 5.2. Architectural Concepts
Section 5.3. Example
Section 5.4. Future Directions
Section 5.5. Summary
Part 3: Describing Metadata
Chapter 6. Web Services Description Language (WSDL)
Section 6.1. Role of WSDL in WS-SOA
Section 6.2. History
Section 6.3. Architectural Concepts
Section 6.4. WSDL 1.1
Section 6.5. WSDL v2.0
Section 6.6. Future Directions
Section 6.7. Summary
Chapter 7. Web Services Policy
Section 7.1. Motivation for WS-Policy
Section 7.2. Architectural Concepts
Section 7.3. Future Directions
Section 7.4. Summary
Part 4: Discovering Metadata
Chapter 8. Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration (UDDI)
Section 8.1. Role of UDDI in SOA and the WS Stack
Section 8.2. Motivation for UDDI
Section 8.3. Architectural Concepts
Section 8.4. Future Directions
Section 8.5. Summary
Chapter 9. Web Services Metadata Exchange
Section 9.1. Architectural Concepts
Section 9.2. Future Directions
Section 9.3. Summary
Part 5: Reliable Interaction
Chapter 10. Reliable Messaging
Section 10.1. Motivation for Reliable Messaging
Section 10.2. Reliable Messaging Scenarios
Section 10.3. Architectural Concepts
Section 10.4. Processing Model
Section 10.5. Strengths and Weaknesses
Section 10.6. Examples
Section 10.7. Future Directions
Section 10.8. Summary
Chapter 11. Transactions
Section 11.1. Role of Transactions in Web ServicesSOA
Section 11.2. Motivation for Transactions
Section 11.3. Architectural Concepts
Section 11.4. Example
Section 11.5. Summary
Part 6: Security
Chapter 12. Security
Section 12.1. A Motivating Example: Travel Agent Web Services
Section 12.2. Roles of Security in Web Services
Section 12.3. Motivation for Using WS-Security
Section 12.4. End-to-End Security When Intermediaries Are Present
Section 12.5. Federating Multiple Security Domains
Section 12.6. A Brief History
Section 12.7. Architectural Concepts
Section 12.8. Processing Model
Section 12.9. Putting the Pieces Together
Section 12.10. Interoperability
Section 12.11. Future Directions
Section 12.12. Summary
Chapter 13. Advanced Security
Section 13.1. WS-Trust
Section 13.2. WS-SecureConversation
Section 13.3. WS-Privacy
Section 13.4. WS-Federation
Section 13.5. WS-Authorization
Section 13.6. Web Services Authorization Model
Section 13.7. Security and Policy
Section 13.8. Assertion Model
Section 13.9. Other Security Topics
Section 13.10. Non-Repudiation
Section 13.11. Summary
Part 7: Service Composition
Chapter 14. Modeling Business Processes: BPEL
Section 14.1. Motivation for BPEL
Section 14.2. Architectural Concepts
Section 14.3. BPEL Processing Model
Section 14.4. Future Directions
Section 14.5. Summary
Part 8: Case Studies
Chapter 15. Case Study: Car Parts Supply Chain
Section 15.1. Scenario Description
Section 15.2. Architecture
Section 15.3. Web Service Descriptions
Section 15.4. Messages and Protocols
Section 15.5. Summary
Chapter 16. Case Study: Ordering Service Packs
Section 16.1. Scenario Description
Section 16.2. Architecture
Section 16.3. Web Service Descriptions
Section 16.4. Messages and Protocols
Section 16.5. Summary
Part 9: Conclusion
Chapter 17. Futures
Section 17.1. Semantics
Section 17.2. Wiring
Section 17.3. Ordering Constraints
Section 17.4. Contracting
Section 17.5. Summary
Chapter 18. Conclusion
Section 18.1. A Summary of the Web Services Platform
Section 18.2. Standardization
Section 18.3. Competing Specifications
Section 18.4. Perspectives
Section 18.5. Building on the Core Platform
Section 18.6. Summary
Appendix AReferences
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Z
Web Services Platform Architecture(c) SOAP, WSDL, WS-Policy, WS-Addressing, WS-BP[. .. ] More
ISBN: N/A
EAN: N/A
Year: 2005
Pages: 176
BUY ON AMAZON
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