Dewey Decimal005.2/76
Table Of Content(NOTE: Each chapter concludes with a Summary, Quiz, and Exercises.) Preface. Introduction. 1. Web Services. What is a Web Service? The Evolution of Software Services. SOAP. WSDL. UDDI. Web Services Adoption. Web Services in Action. Challenges. A Science Fiction Kind of Future? 2. Hands-On Web Services. Your First Web Service. Sniffing SOAP. Browsing Web Services. Aggregation. Exchanging XML Documents. 3. Web Services Description Language (WSDL). The Anatomy of WSDL. Browsing Third-Party Web Services. Consuming Third-Party Web Services. Modularizing WSDL. 4. Mapping Between Native Data Structures and XML. Overview. Primitives. Arrays. User-Defined Types. Any Type. Object Graphs. User-Defined Mappings. Custom Types. 5. Security. HTTPS. HTTP Basic Authentication. SOAP Security Extensions. 6. Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI). Scenarios. Entities. The UDDI API. UDDI Registries. Inquiring. Publishing. The Future of UDDI. 7. J2EE Web Services. Overview. Installing J2EE. Publishing J2EE Web Services. Consuming J2EE Web Services. Consuming Web Services from J2EE. 8. .NET Web Services. Overview. Installing .NET. Publishing .NET Web Services. Consuming .NET Web Services. Consuming Web Services from .NET. Complex Data Types and .NET. 9. Multiplatform Interoperability. Overview. The .NET Credit Check Service. The J2EE Shipping Service. The GLUE Purchasing Service. The GLUE Client. Using UDDI. 10. P2P and the Future of Web Services. The Trend Toward Decentralization. Peer-to-Peer Computing. Peer-To-Peer Web Services. An Electric Mind. Promising Insights. Beyond P2P. Epilogue. Appendix. Installing GLUE and the Examples. Resources. Index.
SynopsisThis book is a complete guide to the techniques and technologies used to deliver Web services. It is thoroughly practical, offers extensive examples, presents in-depth coverage of key standards, and focuses on maximizing interoperability., This is a guide to understanding and building Web services, covering all the main areas such as SOAP, CORBA, COM, and UDDI. It includes a mini-project constructed using Java, EJB and Microsoft.NET to illustrate the interoperable nature of Web services, and looks at peer-to-peer technology.
LC Classification NumberTK5105.888.G58 2002