Web service development with Java
News With acronyms like XML, UDDI, WSDL, and SOAP becoming commonplace. As I stated earlier, chapters are devoted to SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI. Individual chapters focus on the various Web service technologies (with a Java spin): SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI.
[May 16, 2002, 22:53]
Practical examples for establishing Web service security in .NET
News Let's explore programmatic Web service security using Visual Studio .NET to implement a custom, stateful SOAP Header to authenticate a consumer before allowing a method to execute. The SecurityContext class extends the SoapHeader class, which tells...
[May 6, 2003, 13:08]
Debug SOAP apps
News For example, to monitor the messages to and from the Google Web service, you can use the following command: java org.apache.soap.util.net.TcpTunnelGui 88 api.google.com 80 For example, if you are running Tomcat on port 8080, then you can start the...
[January 30, 2003, 14:33]
iTKO LISA WS-Testing
Downloads LISA runs on any client and supports Java and .NET and any other SOAP-compliant web services.Since LISA WS-Testing test cases and test runs are saved as XML files, you can incorporate them easily into your process as attachments to groupware, SCM...
[December 11, 2006, 6:00]
Aesthetics versus practicality
News SOAP versus .Net Remoting Let's look at a key example of implementation cost that is a common discussion point for .Net architects -- using SOAP or using .Net Remoting. Although they certainly agree that the use of SOAP via HTTP over a standard IP...
[February 20, 2003, 10:31]
Build next-generation applications now
News But .Net and upcoming versions of the Java Development Kit (JDK) will have native support for SOAP as the default object invocation protocol. That's what SOAP provides. The second, and somewhat related trend, is that development platforms are...
[June 6, 2002, 13:33]
OpenLink Virtuoso Universal Server (Personal Edition)
Downloads Service Invocation Endpoints via HTTP/WebDAV based virtual directory and multi-homing functionality that provides endpoints for SOAP-, WS-Security-, WSDL-, and UDDI-compliant interactions with composite services.
[February 12, 2008, 6:00]
Top 10 reasons to migrate to .Net
News Standards integration: XML, SOAP, and more SOAP is an XML-based protocol that communicates with Web services. The integration of SOAP allows for easy programmatic access by any client, whether or not that client is running a Microsoft operating...
[November 19, 2002, 11:50]
Microsoft plans new Web services push
News Visual Studio.Net, Microsoft's development tool package, will be updated later this year to allow developers to add digital signature support and SOAP message encryption; TrustBridge will use a Web services standard called the Simple Object Access...
[June 6, 2002, 9:42]
Java pioneer brings Web services to Europe
News Systinet is attempting to distance itself from standards arguments: "WASP is recommended by Microsoft as the bridge between .Net and Java," said Stanek, who feels that the distance between .Net and J2EE is mainly due to implementation, not the...
[April 2, 2003, 17:39]
Microsoft .Net for Linux?
News According to the latest SEC filing, these services include web services that support the XML format defined by the WWW Consortium (W3C), the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) as defined by the W3C, the Web Services Description Language (WSDL...
[October 13, 2000, 9:25]
Certify your XML knowledge with a Certified Developer's exam
News These include SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI. You should know that SOAP is the transport, WSDL is used for definition, and UDDI serves as a directory. XML certification is just as important as other certifications like .NET, Oracle, or Java.
[May 17, 2002, 15:09]
Hard choices ahead for developers
News In doing so, the company will be able to argue that the specs are built on XML and SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol), two of the emerging standards behind the shift to Web services. It's not at all clear that SOAP is necessarily better than XML...
[November 23, 2001, 16:01]
Software giants unite for Web services
News These include XML (Extensible Markup Language), a standard for data exchange and allows competing technologies to communicate and work together; Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), which describes how Web services communicate over the Internet...
[February 6, 2002, 11:38]
.NET: A guide for managers
News Also, .NET technology itself is based on XML Web services, which use standard protocols such as SOAP and XML data to connect applications and Web services. SOAP: The Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) is basically there for information exchange.
[May 2, 2003, 13:18]
.Net attributes are more than decoration
News The WebService and WebMethod attributes signal the compiler that these attributes should be accessible using the SOAP protocol. Among the most confusing and misunderstood elements of the .Net framework are the purpose and uses of attributes.
[July 5, 2002, 20:37]
Windows software by any other name?
News SOAP, which specifies how XML data is transferred over the Web, is key to Microsoft's software-as-a-service strategy, called Microsoft .Net. XML Protocol, or XP, also happens to be the Worldwide Web Consortium's name for SOAP (Simple Object Access...
[February 2, 2001, 16:00]
Prepare yourself for the Internet-based application revolution
News The alphabet soup of Web services has been covered pretty extensively around the Web, so there's no need to go into an in-depth examination of XML or Soap here, but you can read up on them at many of the locations listed in the Resources section...
[June 27, 2003, 10:21]
Implementing XML Key Management Services Using ASP.NET
Downloads This sample code shows how to build a Microsoft ASP.NET Web Service conforming to a SOAP message-based interface specification. Specifically, an interface defined by a Web Services Description Language (WSDL) document describing the SOAP messages...
[August 31, 2007, 10:08]
A Thin-Client Distributed Architecture Using XML and SOAP
White Papers SOAP underlies much of Microsoft's ".NET" initiative. SOAP standards and tools are emerging rapidly. The SOAP 1.1 standard was submitted to the World Wide Web Consortium in May 2000. This paper evaluates the capabilities and limitations of SOAP today.
[January 17, 2005, 2:00]



