SOA-14: Web Services Standards Update - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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SOA-14: Web Services Standards Update

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Progress Exchange 2005 5 - 8 June, 2005 Orlando, Florida USA – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOA-14: Web Services Standards Update


1
SOA-14 Web Services Standards Update
  • Dave Chappell
  • Vice President Chief Technology Evangelist,
    Sonic Software

2
Our Goals Today
  • Understand whats so hip about standards
  • ...and also their limitations
  • Summarize whats up in the Web Services standards
    space
  • ...and why WS standards are interesting
  • Adopt a hopeful but realistic picture of WS
    interoperability and evolution

3
Some Familiar Standards
  • Power
  • Phone lines
  • Railroads
  • Currency
  • etc...

4
Standards Why the Big Deal?
  • Standards allow for independently developed (over
    time and space) components to interoperate
  • Open standards discourage monopolization
  • Anyone can implement (and even affect) the
    standard
  • Standards bodies (govts, IETF, W3C, etc)
    shared control
  • Standards reduce costs of development
    maintenance
  • Shared skills, commoditized tools

5
Benefits of Using Software Standards
  • Categories
  • API standards (Java, .NET, open-source)
  • Protocols (TCP, HTTP, SOAP)
  • Data Formats (XML, ASN.1, WSDL, UBL)
  • Benefits
  • Leveraging common developer skills
  • Interoperability with more partners
  • Insulation from implementation changes
  • Pluggability (vendor independence evolution)
  • Validation / tool support

6
Whats So Special About Web Services
  • Web Services Application Interoperability
  • Havent we been here before? DCE, CORBA....
  • Everyone actually seems to support the bottom
    layers!
  • SOAP / WSDL interop is real today
  • Soapbuilders, WS-I de jure standardization
  • Dont need the whole stack in order to go ahead
  • An orthogonally developed set of composable specs
  • Extensibility built in at each layer (protocol,
    metadata)
  • This hasnt really been tried before!
  • There are tradeoffs....

7
Composability
  • Composition is the Elephant in the Room for WS
  • Encryption Compression ???
  • For composability to work, we need a common
    language
  • Forays into this area
  • SOAP Extensibility Model
  • WSDL Features and Properties
  • WS-Policy

8
A Whirlwind Tour of the WS Stack
  • Goal is to understand what each spec means and
    where its at in its development
  • Not deep technical details!

9
The Four Pillars of Web Services
  • SOAP
  • WSDL
  • Policy
  • Addressing

10
XML The Zeroth Pillar
  • Common data representation (Infoset
    Serialization)
  • Fairly simple (simpler than SGML)
  • Human readable
  • Lots of tool support
  • XML Schema
  • Validation and typing
  • Related XPath, XSLT, XQuery, XLink, XInclude
  • XML 1.0 and Schema 1.0 are W3C Recommendations

11
SOAP
  • Messaging Envelope
  • Extensibility framework
  • Vertical headers
  • Horizontal intermediaries

ltEnvelopegt
ltHeadergt
ltEncrypted MustUnderstandtrue/gt
Partner
Notary
ltBodygt
Encrypted Purchase Order
Purchase Order
SOAP Message
12
SOAP, cont.
  • Faults, Versioning, RPC, Encoding
  • SOAP 1.1 is a W3C Note
  • SOAP 1.2 is a W3C Recommendation
  • Binding Framework
  • Features Properties
  • Modules
  • Processing model clarifications
  • Infoset-based
  • Cleaner fault model
  • NotUnderstood header

13
WSDL
  • Web Service Description Language
  • IDL for Web Services
  • WSDL 1.1 is a W3C Note
  • WSDL 2.0 is in Last Call at W3C
  • Simpler (no ltpartgts)
  • Interface inheritance/extension
  • Single Interface per Service
  • SOAP 1.2 / MTOM support
  • Flexible MEPs

14
policy More Metadata, Please!
  • policy allows expressions of assertions
  • You MUST...
  • I SUPPORT...
  • Rules for composition, comparison
  • WSDL Features Properties / SOAP Modules
  • WS-Policy (MS/IBM/BEA/SAP/Sonic/Verisign)
  • XAML
  • WS-Policy will eventually be submitted to a
    standards body (likely W3C)
  • No timeline yet

15
WS-Addressing
  • WSA is the machinery behind asynchronous SOAP
  • Building blocks for complex MEPs (callback,
    routing)
  • Defines Endpoint References, Addressing Headers
  • ltTogt, ltFromgt, ltMessageIDgt, ltReplyTogt, ltFaultTogt
  • Abstract spec, binding to SOAP
  • WS-Addressing is in the W3C, accelerated schedule
  • Last Call in March?

16
The Four Pillars
  • SOAP
  • WSDL
  • Policy
  • Addressing
  • When these foundational pieces are standard, the
    WS extensibility/agreement mechanisms kick in and
    allow us to either interoperate or fail
    gracefully.
  • On the wire, and at design/metadata time

17
MTOM XOP
  • Unified, infoset-based approach to binary
    attachments
  • Helps with programming model
  • Eases security/encryption
  • Abstract Transmission Optimization Feature
  • XML-binary Optimized Packaging
  • Not tied to SOAP
  • HTTP Transmission Optimization Feature
  • Lots of support
  • MTOM XOP are W3C Recommendations (Jan 2005)

18
WS-Security
  • Rules for putting security principals,
    certificates, and encryption info into SOAP
    messages
  • End-to-end security
  • Token Profiles
  • Username/password, X.509, SAML, REL
  • WS-Security is an OASIS Standard
  • but WS-SecurityPolicy is not...
  • so theres no standard way to do this in WSDL yet!

19
WS-Reliab
  • Reliable messaging comes in two flavors,
    WS-Reliability (OASIS) and WS-ReliableMessaging
    (MS/IBM)
  • WS-Reliability is an OASIS Standard
  • WS-ReliableMessaging has been submitted to OASIS
    as WS-RX TC
  • Will MS/IBM implement WSReliability? Doubtful.
  • OK to have two? (Sonic a member of both)

20
WS-Eventing / WS-Notification
  • Patterns for asynchronous pub/sub WS interactions
  • Subscribe this EPR to receive future events
  • Notification includes hierarchical Topic Spaces
  • Both make heavy use of WS-Addressing
  • Eventing is an MS/TIBCO/BEA spec
  • Notification is in OASIS Technical Committee
  • Merging base specs seems obvious
  • but WSNs dependence on WSRF makes that a bit
    challenging

21
Working up the stack Process Models
  • Process modeling linked series of WSDL
    operations and logic
  • Faults / compensation
  • BPEL Based around a single nodes viewpoint
  • Choreography Omniscient Observer viewpoint.

22
Other Specs
  • UDDI (OASIS)
  • WS-Context / CAF (OASIS)
  • WS-Coordination / Transactions (MS/IBM)
  • WS-ResourceFramework (OASIS)
  • WS-Distributed Management (OASIS)
  • etc... (too many to discuss here)

23
So How are we Doing?
  • Basic interop is there now
  • Yee ha!!
  • Important specs coming togetherbut
  • Composability story isnt there yet
  • We need to be writing extensions with hooks /
    abstraction
  • Wheres Policy?
  • What about competing specs?
  • We should be OK with two or more of some layers

24
Closing Thoughts
  • Adopt SOAP/WSDL now
  • Really means adopt SOA now modular,
    message-based interfaces
  • Useful no matter what else happens
  • More stuff will settle while you start
  • GET INVOLVED if you hope to use this stuff
  • Push on your vendors to ensure theyre on top of
    it
  • Join groups yourself
  • Platforms (.NET, Java, Axis, etc) support
    composibility extensions
  • pick a good model, and ask questions
  • Standards arent a panacea
  • but they make some great platforms interoperable

25
?
Q A
26
Thank you for your time!
27
(No Transcript)
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