Drawing from the XML & web services integration framework (XWIF) he developed, Erl describes strategies for integrating XML and web services technology into single application environments, and introduces service-oriented architectures, based on encapsulating application logic within services that i
Service-Oriented Architecture: A Field Guide to Integrating XML and Web Services
โ Scribed by Thomas Erl
- Publisher
- Prentice Hall PTR
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 560
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Why this guide is important; The hammer and XML; XML and Web services; Web Services and Service-Oriented Architecture; Service-Oriented Architecture and the hammer; The hammer and you; The XML & Web Services Integration Framework (XWIF);Hoe this guide is organized: Pat I:The technical Landscape; Part II: Integrating technology; Part III: Integrating applications; Patr IV: Integrating the enterprise; www.soabooks.com; Contact the author; Introduction to XML technologies; Extensible Markup Language (XML); Document Type Definitions (DTD); XML Schema Definition Language (XSD); Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT); XML Query Language (XQuery); XML Path Language (XPath);Introduction to Web services technologies; Web services and the service-oriented architecture(SOA); Web Services Descritption Language (WSDL); Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP); Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration (UDDI); Introduction ti secind-gerenation(WS-*) Web services technologies; Second-generation Web services and the service-oriented enterprise(SOE); WS-Coordination and WS- Transaction; Business Process Execution Language for Web SErvices (BPEL4WS); WS-Security and the Web services security specifications; WS-ReliableMessaging; WS-Policy; WS-Attachments; Integrating XML into appilcations; Strategies for integrating XML data representation; Integrating Web Services into applications; Integrating XML and databases; The mechanucs of application integration; Service-oriented architectures for legacy integration; Service-Oriented architectures for enterprise integration; Service-oriented integration strategies; Thirty Best practices for integrating XML; Thirty best practices dor integrating Web services; Building the service-oriented enterprise(SOE).
โฆ Table of Contents
Copyright
About Prentice Hall Professional Technical Reference
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction
Section 1.1. Why this guide is important
Section 1.2. The XML & Web Services Integration Framework (XWIF)
Section 1.3. How this guide is organized
Section 1.4. www.serviceoriented.ws
Section 1.5. Contact the author
Part I. The technical landscape
Chapter 2. Introduction to XML technologies
Section 2.1. Extensible Markup Language (XML)
Section 2.2. Document Type Definitions (DTD)
Section 2.3. XML Schema Definition Language (XSD)
Section 2.4. Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT)
Section 2.5. XML Query Language (XQuery)
Section 2.6. XML Path Language (XPath)
Chapter 3. Introduction to Web services technologies
Section 3.1. Web services and the service-oriented architecture (SOA)
Section 3.2. Web Services Definition Language (WSDL)
Section 3.3. Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)
Section 3.4. Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration (UDDI)
Chapter 4. Introduction to second-generation (WS-*) Web services technologies
Section 4.1. Second-generation Web services and the service-oriented enterprise (SOE)
Section 4.2. WS-Coordination and WS-Transaction
Section 4.3. Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL4WS)
Section 4.4. WS-Security and the Web services security specifications
Section 4.5. WS-ReliableMessaging
Section 4.6. WS-Policy
Section 4.7. WS-Attachments
Part II. Integrating technology
Chapter 5. Integrating XML into applications
Section 5.1. Strategies for integrating XML data representation
Section 5.2. Strategies for integrating XML data validation
Section 5.3. Strategies for integrating XML schema administration
Section 5.4. Strategies for integrating XML transformation
Section 5.5. Strategies for integrating XML data querying
Chapter 6. Integrating Web services into applications
Section 6.1. Service models
Section 6.2. Modeling service-oriented component classes and Web service interfaces
Section 6.3. Strategies for integrating service-oriented encapsulation
Section 6.4. Strategies for integrating service assemblies
Section 6.5. Strategies for enhancing service functionality
Section 6.6. Strategies for integrating SOAP messaging
Chapter 7. Integrating XML and databases
Section 7.1. Comparing XML and relational databases
Section 7.2. Integration architectures for XML and relational databases
Section 7.3. Strategies for integrating XML with relational databases
Section 7.4. Techniques for mapping XML to relational data
Section 7.5. Database extensions
Section 7.6. Native XML databases
Part III. Integrating applications
Chapter 8. The mechanics of application integration
Section 8.1. Understanding application integration
Section 8.2. Integration levels
Section 8.3. A guide to middleware
Section 8.4. Choosing an integration path
Chapter 9. Service-oriented architectures for legacy integration
Section 9.1. Service models for application integration
Section 9.2. Fundamental integration components
Section 9.3. Web services and one-way integration architectures
Section 9.4. Web services and point-to-point architectures
Section 9.5. Web services and centralized database architectures
Section 9.6. Service-oriented analysis for legacy architectures
Chapter 10. Service-oriented architectures for enterprise integration
Section 10.1. Service models for enterprise integration architectures
Section 10.2. Fundamental enterprise integration architecture components
Section 10.3. Web services and enterprise integration architectures
Section 10.4. Hub and spoke
Section 10.5. Messaging bus
Section 10.6. Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
Chapter 11. Service-oriented integration strategies
Section 11.1. Strategies for streamlining integration endpoint interfaces
Section 11.2. Strategies for optimizing integration endpoint services
Section 11.3. Strategies for integrating legacy architectures
Section 11.4. Strategies for enterprise solution integration
Section 11.5. Strategies for integrating Web services security
Part IV. Integrating the enterprise
Chapter 12. Thirty best practices for integrating XML
Section 12.1. Best practices for planning XML migration projects
Section 12.2. Best practices for knowledge management within XML projects
Section 12.3. Best practices for standardizing XML applications
Section 12.4. Best practices for designing XML applications
Chapter 13. Thirty best practices for integrating Web services
Section 13.1. Best practices for planning service-oriented projects
Section 13.2. Best practices for standardizing Web services
Section 13.3. Best practices for designing service-oriented environments
Section 13.4. Best practices for managing service-oriented development projects
Section 13.5. Best practices for implementing Web services
Chapter 14. Building the service-oriented enterprise (SOE)
Section 14.1. SOA modeling basics
Section 14.2. SOE building blocks
Section 14.3. SOE migration strategy
About the Author
About the Photographs
Index
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
As XML becomes an increasingly significant part of the IT mainstream, expert guidance and common-sense strategies are required to avoid the many pitfalls of applying XML incorrectly or allowing it to be used in an uncontrolled manner. This book acts as a knowledge base for issues relating to integra
As XML becomes an increasingly significant part of the IT mainstream, expert guidance and common-sense strategies are required to avoid the many pitfalls of applying XML incorrectly or allowing it to be used in an uncontrolled manner. This book acts as a knowledge base for issues relating to integra