SOA and Web Services Interface Design: Principles, Techniques, and Standards / James Bean
By: Bean, James.
Material type: BookSeries: MK/OMG press.Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann: Elsevier Science [distributor], 2010Description: ix, 372 p. ill.ISBN: 9789380931807.Subject(s): Multimedia systems | Programs (Computer)--multimedia systemsDDC classification: 006.78 B365S 2011Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | Information Technology University, Lahore General Stacks | 006.78 B365S 2011 (Browse shelf) | Available | 001809 |
In SOA and Web Services Interface Design, data architecture guru James Bean teaches you how to design web service interfaces that are capable of being extended to accommodate ever changing business needs and promote incorporation simplicity. The book first provides an overview of critical SOA principles, thereby offering a basic conceptual summary. It then provides explicit, tactical, and real-world techniques for ensuring compliance with these principles. Using a focused, tutorial-based approach the book provides working syntactical examples - described by Web services standards such as XML, XML Schemas, WSDL and SOAP - that can be used to directly implement interface design procedures, thus allowing you immediately generate value from your efforts. In summary, SOA and Web Services Interface Design provides the basic theory, but also design techniques and very specific implementable encoded interface examples that can be immediately employed in your work, making it an invaluable practical guide to any practitioner in today's exploding Web-based service market. Provides chapters on topics of introductory WSDL syntax and XML Schema syntax, taking take the reader through fundamental concepts and into deeper techniques and allowing them to quickly climb the learning curve. Provides working syntactical examples - described by Web services standards such as XML, XML Schemas, WSDL and SOAP - that can be used to directly implement interface design procedures. Real-world examples generated using the Altova XML Spy tooling reinforce applicability, allowing you to immediately generate value from their efforts.
Include index.
1. SOA -- A Common Sense Definition -- 2. Core SOA Principles -- 3. Web Services vs. other Types and Styles of Services -- 4. Data -- the Missing Link -- 5. Data Services -- 6. Transformation to Resolve Data Impedance -- 7. The Service Interface -- the "Contract" -- 8. Canonical Message Design -- 9. The Enterprise Taxonomy -- 10. XML Schema Basics -- 11. XML Schema Design Patterns -- 12. Schema Assembly and Reuse -- 13. The Interface and Change -- 14. Service Operations and Overloading -- 15. Selective Data Fragmentation -- 16. Update Transactions -- 17. Fixed Length Transactions and Nulls -- 18. Document Literal Interfaces -- 19. Performance Analysis and Optimization Techniques -- 20. Error Definition and Handling -- A. Appendix.
With the introduction of increasingly complex Web services over the last decade, there has been an explosion of interest in service-oriented architecture (SOA), a structural style whose goal is to achieve a coupling of interacting services - functionalities such as filling out an online application for an account, viewing an online bank statement, or placing an online booking or airline ticket order. These services operate through specific interfaces that control and define their operation. However, due to the evolving nature of enterprises, new services and applications must often be incorporated into these same interfaces. Such incorporation can be costly and complex if the original interface is inflexible or incompatible with the technology utilized by the new applications. In his new book, data architecture guru James Bean teaches you exactly how to design web service interfaces that are capable of being extended to accommodate ever changing business needs and promote incorporation simplicity. The book first provides an overview of critical SOA principles, thereby offering a basic conceptual summary. The book then provides explicit, tactical, and real-world techniques for ensuring compliance with these principles. Using a focused, tutorial-based approach the book provides working syntactical examples - described by Web services standards such as XML, XML Schemas, WSDL and SOAP - that can be used to directly implement interface design procedures, thus allowing you immediately generate value from your efforts. In summary, SOA and Web Services Interface Design provides the basic theory, but also design techniques and very specific implementable encoded interface examples that can be immediately employed in your work, making it an invaluable practical guide to any practitioner in today's exploding Web-based service market. Provides chapters on topics of introductory WSDL syntax and XML Schema syntax, taking take the reader through fundamental concepts and into deeper techniques and allowing them to quickly climb the learning curve. Provides working syntactical examples - described by Web services standards such as XML, XML Schemas, WSDL and SOAP - that can be used to directly implement interface design procedures. Real-world examples generated using the Altova XML Spy tooling reinforce applicability, allowing you to immediately generate value from their efforts. A companion website with all artwork and code examples accompanies the book.
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