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Index
Java Web Services: Up and Running
SPECIAL OFFER: Upgrade this ebook with O’Reilly A Note Regarding Supplemental Files Preface
Code-Driven Approach Chapter-by-Chapter Overview Freedom of Choice: The Tools/IDE Issue Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples Safari® Books Online How to Contact Us Acknowledgments
1. Java Web Services Quickstart
What Are Web Services?
What Good Are Web Services?
A First Example
The Service Endpoint Interface and Service Implementation Bean A Java Application to Publish the Web Service Testing the Web Service with a Browser
A Perl and a Ruby Requester of the Web Service The Hidden SOAP A Java Requester of the Web Service Wire-Level Tracking of HTTP and SOAP Messages What’s Clear So Far?
Key Features of the First Code Example
Java’s SOAP API An Example with Richer Data Types
Publishing the Service and Writing a Client
Multithreading the Endpoint Publisher What’s Next?
2. All About WSDLs
What Good Is a WSDL?
Generating Client-Support Code from a WSDL The @WebResult Annotation
WSDL Structure
A Closer Look at WSDL Bindings Key Features of Document-Style Services Validating a SOAP Message Against a WSDL’s XML Schema The Wrapped and Unwrapped Document Styles
Amazon’s E-Commerce Web Service
An E-Commerce Client in Wrapped Style An E-Commerce Client in Unwrapped Style Tradeoffs Between the RPC and Document Styles An Asynchronous E-Commerce Client
The wsgen Utility and JAX-B Artifacts
A JAX-B Example Marshaling and wsgen Artifacts An Overview of Java Types and XML Schema Types Generating a WSDL with the wsgen Utility
WSDL Wrap-Up
Code First Versus Contract First A Contract-First Example with wsimport A Code-First, Contract-Aware Approach Limitations of the WSDL
What’s Next?
3. SOAP Handling
SOAP: Hidden or Not?
SOAP 1.1 and SOAP 1.2 SOAP Messaging Architecture Programming in the JWS Handler Framework The RabbitCounter Example Injecting a Header Block into a SOAP Header Configuring the Client-Side SOAP Handler Adding a Handler Programmatically on the Client Side Generating a Fault from a @WebMethod Adding a Logical Handler for Client Robustness Adding a Service-Side SOAP Handler Summary of the Handler Methods
The RabbitCounter As a SOAP 1.2 Service The MessageContext and Transport Headers
An Example to Illustrate Transport-Level Access
Web Services and Binary Data
Three Options for SOAP Attachments Using Base64 Encoding for Binary Data Using MTOM for Binary Data
What’s Next?
4. RESTful Web Services
What Is REST?
Verbs and Opaque Nouns
From @WebService to @WebServiceProvider A RESTful Version of the Teams Service
The WebServiceProvider Annotation Language Transparency and RESTful Services Summary of the RESTful Features Implementing the Remaining CRUD Operations Java API for XML Processing
The Provider and Dispatch Twins
A Provider/Dispatch Example More on the Dispatch Interface A Dispatch Client Against a SOAP-based Service
Implementing RESTful Web Services As HttpServlets
The RabbitCounterServlet Requests for MIME-Typed Responses
Java Clients Against Real-World RESTful Services
The Yahoo! News Service The Amazon E-Commerce Service: REST Style The RESTful Tumblr Service
WADLing with Java-Based RESTful Services JAX-RS: WADLing Through Jersey The Restlet Framework What’s Next?
5. Web Services Security
Overview of Web Services Security Wire-Level Security
HTTPS Basics Symmetric and Asymmetric Encryption/Decryption How HTTPS Provides the Three Security Services The HttpsURLConnection Class
Securing the RabbitCounter Service
Adding User Authentication HTTP BASIC Authentication
Container-Managed Security for Web Services
Deploying a @WebService Under Tomcat Securing the @WebService Under Tomcat Application-Managed Authentication Container-Managed Authentication and Authorization Configuring Container-Managed Security Under Tomcat Using a Digested Password Instead of a Password A Secured @WebServiceProvider
WS-Security
Securing a @WebService with WS-Security Under Endpoint The Prompter and the Verifier The Secured SOAP Envelope Summary of the WS-Security Example
What’s Next?
6. JAX-WS in Java Application Servers
Overview of a Java Application Server Deploying @WebServices and @WebServiceProviders
Deploying @WebServiceProviders
Integrating an Interactive Website and a Web Service A @WebService As an EJB
Implementation As a Stateless Session EJB The Endpoint URL for an EBJ-Based Service Database Support Through an @Entity The Persistence Configuration File The EJB Deployment Descriptor Servlet and EJB Implementations of Web Services
Java Web Services and Java Message Service WS-Security Under GlassFish
Mutual Challenge with Digital Certificates MCS Under HTTPS MCS Under WSIT The Dramatic SOAP Envelopes
Benefits of JAS Deployment What’s Next?
7. Beyond the Flame Wars
A Very Short History of Web Services
The Service Contract in DCE/RPC XML-RPC Standardized SOAP
SOAP-Based Web Services Versus Distributed Objects SOAP and REST in Harmony
Index About the Author Colophon SPECIAL OFFER: Upgrade this ebook with O’Reilly
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