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Index
Java Web Services: Up and Running Preface
What’s Changed in the Second Edition? Web Service APIs and Publication Options
The Publication Options
Chapter-by-Chapter Overview Tools and IDEs Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples Safari® Books Online How to Contact Us Acknowledgments
1. Web Services Quickstart
Web Service Miscellany What Good Are Web Services? Web Services and Service-Oriented Architecture A Very Short History of Web Services
From DCE/RPC to XML-RPC Distributed Object Architecture: A Java Example Web Services to the Rescue
What Is REST?
Verbs and Opaque Nouns
Review of HTTP Requests and Responses HTTP as an API
Two HTTP Clients in Java
A First RESTful Example
How the Predictions Web Service Works
The Tomcat web server An Ant script for service deployment
A Client Against the Predictions Web Service
Why Use Servlets for RESTful Web Services? What’s Next?
2. RESTful Web Services: The Service Side
A RESTful Service as an HttpServlet
Implementation Details Sample Client Calls Against the predictions2 Service
A RESTful Web Service as a JAX-RS Resource
A First JAX-RS Web Service Using Jersey Publishing JAX-RS Resources with a Java Application Publishing JAX-RS Resources with Tomcat The Adage Class JAX-RS Generation of XML and JSON Responses Porting the Predictions Web Service to JAX-RS
A RESTful Web Service as Restlet Resources
Sample Calls Against the adages2 Service Publishing the adages2 Restlet Service Without a Web Server
A RESTful Service as a @WebServiceProvider What’s Next?
3. RESTful Web Services: The Client Side
A Perl Client Against a Java RESTful Web Service A Client Against the Amazon E-Commerce Service A Standalone JAX-B Example
The XStream Option
Another Client Against the Amazon E-Commerce Service The CTA Bus-Tracker Services RESTful Clients and WADL Documents The JAX-RS Client API JSON for JavaScript Clients
JSONP and Web Services A Composed RESTful Service with jQuery An Ajax Polling Example
What’s Next?
4. SOAP-Based Web Services
A SOAP-Based Web Service The RandService in Two Files Clients Against the RandService
A Java Client Against the RandService A C# Client Against the RandService A Perl Client Against the RandService
The WSDL Service Contract in Detail
The types Section The message Section The portType Section The binding Section The service Section Java and XML Schema Data Type Bindings Wrapped and Unwrapped Document Style wsimport Artifacts for the Service Side
SOAP-Based Clients Against Amazon’s E-Commerce Service
Asynchronous Clients Against SOAP-Based Services
What’s Next?
5. SOAP Handlers and Faults
The Handler Level in SOAP-Based Services and Clients Handlers and Faults in the predictionsSOAP Service
The Backend Support Classes From the Client to the Service Signature Verification Faults from the Application and Handler Levels Linking the Service-Side Handler to the Service
A Handler Chain with Two Handlers SOAP-Based Web Services and Binary Data The Transport Level Axis2 What’s Next?
6. Web Services Security
Wire-Level Security
HTTPS Basics Symmetric and Asymmetric Encryption/Decryption How HTTPS Provides the Three Security Services The HTTPS Handshake The HttpsURLConnection Class
A Very Lightweight HTTPS Server and Client HTTPS in a Production-Grade Web Server
Enforcing HTTPS Access to a Web Service An HTTPS Client Against the predictions2 Service
Container-Managed Security
Linking the Service web.xml with a Tomcat Security Realm The Client Side in Users/Roles Security Using the curl Utility for HTTPS Testing A @WebService Under HTTPS with Users/Roles Security Using a Digested Password Instead of a Password
WS-Security
Securing a @WebService with WS-Security
What’s Next?
7. Web Services and Java Application Servers
The Web Container
The Message-Oriented Middleware The Enterprise Java Bean Container The Naming and Lookup Service The Security Provider The Client Container The Database System
Toward a Lightweight JAS GlassFish Basics Servlet-Based Web Services Under GlassFish
An Example with Mixed APIs
An Interactive Website and a SOAP-Based Web Service A @WebService as a @Stateless Session EJB
Packaging and Deploying the predictionsEJB Service A Client Against the predictionsEJB Service
TomEE: Tomcat with Java EE Extensions
Porting the predictionsEJB Web Service to TomEE Deploying an EJB in a WAR File
Where Is the Best Place to Be in Java Web Services?
Back to the Question at Hand
Index About the Author Colophon Copyright
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