Web services standards

One of the key attributes of Internet standards is that they focus on protocols and not on implementations. The Internet is composed of heterogeneous technologies that successfully interoperate through shared protocols. This prevents individual vendors from imposing a standard on the Internet. Open Source software development plays a crucial role in preserving the interoperability of vendor implementations of standards.

The following standards play key roles in Web services: Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI), Web Services Description Language (WSDL), Web Services Inspection Language (WSIL), SOAP, and Web Services Interoperability (WS-I). The relationship between these standards is described in Figure 2.

The UDDI specification defines open, platform-independent standards that enable businesses to share information in a global business registry, discover services on the registry, and define how they interact over the Internet. For more information on UDDI, refer to www.uddi.org

WSIL is an XML-based open specification that defines a distributed service discovery method that supplies references to service descriptions at the service provider's point-of-offering, by specifying how to inspect a Web site for available Web services.  A WSIL document defines the locations on a Web site where you can look for Web service descriptions. Since WSIL focuses on distributed service discovery, the WSIL specification complements UDDI by facilitating the discovery of services that are available on Web sites that may not be listed yet in a UDDI registry. A separate topic in this documentation discusses the Relationship between UDDI and WSIL.  For more information on WSIL, refer to www.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-wsilspec.html

WSDL is an XML-based open specification that describes the interfaces to and instances of Web services on the network. It is extensible, so endpoints can be described regardless of the message formats or network protocols that are used to communicate. Businesses can make the WSDL documents for their Web services available though UDDI, WSIL, or by broadcasting the URLs to their WSDL via email or Web sites. WSDL is described as a separate topic in this documentation. For more information on WSDL, refer to www.w3.org/TR/wsdl

SOAP is an XML-based standard for messaging over HTTP and other Internet protocols. It is a lightweight protocol for the exchange of information in a decentralized, distributed environment. It is based on XML and consists of three parts:

SOAP enables the binding and usage of discovered Web services by defining a message path for routing messages. SOAP may be used to query UDDI for Web services. For more information on SOAP 1.1 (SOAP 1.2 is not supported by the Web services tools), refer to www.w3.org/TR/SOAP

Figure 2. Relationships between SOAP, UDDI, WSIL and WSDL.

A service provider hosts a Web service and makes it accessible using protocols such as SOAP/HTTP or SOAP/JMS. The Web service is described by a WSDL document that is stored on the provider's server or in a special repository. The WSDL document may be referenced by the UDDI business registry and WSIL documents. These contain pointers to the Web service's WSDL files.

The WS-I Simple SOAP Binding Profile and WS-I Attachments Profile are outlines of requirements to which WSDL and Web service protocol (SOAP/HTTP) traffic must comply in order to claim WS-I conformance. The Web services WS-I validation tools currently support WS-I Simple SOAP Binding Profile 1.0 and the Attachment Profile 1.0. To view the specifications, refer to the WS-I Web site, and under Resources select Documentation: http://www.ws-i.org

Several new Web services standards are also supported by this development environment. These include:

JAX-RPC

JAX-RPC stands for Java™ API for XML-based RPC, also known as JSR 101. It is a specification that describes Java Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) and conventions for building Web services and Web service clients that use remote procedure calls (RPC) and XML. It standardizes the Java to WSDL and WSDL to Java mappings, and provides the core APIs for developing and deploying Web services and Web service clients on the Java platform. For more information refer to the official specifications.

JSR-109

JSR-109 (Implementing Enterprise Web Services) defines the programming model and run-time architecture to deploy and look up Web services in the Java EE environment; more specifically, in the Web, EJB, and Client Application containers. One of its main goals is to ensure vendors' implementations interoperate. For more information, refer to the official specifications:

WS-S

These tools support the OASIS Web Services Security 1.0 standard. For more information on the various components of this standard, refer to:

Web services tooling supports the following specifications:

Technology or specification Version or level supported
Transports
HTTP/HTTPS v1.0 and v1.1
JMS  
Messaging
SOAP specification v1.1
SOAP Attachements  
Description
UDDI v2.0
WSDL v1.1
WSIL v1.0
Security
WS-Security OASIS Standard 1.0
Ineroperability
WS-I Basic Profile 1.1.2
WS-I Simple SOAP Binding Profile 1.0.3
WS-I Attachments Profile 1.0
Other Standards  
JAX-RPC v1.0 for J2EE 1.3, v1.1 for J2EE 1.4 and Java EE 1.5
JSR 109  

Parent topic: Web services overview

Related Concepts

Web services overview

Tools for Web services development

Web services interoperability (WS-I)

Related Tasks

Developing Web services