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XML Design Handbook

May 3, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
The platform- and language-agnostic nature of XML makes it a natural choice for developers building cross-platform applications and is rapidly becoming the mechanism of choice for application designers who need to store and share data.

Simply knowing the syntax and features of the language just isn’t enough if you want to build powerful and efficient XML driven applications. You need to understand how to use the language and its features in the most effective manner. This is where this book comes in – assuming familiarity with the mechanics of XML, it analyzes all of the critical pieces of the XML space that require careful design in order to build efficient, robust, and extensible applications. It covers:

  • Effective document design
  • Designing robust, flexible schemas for validating documents
  • Dissection of the SAX and DOM parsing APIs – when to use which
  • Best practices for XSLT design
  • XML storage strategies
  • Techniques for XML transmission, using SOAP and XML-RPC
  • Presenting data to a range of different applications

    The book should appeal equally to the XML developer, who needs to write code to process XML documents or data, and the XML architect, working on systems that store and/or process XML.

    XML Design Handbook

  • Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Application Designers, Careful Design, Critical Pieces, Cross Platform, Design, Dissection, Document Design, Driven Applications, Extensible Applications, Familiarity, Handbook, Natural Choice, Parsing, Platform Applications, Schemas, Share Data, Soap Xml, Storage Strategies, Xml Developer, Xml Rpc, Xml Soap, Xml Space

    SOAP: Cross Platform Web Services Development Using XML

    May 2, 2010 by BPELforum

    Product Description
    SOAP will be the universal “application glue” for tomorrow’s widely distributed systems. It’s simple, based on widely deployed standards such as XML and HTTP, and will enable virtually any business software to communicate across the Internet. SOAP: Cross Platform Internet Development Using XML offers a practical, hands-on introduction to SOAP that demonstrates how to leverage this technology on multiple platforms, using virtually every leading programming language. Seely begins by reviewing the history of distributed computing, and demonstrating how SOAP solves distributed computing problems that DCOM and CORBA failed to solve. He presents basic introductions to XML, and then to SOAP’s syntax — including SOAP’s use of HTTP headers, the SOAP payload, error handling, data types, encoding structures, and more. You’ll walk through building a simple SOAP server for Windows; then discover how SOAP can be extended to support multiple platforms and programming languages. SOAP: Cross Platform Internet Development Using XML contains detailed chapters on utilizing SOAP with each of five leading programming languages: C++, Perl, Python, Visual Basic, and Java. The book concludes by reviewing today’s leading SOAP servers. For all developers and system integrators constructing Internet applications, applications written in multiple programming languages, or applications that integrate diverse enterprise systems; and for any IT professional evaluating SOAP.

    SOAP: Cross Platform Web Services Development Using XML

    Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Business Software, Corba, Cross, Cross Platform, Data Types, Dcom, development, Enterprise Systems, Glue, Http Headers, Internet Applications, Internet Development, Platform, Platform Web, Product Description, Programming Language, Programming Languages, Seely, services, SOAP, Soap Server, Soap Soap, System Integrators, Universal Application, using, Xml Soap

    Securing Web Services with WS-Security: Demystifying WS-Security, WS-Policy, SAML, XML Signature, and XML Encryption

    May 1, 2010 by BPELforum

    Product Description
    You know how to build Web service applications using XML, SOAP, and WSDL, but can you ensure that those applications are secure? Standards development groups such as OASIS and W3C have released several specifications designed to provide security – but how do you combine them in working applications?

    “Securing Web Services with WS-Security” will help you take your Web services securely to production, with insight into the latest security standards including

    - WS-Security, a model that defines how to put security specifications into practice
    - XML Encryption to ensure confidentiality
    - XML Signature to ensure data integrity
    - Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) to authenticate and authorize users
    - WS-Policy to set policies across trust domains

    Jothy Rosenberg and David Remy, both business, technology, and security visionaries, demystify these standards with practical examples including a fully developed case study application showing these tools at work. A pragmatic approach is taken showing which Web Services Security standards are needed when faced with a variety of security challenges. The authors understand that security remains one of the largest remaining impediments to deploying major Web services in business-critical situations. The goal of this book is to begin to remove those impediments by providing a detailed understanding of all the available security technologies and how and when to employ them.

    Securing Web Services with WS-Security: Demystifying WS-Security, WS-Policy, SAML, XML Signature, and XML Encryption

    Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Assertion Markup Language, Critical Situations, Data Integrity, David Remy, Demystifying, Development Groups, Encryption, Encryption Product, Impediments, Latest Security, Pragmatic Approach, SAML, Securing, Security Assertion Markup Language, Security Specifications, Security Standards, Security Technologies, Service Applications, services, Signature, Study Application, Visionaries, Web Service, Web Services Security, WSDL, WSPolicy, WSSecurity, Xml Soap

    SOA and Web Services Interface Design: Principles, Techniques, and Standards

    April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

    Product Description
    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.

    SOA and Web Services Interface Design: Principles, Techniques, and Standards

    Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Airline Ticket, Basic Theory, Business Incorporation, Coupling, Data Architecture, Design, Guru, Interface, Interface Design Principles, Interface Examples, Last Decade, Practical Guide, Principles, Product Description, Service Interfaces, Service Oriented Architecture, services, Simplicity, SOA, Standards, Techniques, Web Service, WSDL, Xml Schema, Xml Schemas, Xml Soap

    Java & XML for Dummies

    April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

    Product Description
    Java & XML For Dummies shows experienced Java developers how to start incorporating XML data in to their applications.
    Topics covered include Java/XML Bindings, SAX (Simple API for XML), DOM, SOAP, Web Services, data binding, XML from Java Applications, messaging with XML and Java, DTDs, namespaces, Xpath, CSS, UDDI, HTTP handing servers for SOAP and other XML format messages via serverlets, differences between parsers, Java API programming tools for handling XML, using XML to solve real-world programming problems, WSDL, UDDI, EAI, Message routing, turning java objects into XML, databases in XML.

    Java & XML for Dummies

    Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Dtds, Dummies, Format Messages, Java, Java Api, Java Applications, Java Developers, Java Objects, Java Xml, Programming Problems, Programming Tools, Sax Xml, Soap Web Services, Soap Xml, Uddi, Xml Bindings, Xml Databases, Xml Dom, Xml Format, Xml Java, Xml Namespaces, Xml Soap
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