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VB.NET 2005

  1. VB.NET 2005 Free Training
  2. The .NET Framework Architecture Part 1
  3. The .NET Framework Architecture Part 2
  4. Application Class and Message Class
  5. Implementing Class Library Object
  6. Visual Studio.NET Namespaces
  7. .NET Assemblies
  8. Differences between VB.NET 1.0 and VB.NET 2.0
  9. Introducing VB.NET Windows Forms
  10. Visual Studio Windows Forms Designer
  11. Exploring the Forms Designer generated code
  12. Setting and Adding Properties to Windows Form
  13. Implementing Inheritance
  14. Event Handling In Visual Basic .NET
  15. Building Graphical Interface elements
  16. .NET Common Windows Forms Controls Part 1
  17. .NET Common Windows Forms Controls Part 2
  18. Common Controls and Handling Control Events
  19. DomainUpDown and NumericUpDown Controls
  20. Dialog Boxes in Visual Basic .NET
  21. Visual Studio Adding Controls to Windows Form
  22. VB.NET Validation Controls
  23. Working with Menu Controls
  24. VB.NET MDI Applications
  25. .NET Exceptions
  26. VB.NET Creating and Managing Components Part 1
  27. VB.NET Creating and Managing Components Part 2
  28. Simple Data Binding
  29. .NET Complex Data Binding
  30. .NET Data Form Wizard
  31. Data Manipulation with ADO.NET
  32. SQL Server Stored Procedures
  33. SQL Server Ad Hoc Queries
  34. Finding and Sorting Data in DataSets
  35. ADO.NET Object Model
  36. Working with DataSets
  37. Using XML Data
  38. Working with File System in .NET
  39. Creating Web Service
  40. Instantiating - Invoking Web Services, Creating Proxy Classes with WSDL
  41. Web Reference and Web Services
  42. Web Services - SOAP, WSDL, Disco and UDDI
  43. Web Application Testing in VB.NET 2005
  44. Web Application Tracing and Debugging
  45. Working with Legacy Code and COM Components
  46. ActiveX Controls and Legacy Code
  47. Windows Application Testing
  48. VB.NET Windows Application Testing
  49. Tracing VB.NET Windows Application
  50. Debugging Windows Applications In Visual Studio.NET 2005
  51. Deploying Windows Applications In Visual Studio.NET 2005
  52. Customizing Setup Project in Visual Studio.NET 2005
  53. Shared Assembly
  54. Microsoft .NET Creating Installation Components
  55. The Registry Editor in Visual Studio.NET 2005
  56. The File Types Editor

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Home arrow Technical Training arrow VB.NET 2005

Web Services - SOAP, WSDL, Disco and UDDI

Author : Exforsys Inc.     Published on: 16th Jul 2005    |   Last Updated on: 24th Dec 2007

Web Services - SOAP, WSDL, Disco and UDDI

In this tutorial you will learn about Web Services - Understanding Web Services, Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), The Web Service Discovery Tool (DISCO), Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI), Web Service Discovery Language (WSDL).

Web Services - SOAP, WSDL, Disco and UDDI

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Understanding Web Services

Interconnectedness engendered by the World Wide Web has created a pressure to create applications that are interoperable and distributable over the network. The direction of effort is towards creating applications that connect to each other regardless of the language or platform in which the application was created.

Web services are externally exposed systems that allow applications to talk to each other and share information over a network. The web service standards are built upon other standards such as HTTP or XML and are not reliant upon any proprietary systems. The Web service is itself a collection of methods that can be called from a remote location so that these methods accept and return parameters and provide for a wide variety of functionalities that can be used internally in the application that is exposed to the public.

The concept behind web services is not new. The ad hoc methods of tying applications together have merely given place to organized methods of communications between applications. Standardized specifications have also lowered costs and shortened development timelines.

Prior to the emergence of Visual Studio.NET in the market a number of technologies attempted to cater to the needs of the Web based world. Let us briefly look at the various technologies that tried to address these issues.

SOAP

Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) is a protocol that uses the XML to describe the data and Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP) to transmit application data. The Web Service and the client application must agree upon a common protocol to facilitate communication. SOAP is a standard communication protocol for interchanging information in a structured format in a distributed environment. Messaging is an example of information exchange between a client and a web service. The calls made by a client application to a web method and the data returned by a web method to the client are the messages that are actually exchanged. A SOAP packet is created when a web client makes a call to the web method. This message contains the name of the web method and the parameters that are needed for making a call to the web method in XML format. The Web method is invoked based on the information available in the SOAP Packet

The System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap namespace contains the System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.SoapFormatter class, which can be used to serialize and de-serialize objects in the SOAP format. When building applications that uses the types in this namespace, a reference must be made to the System.Runtime.Serialization.Formatters.Soap.dll assembly. The COM+ SOAP service permits the publishing of a component as a XML Web Service. Clients can continue to access the component using previous methods, but the component is also accessible using WSDL (Web Services Description Language) and SOAP. We will see more of SOAP usage later in the lesson.

Disco and UDDI

The Web Service Discovery Tool (DISCO) is used to discover the URLs of XML Web Services located on a Web server and saves documents related to each XML service on a local disk. The DISCO takes the URL and discovers and produce publishes discovery documents (.wsdl, .xsd, .disco and .dicomap files) as arguments. Some of the options available for use with this tool are:

/d[omain]:domain

Specifies the domain name to use when connecting to a proxy server that requires authentication

/nosave

Does not save the discovered document or results

/nologo

Suppresses the Microsoft startup banner display

/o[ut]:directoryName

Specifies the output directory in which to save the discovered documents. Current directory is the default one.

/p[assword]:password

Specifies the password to use when connecting to a proxy server

/proxy:url

Specifies the URL of the proxy server to use for HTTP requests.


The following command is an example of how the tool can be used to search a specified URL for the discovery of documents. The documents are then saved to the current directory. It will throw an error message if it cannot find discoverable documents at the URL specified.

disco http://www.vbdotnetlearning.com/selflearningservie.disco

To specify a directory to save the documents you can use the /out option as shown below:

disco /out:VBtutorial http://www.vbdotnetlearning.com

Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI) is a platform independent framework functioning like a directory that provides a mechanism to locate and register web services on the internet. The web service provider makes the web service available to the consumer by describing the web service using a WDSL document and then registering the Web service in the UDDI Directory. The UDDI Directory contains pointers to the Web service and the WDSL document for the Web service. After this is done the Client Applications can discover the Web service using the UDDI Directory. The UDDI specification calls for three elements as given below:

(1)White Pages -- These provide business contact information

(2)Yellow Pages -- These organize Web services into categories like usage billing service, authorization service and so on.

(3)Green Pages --These Pages provide detailed technical information about individual services.

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WSDL

Web Service Discovery Language (WSDL) is a markup language that describes the web service. In order to use this Web service, the Client application developers need to know the methods exposed by the Web service and the parameters to be passed to these methods. It is imperative that access to these methodologies is available at development time and it is just this need that WSDL addresses. A typical WSDL document provides the following information to the developer:

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This tutorial is part of a VB.NET 2005 tutorial series. Read it from the beginning and learn yourself.

VB.NET 2005

  1. VB.NET 2005 Free Training
  2. The .NET Framework Architecture Part 1
  3. The .NET Framework Architecture Part 2
  4. Application Class and Message Class
  5. Implementing Class Library Object
  6. Visual Studio.NET Namespaces
  7. .NET Assemblies
  8. Differences between VB.NET 1.0 and VB.NET 2.0
  9. Introducing VB.NET Windows Forms
  10. Visual Studio Windows Forms Designer
  11. Exploring the Forms Designer generated code
  12. Setting and Adding Properties to Windows Form
  13. Implementing Inheritance
  14. Event Handling In Visual Basic .NET
  15. Building Graphical Interface elements
  16. .NET Common Windows Forms Controls Part 1
  17. .NET Common Windows Forms Controls Part 2
  18. Common Controls and Handling Control Events
  19. DomainUpDown and NumericUpDown Controls
  20. Dialog Boxes in Visual Basic .NET
  21. Visual Studio Adding Controls to Windows Form
  22. VB.NET Validation Controls
  23. Working with Menu Controls
  24. VB.NET MDI Applications
  25. .NET Exceptions
  26. VB.NET Creating and Managing Components Part 1
  27. VB.NET Creating and Managing Components Part 2
  28. Simple Data Binding
  29. .NET Complex Data Binding
  30. .NET Data Form Wizard
  31. Data Manipulation with ADO.NET
  32. SQL Server Stored Procedures
  33. SQL Server Ad Hoc Queries
  34. Finding and Sorting Data in DataSets
  35. ADO.NET Object Model
  36. Working with DataSets
  37. Using XML Data
  38. Working with File System in .NET
  39. Creating Web Service
  40. Instantiating - Invoking Web Services, Creating Proxy Classes with WSDL
  41. Web Reference and Web Services
  42. Web Services - SOAP, WSDL, Disco and UDDI
  43. Web Application Testing in VB.NET 2005
  44. Web Application Tracing and Debugging
  45. Working with Legacy Code and COM Components
  46. ActiveX Controls and Legacy Code
  47. Windows Application Testing
  48. VB.NET Windows Application Testing
  49. Tracing VB.NET Windows Application
  50. Debugging Windows Applications In Visual Studio.NET 2005
  51. Deploying Windows Applications In Visual Studio.NET 2005
  52. Customizing Setup Project in Visual Studio.NET 2005
  53. Shared Assembly
  54. Microsoft .NET Creating Installation Components
  55. The Registry Editor in Visual Studio.NET 2005
  56. The File Types Editor
 

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