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creator |
Wutke, Daniel
| | Martin, Daniel
| | Leymann, Frank
| date |
2008
| | | description |
18 pages
| |
The SOAP messaging framework, as one key technology of the Web
service technology standard stack, defines a standardized message
format for Web service interactions, a set of rules governing their
processing and a mechanism that describes how SOAP messages can be
transmitted over different network transport protocols, called SOAP
bindings. The most prominent example for a Web service transport
today, is the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which however
suffers from certain drawbacks such as being inherently synchronous
in nature and not providing decoupling of message sender and
receiver in reference or time. In this paper, we present triplespace
technology as an alternative Web service transport that is
characterized by a number of properties that are not found in
current Web service transports: asynchronism, strong decoupling of
sender and receiver and support for advanced message exchange
patterns, such as one-to-many interactions, directly on the
transport level. We describe the triplespace binding definition in
the form of a W3C technical note closely aligning the new binding
defintion with existing ones.
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