Course Duration in Hours
90
90
Industrial training Course Content
Chapter 1. Overview of Web Services
Why Web Services?
Service-Oriented Architecture
HTTP and XML
Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)
Web Service Description Language (WSDL)
Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI)
The WS-I Basic and Related Profiles
REST
Chapter 2. Web Services for Java EE
Hosting Web Services: Scenarios
Invoking Web Services: Scenarios
Web Services for Java EE (WS4JEE)
The Automated Approach: JAX-WS and JAXB
Manual Options: SAAJ and JAXP
Portable Web-Services Metadata
Service Registries: JAXR
Chapter 3. The Simple Object Access Protocol
Messaging Model
Namespaces
SOAP over HTTP
The SOAP Envelope
The Message Header
The Message Body
SOAP Faults
Attachments
Chapter 4. The Java API for XML Binding
The Need for Data Binding
XML Schema
Two Paths
JAXB Compilation
Mapping Schema Types to Java
Java-to-XML Mapping Using Annotations
Marshaling and Unmarshaling
Working with JAXB Object Models
In-Memory Validation
Chapter 5. Web Services Description Language
Web Services as Component-Based Software
The Need for an IDL
Web Services Description Language
WSDL Information Model
The Abstract Model -- Service Semantics
Message Description
Messaging Styles
The Concrete Model -- Ports, Services, Locations
Extending WSDL -- Bindings
Service Description
Chapter 6. The Java API for XML-Based Web Services
Two Paths
How It Works: Build Time and Runtime
The Service Endpoint Interface
Working from WSDL
Working from Java
RPC and Document Styles
One-Way Messaging
Binary Protocols
Chapter 7. WSDL-to-Java Development
The @WebService Annotation
Generated Code
Compilation and Assembly
Deployment
Runtime Behavior
Scope of Code Generation
More JAXB: Mapping Collections
More JAXB: Mapping Enumerations
Chapter 8. Client-Side Development
Stubs and Proxies
Generated Code
Locating a Service
Invoking a Service
Chapter 9. Java-to-WSDL Development
The @WebMethod, @XmlParam, and Related Annotations
Scope of Code Generation
More JAXB: Mapping Inheritance
Controlling the XML Model
Controlling the WSDL Description
Chapter 10. JAX-WS Best Practices
Which Way to Go?
Interoperability Impact
Portability Impact
Polymorphism in Web Services
Web Services as Java EE Components
Lifecycle Annotations
Context Interfaces
The @WebServiceRef Annotation
Chapter 11. Provider and Dispatch APIs
Stepping Down
The Provider
Implementing a Provider
JAXB Without WSDL
Integrating JAXP
The Dispatch
Building Clients
Chapter 12. The SOAP with Attachments API for Java
The SAAJ Object Model
Parsing a SOAP Message
Reading Message Content
Working with Namespaces
Creating a Message
Setting Message Content
Chapter 13. Message Handlers
Handling SOAP Headers
Servlet Endpoint Context
MessageContext and SOAPMessageContext
Message Handlers and Handler Chains
Processing Model and Patterns
Client-Side Handlers
Chapter 14. EJBs as Web Services
Enterprise JavaBeans
Three Tiers for Java EE
EJB3 and JAX-WS
Session Beans as Web Service Endpoints
The Bean s Service Endpoint Interface
SOAP as an EJB Protocol
Pitfalls
Chapter 15. Handling Binary Content
The WS-I Attachments Profile
Using base64Binary
MIME Attachments
JAX-WS Support
MTOM and XOP
SAAJ Support
DIPLOMA ,BCA , BSC-CS , BTECH IT/CS , MCA , MSC-CS
INTEGOS INTELLIGENT SOLUTIONS, Kannur,IN