Engineering:Web Services Interoperability Technology

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Web Services Interoperability Technology (WSIT) is an open-source project started by Sun Microsystems to develop the next-generation of Web service technologies. It provides interoperability between Java Web Services and Microsoft's Windows Communication Foundation (WCF).[1]

It consists of Java programming language APIs that enable advanced WS-* features to be used in a way that is compatible with Microsoft's Windows Communication Foundation as used by .NET. The interoperability between different products is accomplished by implementing a number of Web Services specifications, like JAX-WS that provides interoperability between Java Web Services and Microsoft Windows Communication Foundation.[2]

WSIT is distributed under the terms of the CDDL open-source license, and is currently under development as part of project Metro.

WSIT is a series of extensions to the basic SOAP protocol, and so uses JAX-WS and JAXB. It is not a new protocol such as the binary DCOM.

WSIT implements the WS-I specifications, including:

See also

  • JAX-WS

References

  1. "Web Services Interoperability Technology Features". http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/index.html: ORACLE. http://java.sun.com/webservices/interop/features/index.jsp. Retrieved 2011-05-17. "Web Services Interoperability Technology (WSIT) provides interoperability between Java Web Services and Microsoft's Windows Communication Foundation." 
  2. "Web Services Interoperability Technology Features". http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/index.html: ORACLE. http://java.sun.com/webservices/interop/features/index.jsp. Retrieved 2011-05-01. "Interoperability is accomplished by implementing a number of WS-*specifications and holding plugfests where Sun and Microsoft engineers work together testing our respective implementations of those specifications. As an extension to JAX-WS, WSIT provides additional interoperability between Java Web Services and Microsoft's Windows Communication Foundation. It focuses on enterprise class features such as security, reliable messaging, and atomic transactions." 

External links

A general framework, applicable but not limited to Web services, for interoperation of model-based services is described at