Java EE: JAX-WS Web Service Controls, Part 2 of 4
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Java EE: JAX-WS Web Service Controls, Part 2 of 4

LearnNow Online
Updated Oct 25, 2018

Course description

To use Java Web services you will need to deal with controls. This course covers many of the important controls that need be configured and managed in order to create a stable and secure JAX-WS environment. This course starts with Java API XML Web Service bindings and then moves on to Simple Object Access Protocols (SOAP). The course will then explore JBoss support of Web Services and Web Service Security. From there WS-Trust and WS-Federation is covered with claims and tokens. Then Web Services Interoperability (WS-I) is shown and its standards. The course then moves to error handling in dealing with business rule violations and other subjects. The final subjects cover Web Service addressing, reliable messaging and handlers.

Each LearnNowOnline training course is made up of Modules (typically an hour in length). Within each module there are Topics (typically 15-30 minutes each) and Subtopics (typically 2-5 minutes each). There is a Post Exam for each Module that must be passed with a score of 70% or higher to successfully and fully complete the course.


Prerequisites

You should know Java programming and have a basic understanding of the JAX-WS.


Meet the expert

Ali Hamad

Ali Hamad has a Bachelor and Masters degree in Computer Science and has been training many aspects of Java for over 14 years, covering Introduction through JDBC, JBoss and beyond. His training and consulting background also covers C, C , Object Oriented Analysis and Design (OOAD), and Unix/Linux. Ali has worked for or been a consultant and trainer for many companies including Dell, Texas Instruments, State of New Hampshire, Web Age Solutions, and many more. He is the author of training material for several programming topics such as Java, Struts, C , Unix and J2EE applications.

Video Runtime

142 Minutes

Time to complete

182 Minutes

Course Outline

JBossWS and WSTools

JBoss WS Support (17:20)

  • Introduction (00:30)
  • JBoss Introduction (01:44)
  • Service in a Web Container (01:47)
  • Example Java Class (00:53)
  • Generated Artifacts (01:41)
  • JSR 109 Components (01:59)
  • Demo: MySQL Database (08:22)
  • Summary (00:21)

WS Tools (17:47)

  • Introduction (00:26)
  • Using wstools (01:05)
  • Using wstools - Server side (01:36)
  • Using wstools - Sample config.xml (00:40)
  • Web Services Deployment Descriptor (01:40)
  • Example: webservices.xml (01:05)
  • The Generated WSDL File (01:47)
  • The WSDL Editor (01:15)
  • Demo: WSDL Editor (07:55)
  • Summary (00:14)

Deployment Descriptors (24:42)

  • Introduction (00:27)
  • Service in a EJB Container (02:43)
  • Web Services Deployment Descriptor (00:45)
  • Client Development (01:04)
  • Using wstools - sample config.xml (00:24)
  • Generated Artifacts (01:36)
  • The Service Reference (01:01)
  • Demo: Service Reference (16:17)
  • Summary (00:21)
WS Security

WS Security (30:58)

  • Introduction (00:25)
  • The Challenges (02:11)
  • Public Key Infrastructure (01:37)
  • Digital Signature (01:58)
  • Certificates (02:26)
  • Web Services Security (02:21)
  • SOAP Message Security (02:23)
  • Message Integrity (01:52)
  • Message Confidentiality (03:22)
  • Symmetric Encryption Example (01:37)
  • Demo: WS Security (10:24)
  • Summary (00:18)

Authentication (38:48)

  • Introduction (00:27)
  • Authentication Using Identity Token (02:35)
  • Authentication (02:12)
  • Transport Level Security (02:18)
  • Audit Tracking (03:13)
  • Identity Assertion Using SAML (01:32)
  • SAML SOAP Example (01:10)
  • Demo: Security (24:53)
  • Summary (00:23)

WS Trust and Federation (13:03)

  • Introduction (00:32)
  • Review of WS-Security Authentication Model (01:32)
  • How WS-Trust Works (04:39)
  • WS-Federation (02:31)
  • Federation Metadata Example (00:57)
  • Requesting a Token (01:05)
  • Dynamic Conversation (01:24)
  • Summary (00:20)
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