Recommended Reading
Here are things you can read to understand and use Axis better. Remember,
you also have access to all the source if you really want to find out how
things work (or why they don't).
Axis installation, use and internals
-
Web Services with JAX-RPC and Apache Axis.
by Pankaj Kumar.
Starting with a 10000 ft. view of Web Services, prior technologies, current and emerging
standards, it quickly gets into the nitty-gritties of using JAX-RPC and Apache Axis
for writing and executing programs. Has a nice coverage of different invocation styles -
generated stubs, dynamic proxy and dynamic invocation interface. A good place to start
if you are new to Web Services and Axis.
The author also maintains a
Web Services Resource Page.
- Apache Axis SOAP for Java
Dennis Sosnoski covers Axis. This is another good introductory guide.
-
Enabling SOAPMonitor in Axis 1.0.
Dennis Sosnoski on how to turn the SOAP monitor on and off, and use it to log your
application.
-
Axis in JRrun
Macromedia authored coverage of using Axis from inside JRun.
-
Ask the magic eight ball
Example of using an Axis service with various
caller platforms/languages.
Specifications
-
SOAP Version 1.1
Remember that SOAP1.1 is not an official W3C standard.
-
SOAP Version 1.2 Part 0: Primer
This and the follow-on sections cover what the W3C think SOAP
is and how it should be used.
-
Web Services Description Language (WSDL) 1.1
-
RFC 2616: Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1
<
-
JAX-RPC Specification 1.0
The public API for Web Services in Java.
-
XML Schema Part 0: Primer
The W3C XML Schema, (WXS) is one of the two sets of datatype SOAP
supports, the other being the SOAP Section 5 datatypes that predate
WXS. Complicated as it is, it is useful to have a vague understanding
of this specification.
Explanations, articles and presentations
-
A Gentle Introduction to SOAP
Sam Ruby tries not to scare people.
-
A Busy Developer's Guide to WSDL 1.1
Quick intro to WSDL by the eponymous Sam Ruby.
-
Axis - an open source web service toolkit for Java
by Mark Volkmann, Partner, Object Computing, Inc. A very good introduction
to SOAP and Axis. Highly Recommended.
-
When Web Services Go Bad
Steve Loughran tries to scare people.
A painful demonstration how deployment and system management are
trouble spots in a production service, followed by an espousal of a
deployment-centric development process. Remember, it doesn't have to
be that bad.
-
JavaOne 2002, Web Services Today and Tomorrow
(Java Developer connection login required)
-
The Java Web Services Tutorial: Java API for XML-based RPC
This is part of Sun's guide to their Java Web Services Developer Pack.
The examples are all based on their JWSDP, but as Axis also implements
JAX-RPC, they may all port to Axis.
-
Using Web Services Effectively.
Blissfully ignoring issues such as versioning, robustness and security and
all the other details a production Web Service needs, instead pushing EJB as
the only way to process requests, this is Sun's guide to
using web services in Java. It also assumes Java is at both ends, so manages
to skirt round the interop problem.
Interoperability
-
To infinity and beyond - the quest for SOAP interoperability
Sam Ruby explains why Interop matters so much.
-
The Wondrous Curse of Interoperability
Steve Loughran on interop challenges (especially between .NET and Axis),
and how to test for them.
Advanced topics
-
Requirements for and Evaluation of RMI Protocols for Scientific Computing
-
Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures
The theoretical basis of the REST architecture
-
Investigating the Limits of SOAP Performance for Scientific Computing
-
Architectural Principles of the World Wide Web
The W3C architects say how things should be done.
Books
-
Beginning Java Web Services
Meeraj Kunnumpurath et al, Wrox Press, September 2002.
An introductory book, with the early chapters focusing on Axis.
The
sample chapter shows how to install Axis with Tomcat 4.0: we do not believe
that their approach is the best. It is easier to drop jaxrpc.jar and
saaj.jar into the CATALINA_HOME/common/lib dir than it is to add all
axis jars to the classpath by hand. The book is based on Axis Beta-3.
-
Java development with Ant
by Erik Hatcher and Steve Loughran, Manning Press, July 2002.
A book on Ant development which covers Web Service development with Axis,
along with other topics relevant to Java developers using Ant. The Web Service
chapter,
chapter 15, is free to download, and was the birthplace of
happyaxis.jar.
The book is based on Axis Beta-2; the web site contains updated
documentation where appropriate.
-
AXIS: Next Generation Java SOAP
by Romin Irani and S Jeelani Bashna, Wrox Press, May 2002.
The first nothing-but-Axis book.
It is based on Beta-1. This is a reasonable book, despite is apparent thinness and
relative age. If it has a major weakness it believes everything works as intended,
which regular Axis users will know is not quite true yet. Maybe they didn't want
to fault missing features and other gotchas, assuming they would be fixed by the time
the product shipped, but the effective result is that you can get into minor trouble working
from this book, trying to use bits that aren't there, or just don't work (yet).
-
Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL and UDDI
Steve Graham et al, December 2001.
Covering very early versions of Axis
along with other aspects of Web Service technologies. One of the
authors, Glen Daniels, is an Axis committer and active contributor, so
the quality of the Axis coverage is high. Good explanations of SOAP, UDDI, and the like.
Authors, publishers: we welcome additions to this section of any books which
have some explicit coverage of Axis. Free paper/pdf copies and other forms of bribery accepted.
External Sites covering Web Services
-
IBM developerWorks Web Services corner
There are lots of interesting articles on Web Services here, many of which are
Axis related. There is also a
listing of
"all current open standards and specifications that define the Web services family of protocols",
though Soap with Attachments is mysteriously absent.