Copyright © 2002-2004 by The Web Services-Interoperability Organization (WS-I) and Certain of its Members. All Rights Reserved.
This document defines the WS-I Basic Profile 1.0, consisting of a set of non-proprietary Web services specifications, along with clarifications and amendments to those specifications which promote interoperability.
This is a final specification. Please refer to the errata, which may include normative corrections to it.
The material contained herein is not a license, either expressly or impliedly, to any intellectual property owned or controlled by any of the authors or developers of this material or WS-I. The material contained herein is provided on an "AS IS" basis and to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, this material is provided AS IS AND WITH ALL FAULTS, and the authors and developers of this material and WS-I hereby disclaim all other warranties and conditions, either express, implied or statutory, including, but not limited to, any (if any) implied warranties, duties or conditions of merchantability, of fitness for a particular purpose, of accuracy or completeness of responses, of results, of workmanlike effort, of lack of viruses, and of lack of negligence. ALSO, THERE IS NO WARRANTY OR CONDITION OF TITLE, QUIET ENJOYMENT, QUIET POSSESSION, CORRESPONDENCE TO DESCRIPTION OR NON-INFRINGEMENT WITH REGARD TO THIS MATERIAL.
IN NO EVENT WILL ANY AUTHOR OR DEVELOPER OF THIS MATERIAL OR WS-I BE LIABLE TO ANY OTHER PARTY FOR THE COST OF PROCURING SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES, LOST PROFITS, LOSS OF USE, LOSS OF DATA, OR ANY INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR SPECIAL DAMAGES WHETHER UNDER CONTRACT, TORT, WARRANTY, OR OTHERWISE, ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THIS OR ANY OTHER AGREEMENT RELATING TO THIS MATERIAL, WHETHER OR NOT SUCH PARTY HAD ADVANCE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
If there are areas in this specification that could be clearer, or if errors or omissions are identified, WS-I would like to be notified in order to provide the best possible interoperability guidance.
By sending email, or otherwise communicating with WS-I, you (on behalf of yourself if you are an individual, and your company if you are providing Feedback on behalf of the company) will be deemed to have granted to WS-I, the members of WS-I, and other parties that have access to your Feedback, a non-exclusive, non-transferable, worldwide, perpetual, irrevocable, royalty-free license to use, disclose, copy, license, modify, sublicense or otherwise distribute and exploit in any manner whatsoever the Feedback you provide regarding the work. You acknowledge that you have no expectation of confidentiality with respect to any Feedback you provide. You represent and warrant that you have rights to provide this Feedback, and if you are providing Feedback on behalf of a company, you represent and warrant that you have the rights to provide Feedback on behalf of your company. You also acknowledge that WS-I is not required to review, discuss, use, consider or in any way incorporate your Feedback into future versions of its work. If WS-I does incorporate some or all of your Feedback in a future version of the work, it may, but is not obligated to include your name (or, if you are identified as acting on behalf of your company, the name of your company) on a list of contributors to the work. If the foregoing is not acceptable to you and any company on whose behalf you are acting, please do not provide any Feedback.
Feedback on this document should be directed to wsbasic_comment@ws-i.org.
1. Introduction
1.1. Guiding Principles
1.2. Notational Conventions
2. Scope of the Profile
3. Profile Conformance
3.1. Conformance of Artifacts
3.2. Conformance of Services, Consumers
and Registries
3.3. Conformance Annotation in
Descriptions
3.4. Conformance Annotation in
Messages
3.5. Conformance Annotation
in Registry Data
4. Messaging
4.1. XML Representation of SOAP Messages
4.1.1. SOAP Messages and
the Unicode BOM
4.1.2. SOAP Fault Syntax
4.1.3. SOAP Faults and
Namespaces
4.1.4. SOAP Fault
Extensibility
4.1.5. SOAP Fault Language
4.1.6. SOAP Custom Fault
Codes
4.1.7. SOAP encodingStyle
Attribute
4.1.8. SOAP's use of XML
4.1.9. SOAP and XML
Declarations
4.1.10. SOAP Trailers
4.1.11. Acceptable SOAP
Character Encodings
4.1.12. SOAP
mustUnderstand Attribute
4.1.13. SOAP Body and
Namespaces
4.1.14. SOAP Envelope
Namespace
4.1.15. Use of xsi:type
Attributes
4.2. SOAP Processing Model
4.2.1. Mandatory Headers
4.2.2. Generating
mustUnderstand Faults
4.2.3. SOAP Fault
Processing
4.3. Use of SOAP in HTTP
4.3.1. HTTP Versions
4.3.2. Identifying SOAP
Faults
4.3.3. HTTP Methods and
Extensions
4.3.4. SOAPAction Header
Syntax
4.3.5. HTTP and TCP Ports
4.3.6. HTTP Success Status
Codes
4.3.7. HTTP Redirect
Status Codes
4.3.8. HTTP Client Error
Status Codes
4.3.9. HTTP Server Error
Status Codes
4.3.10. HTTP Cookies
5. Service Description
5.1. Document Structure
5.1.1. WSDL Schema
Definitions
5.1.2. WSDL and Schema
Import
5.1.3. WSDL Import
location Attribute Syntax
5.1.4. WSDL Import
location Attribute Semantics
5.1.5. Placement of WSDL
import Elements
5.1.6. XML Version
Requirements
5.1.7. WSDL and the
Unicode BOM
5.1.8. Acceptable WSDL
Character Encodings
5.1.9. Namespace Coercion
5.1.10. WSDL documentation
Element
5.1.11. WSDL Extensions
5.2. Types
5.2.1. QName References
5.2.2. Schema
targetNamespace Syntax
5.2.3. soapenc:Array
5.2.4. WSDL and Schema
Definition Target Namespaces
5.3. Messages
5.3.1. Bindings and Parts
5.3.2. Bindings and Faults
5.3.3. Unbound portType
Element Contents
5.3.4. Declaration of part
Elements
5.4. Port Types
5.4.1. Ordering of part
Elements
5.4.2. Allowed Operations
5.4.3. Distinctive
Operations
5.4.4. parameterOrder
Attribute Construction
5.4.5. Exclusivity of type
and element Attributes
5.5. Bindings
5.5.1. Use of SOAP Binding
5.6. SOAP Binding
5.6.1. Specifying the
transport Attribute
5.6.2. HTTP Transport
5.6.3. Consistency of
style Attribute
5.6.4. Encodings and the
use Attribute
5.6.5. Default for use
Attribute
5.6.6. Multiple Bindings
for portType Elements
5.6.7. Wire Signatures for
Operations
5.6.8. Multiple Ports on
an Endpoint
5.6.9. Child Element for
Document-Literal Bindings
5.6.10. One-Way Operations
5.6.11. Namespaces for
soapbind Elements
5.6.12. Consistency of
portType and binding Elements
5.6.13. Describing
headerfault Elements
5.6.14. Enumeration of
Faults
5.6.15. Type and Name of
SOAP Binding Elements
5.6.16. name Attribute on
Faults
5.6.17. Omission of the
use Attribute
5.6.18. Consistency of
Messages with Descriptions
5.6.19. Response Wrappers
5.6.20. Namespace for Part
Accessors
5.6.21. Namespaces for
Children of Part Accessors
5.6.22. Required Headers
5.6.23. Allowing
Undescribed Headers
5.6.24. Ordering Headers
5.6.25. Describing
SOAPAction
5.6.26. SOAP Binding
Extensions
5.7. Use of XML Schema
6. Service Publication and Discovery
6.1. bindingTemplates
6.2. tModels
7. Security
7.1. Use of HTTPS
Appendix I: Referenced Specifications
Appendix II: Extensibility Points
Appendix III: Acknowledgements
This document defines the WS-I Basic Profile 1.0 (hereafter, "Profile"), consisting of a set of non-proprietary Web services specifications, along with clarifications to and amplifications of those specifications which promote interoperability.
Section 1 introduces the Profile, and relates the philosophy that it takes with regard to interoperability.
Section 2, "Scope of the Profile," delimits the areas where the Profile improves interoperability.
Section 3, "Profile Conformance," explains what it means to be conformant to the Profile.
Each subsequent section addresses a component of the Profile, and consists of two parts; an overview detailing the component specifications and their extensibility points, followed by subsections that address individual parts of the component specifications. Note that there is no relationship between the section numbers in this document and those in the referenced specifications.
The Profile was developed according to a set of principles that, together, form the philosophy of the Profile, as it relates to bringing about interoperability. This section documents these guidelines.
The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC2119.
Normative statements in the Profile (i.e., those impacting conformance, as outlined in "Profile Conformance") are presented in the following manner:
RnnnnStatement text here.
where "nnnn" is replaced by the statement number. Each statement contains exactly one requirement level keyword (e.g., "MUST") and one conformance target keyword (e.g., "MESSAGE").
Some statements clarify the referenced specification(s), but do not place additional constraints upon implementations. For convenience, clarifications are annotated in the following manner: C
Some statements are derived from ongoing standardization work on the referenced specification(s). For convenience, such forward-derived statements are annotated in the following manner: xxxx, where "xxxx" is an identifier for the specification (e.g., "SOAP12" for SOAP Version 1.2, currently under development). Note that because such work is not complete, the specification that the requirement is derived from may change; this information is included only as a convenience to implementers.
This specification uses a number of namespace prefixes throughout; their associated URIs are listed below. Note that the choice of any namespace prefix is arbitrary and not semantically significant.
The scope of the Profile delineates the technologies that it addresses; in other words, the Profile only attempts to improve interoperability within its own scope. Initially, the Profile's scope is bounded by the specifications referenced by it; for a complete list of the Profile's referenced specifications, see Appendix I.
The Profile's scope is further refined by extensibility points. Referenced specifications often provide extension mechanisms and unspecified or open-ended configuration parameters. When identified as an extensibility point, such a mechanism or parameter is outside the scope of the Profile, and its use is not subject to claims of conformance to this Profile.
Because the use of extensibility points may impair interoperability, their use should be negotiated or documented in some fashion by the parties to a Web service; for example, this could take the form of an out-of-band agreement.
Note that the Profile may still place requirements on the use of an extensibility point, without constraining its range. Also, specific uses of extensibility points may be further restricted by other profiles, to improve their interoperability when used in conjunction with the Profile.
For a complete list of the Profile's extensibility points, see Appendix II.
Conformance to the Profile is defined by adherence to the set of requirements for a specific target, within the scope of the Profile.
The scope of the Profile is defined above ("Scope of the Profile"); conformance to the Profile is dependent upon conformance to those referenced specifications that are in-scope, except when in conflict with the Profile's Requirements, which take precedence for purposes of conformance.
Requirements state the criteria for conformance to the Profile within its stated scope. They embody refinements, interpretations and clarifications that improve interoperability therein. Requirement levels, using RFC2119 language (e.g., MUST, MAY, SHOULD) indicate the nature of the requirement and its impact on conformance. Each requirement is individually identified (e.g., R9999) for convenience.
Additional text may be included in the Profile to illuminate requirements (e.g., rationale and examples); however, requirement statements alone should be considered in determining conformance.
Targets allow for the description of conformance in different contexts, to allow conformance testing and certification of artifacts (such as SOAP messages and WSDL descriptions), Web service instances, and Web service consumers. The sections below describe the Profile's conformance targets.
To allow services to advertise conformance to the Profile, messages, descriptions and registry data can be annotated with conformance claims, which use a URI to assert conformance with a particular profile.
The conformance claim URI for this Profile is "http://ws-i.org/profiles/basic/1.0".
The most basic level of conformance is that of an artifact. The Profile makes requirement statements about three kinds of artifacts:
An instance of an artifact is considered conformant when all of the requirements associated with it are met.
A deployed instance of a Web service (as specified by wsdl:port
or uddi:bindingTemplate) is considered conformant if it produces
only conformant artifacts, and is capable of consuming conformant artifacts, as
appropriate. Note that this means that where multiple conformant artifacts are
possible, a conformant service must be able to consume them all (e.g., while a
sender might choose whether to encode XML in UTF-8 or UTF-16 when sending a
message, a receiver must be capable of using either).
Similarly, a consumer of a service instance is considered conformant if it produces only conformant artifacts and is capable of consuming conformant artifacts, as appropriate.
Finally, a registry is considered conformant if it satisfies the profile requirements for the target REGISTRY.
wsdl:port
or a uddi:bindingTemplate. Conformant Web service instances must comply with all requirement statements associated with INSTANCE.
Likewise, conformant consumers must comply with all requirements statements associated with CONSUMER.
Both conformant Web service instances and consumers must comply, as appropriate, with all of the requirement statements associated with:
Note that conformance does not apply to a service as a whole; only ports are
considered when determining conformance of instances. Therefore, the Profile
places no constraints on wsdl:service definitions. In particular,
they can contain multiple wsdl:port elements, each of which may or
may not be conformant.
Types of Web services (as described by wsdl:binding and
wsdl:portType) are considered conformant if, when properly implemented
and deployed in the environment in which they were intended to operate, they
result in conformant instances.
R0001 An INSTANCE MUST be described by a WSDL 1.1 service description, by a UDDI binding template, or both.
wsdl:portType) to scope them to that construct.
R0002 A DESCRIPTION MAY contain conformance claims regarding instances, as specified in the conformance claim schema.
R0003
A DESCRIPTION's conformance claims MUST be children of the
wsdl:documentation element of each of the elements: wsdl:port,
wsdl:binding, wsdl:portType, wsdl:operation
(as a child element of wsdl:portType but not of
wsdl:binding) and wsdl:message.
A conformance claim on an element also implies that the same claim is made for all the elements that it uses, based on the following transitivity rules, applied recursively:
wsdl:port is inherited by the referenced
wsdl:binding wsdl:binding is inherited by the referenced
wsdl:portType wsdl:portType is inherited by the referenced
wsdl:operations wsdl:operation is inherited by the
referenced wsdl:messages of its child wsdl:output
and/or wsdl:input The conformance claim schema is:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<xsd:schema xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
targetNamespace="http://ws-i.org/schemas/conformanceClaim/"
xmlns:tns="http://ws-i.org/schemas/conformanceClaim/"
xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
elementFormDefault="qualified"
attributeFormDefault="unqualified" >
<xsd:import namespace="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
schemaLocation="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" />
<xsd:element name="Claim" >
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:any namespace="##any" processContents="lax"
minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" />
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute name="conformsTo" type="xsd:anyURI" use="required"/>
<xsd:attribute ref="soap:mustUnderstand" use="prohibited" />
<xsd:anyAttribute namespace="##any" processContents="lax"/>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
</xsd:schema>
CORRECT:
<wsdl:definitions xmlns:wsdl="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl"
xmlns:tns="http://example.org/myservice"
xmlns:soapbind="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap"
xmlns:wsi="http://ws-i.org/schemas/conformanceClaim/"
targetNamespace="http://example.org/myservice">
<wsdl:portType name="MyPortType">
...
</wsdl:portType>
<wsdl:binding name="MyBinding" portType="MyPortType" >
...
</wsdl:binding>
<wsdl:service name="MyService" >
<wsdl:port name="MyPort" binding="tns:MyBinding" >
<wsdl:documentation>
<wsi:Claim conformsTo="http://ws-i.org/profiles/basic/1.0" />
</wsdl:documentation>
<soapbind:address location="http://example.org/myservice/myport" />
</wsdl:port>
</wsdl:service>
</wsdl:definitions>
R0004 A MESSAGE MAY contain conformance claims, as specified in the conformance claim schema.
R0005 A MESSAGE's conformance claims MUST be carried as SOAP header blocks.
R0006 A MESSAGE MAY contain conformance claims for more than one profile.
R0007
A SENDER MUST NOT use the soap:mustUnderstand attribute
when sending a SOAP header block containing a conformance claim.
CORRECT:
<soap:Envelope xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" >
<soap:Header>
<!-- other headers -->
<wsi:Claim conformsTo="http://ws-i.org/profiles/basic/1.0"
xmlns:wsi="http://ws-i.org/schemas/conformanceClaim/" />
<!-- other headers -->
</soap:Header>
<soap:Body>
<!-- body content -->
</soap:Body>
</soap:Envelope>
uddi:tModel elements. The natural mechanism in UDDI for adding
attributes to a uddi:tModel is to define and use a category
system. The Profile adopts this mechanism to add the ability for
uddi:tModels to assert conformance with WS-I Profiles, and with the
Profile in particular.
R3020
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel claiming conformance with a
Profile MUST be categorized using the ws-i-org:conformsTo:2002_12 taxonomy.
R3030
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel claiming conformance with a
Profile MUST use the ws-i-org:conformsTo:2002_12 categorization value
corresponding to the conformance claim URI for that Profile.
R3021 A REGISTRY MUST support the WS-I Conformance category system by adding the ws-i-org:conformsTo:2002_12 tModel definition to its registry content.
<tModel tModelKey="uuid:65719168-72c6-3f29-8c20-62defb0961c0">
<name>ws-i-org:conformsTo:2002_12</name>
<description xml:lang="EN">Category system used for UDDI entities
to point to the WS-I concept to which they conform to</description>
<overviewDoc>
<overviewURL>http://ws-i.org/schemas/conformanceClaim/</overviewURL>
</overviewDoc>
<categoryBag>
<keyedReference
keyName="uddi-org:types:categorization"
keyValue="categorization"
tModelKey="uuid:C1ACF26D-9672-4404-9D70-39B756E62AB4" />
</categoryBag>
</tModel>
CORRECT:
<tModel tModelKey="...">
<name>BarSOAPService</name>
<description xml:lang="EN">Bar's SOAP Service</description>
<overviewDoc>...</overviewDoc>
<categoryBag>
<keyedReference
tModelKey="uuid:65719168-72c6-3f29-8c20-62defb0961c0"
keyName="ws-I_conformance:BasicProfile1.0"
keyValue="http://ws-i.org/profiles/basic/1.0" />
</categoryBag>
wsdl:service elements are not necessarily mapped to a
single uddi:businessService and are also not subject to
conformance claims, it would be unclear what it meant if a
uddi:businessEntity or a uddi:businessService element
were to claim conformance with the Profile. Also, uddi:bindingTemplate
elements can't be categorized because the UDDI V2 XML Schema does not
provide a uddi:categoryBag for them. Hence, the conformance
claim made by wsdl:port elements can't be documented in the
corresponding uddi:bindingTemplate.
R3005
REGDATA other than uddi:tModel elements representing
conformant Web service types MUST NOT be categorized using the
ws-i-org:conformsTo:2002_12 taxonomy and a categorization of "http://ws-i.org/profiles/basic/1.0".
uddi:tModel
made were not consistent with the claim made by the wsdl:binding
it uses.
R3004
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel MUST be constructed so that
the conformance claim it makes is consistent with the conformance claim made
by the wsdl:binding to which it refers.
This section of the Profile incorporates the following specifications by reference, and defines extensibility points within them:
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
SOAP 1.1 defines an XML-based structure for transmitting messages. The Profile mandates the use of that structure, and places the following constraints on its use:
R4001 A RECEIVER MUST accept messages that include the Unicode Byte Order Mark (BOM).C
soap:Body element, that element being a soap:Fault
element. The Profile restricts the content of the soap:Fault
element to those elements explicitly described in SOAP 1.1.R1000
When a MESSAGE contains a soap:Fault element, that element
MUST NOT have element children other than faultcode,
faultstring, faultactor and detail.
INCORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' >
<faultcode>soap:Client</faultcode>
<faultstring>Invalid message format</faultstring>
<faultactor>http://example.org/someactor</faultactor>
<detail>There were <b>lots</b> of elements in the message
that I did not understand
</detail>
<m:Exception xmlns:m='http://example.org/faults/exceptions' >
<m:ExceptionType>Severe</m:ExceptionType>
</m:Exception>
</soap:Fault>
CORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' >
<faultcode>soap:Client</faultcode>
<faultstring>Invalid message format</faultstring>
<faultactor>http://example.org/someactor</faultactor>
<detail>
<m:msg xmlns:m='http://example.org/faults/exceptions'>
There were <b>lots</b> of elements in the message that I did not understand
</m:msg>
<m:Exception xmlns:m='http://example.org/faults/exceptions'>
<m:ExceptionType>Severe</m:ExceptionType>
</m:Exception>
</detail>
</soap:Fault>
soap:Fault element are local to that
element, therefore namespace qualification is unnecessary.R1001
When a MESSAGE contains a soap:Fault element its element
children MUST be unqualified.
INCORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' >
<soap:faultcode>soap:Client</soap:faultcode>
<soap:faultstring>Invalid message format</soap:faultstring>
<soap:faultactor>http://example.org/someactor</soap:faultactor>
<soap:detail>
<m:msg xmlns:m='http://example.org/faults/exceptions'>
There were <b>lots</b> of elements in the message that
I did not understand
</m:msg>
</soap:detail>
</soap:Fault>
CORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/'
xmlns='' >
<faultcode>soap:Client</faultcode>
<faultstring>Invalid message format</faultstring>
<faultactor>http://example.org/someactor</faultactor>
<detail>
<m:msg xmlns:m='http://example.org/faults/exceptions'>
There were <b>lots</b> of elements in the message that
I did not understand
</m:msg>
</detail>
</soap:Fault>
detail element and additional elements are allowed to appear as
children of the detail element.R1002
A RECEIVER MUST accept fault messages that have any number of elements,
including zero, appearing as children of the detail element. Such
children can be qualified or unqualified.
R1003
A RECEIVER MUST accept fault messages that have any number of qualified
or unqualified attributes, including zero, appearing on the detail
element. The namespace of qualified attributes can be anything other than
"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/".
R1016
A RECEIVER MUST accept fault messages that carry an xml:lang
attribute on the faultstring element.
faultcode
element, through the use of the "dot" notation.
Use of this mechanism to extend the meaning of the SOAP 1.1-defined fault codes can lead to namespace collision. Therefore, its use should be avoided, as doing so may cause interoperability issues when the same names are used in the right-hand side of the "." (dot) to convey different meaning.
Instead, the Profile encourages the use of the fault codes defined in
SOAP 1.1, along with additional information in the detail
element to convey the nature of the Fault.
Alternatively, it is acceptable to define custom fault codes in a namespace controlled by the specifying authority.
A number of specifications have already defined custom fault codes using the "." (dot) notation. Despite this, their use in future specifications is discouraged.
R1004
When a MESSAGE contains a faultcode element the content of
that element SHOULD be one of the fault codes defined in SOAP 1.1 or a
namespace qualified fault code.
R1031
When a MESSAGE contains a faultcode element the content of
that element SHOULD NOT use of the SOAP 1.1 "dot" notation to refine the
meaning of the Fault.
INCORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/'
xmlns:c='http://example.org/faultcodes' >
<faultcode>soap:Server.ProcessingError</faultcode>
<faultstring>An error occurred while processing the message
</faultstring>
</soap:Fault>
CORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/'
xmlns:c='http://example.org/faultcodes' >
<faultcode>c:ProcessingError</faultcode>
<faultstring>An error occured while processing the message
</faultstring>
</soap:Fault>
CORRECT:
<soap:Fault xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' > <faultcode>soap:Server</faultcode> <faultstring>An error occured while processing the message </faultstring> </soap:Fault>
soap:encodingStyle attribute is used to indicate the use of
a particular scheme in the encoding of data into XML. However, this
introduces complexity, as this function can also be served by the use of XML
Namespaces. As a result, the Profile prefers the use of literal, non-encoded
XML.R1005
A MESSAGE MUST NOT contain soap:encodingStyle attributes
on any of the elements whose namespace name is "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/".
R1006
A MESSAGE MUST NOT contain soap:encodingStyle attributes
on any element that is a child of soap:Body.
R1007
A MESSAGE described in an rpc-literal binding MUST NOT contain
soap:encodingStyle attribute on any elements are grandchildren of
soap:Body.
R1008 A MESSAGE MUST NOT contain a Document Type Declaration. C
R1009 A MESSAGE MUST NOT contain Processing Instructions. C
R1010 A RECEIVER MUST accept messages that contain an XML Declaration. C
soap:Body
element is unclear. Therefore, such elements are disallowed.R1011
A MESSAGE MUST NOT have any element children of soap:Envelope
following the soap:Body element.
INCORRECT:
<soap:Envelope xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' >
<soap:Body>
<p:Process xmlns:p='http://example.org/Operations' />
</soap:Body>
<m:Data xmlns:m='http://example.org/information' >
Here is some data with the message
</m:Data>
</soap:Envelope>
CORRECT:
<soap:Envelope xmlns:soap='http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' >
<soap:Body>
<p:Process xmlns:p='http://example.org/Operations' >
<m:Data xmlns:m='http://example.org/information' >
Here is some data with the message
</m:Data>
</p:Process>
</soap:Body>
</soap:Envelope>
As a
consequence of this, in conjunction with SOAP 1.1's requirement to use the
text/xml media type (which has a default character encoding of "us-ascii"),
the charset parameter must always be present on the SOAP
envelope's media type. A further consequence of this is that the encoding
pseudo-attribute of XML declaration within the message is always ignored, in
accordance with the requirements of both XML 1.0 and RFC3023, "XML Media
Types".
R1012 A MESSAGE MUST be serialized as either UTF-8 or UTF-16.
R1018 The media type of a MESSAGE's envelope MUST indicate the correct character encoding, using the charset parameter. C
Content-Type HTTP header field.
soap:mustUnderstand attribute has a restricted type of "xsd:boolean"
that takes only "0" or "1". Therefore, only those two values are allowed.R1013
A MESSAGE containing a soap:mustUnderstand attribute MUST
only use the lexical forms "0" and "1". C
soap:Body.R1014
The children of the soap:Body element in a MESSAGE MUST be
namespace qualified.
R1015 A RECEIVER MUST generate a fault if they encounter a message whose document element has a local name of "Envelope" but a namespace name that is not "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/".
xsi:type
attribute is only needed where no such schema exists, that is where both
sides are assuming that all exchanged items are "xsd:anyType".
R1017
A RECEIVER MUST NOT mandate the use of the xsi:type
attribute in messages except as required in order to indicate a derived type
(see XML Schema Part 1: Structures, Section 2.6.1).
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
SOAP 1.1 defines a message exchange model for processing of messages. In particular, it defines rules for the processing of header blocks and the body of message. It also defines rules related to generation of faults. The Profile places the following constraints on the processing model:
soap:Header element bearing a soap:mustUnderstand
attribute with a value of "1".
R1025 A RECEIVER MUST handle messages in such a way that it appears that all checking of mandatory header blocks is performed before any actual processing. SOAP12
R1027
A RECEIVER MUST generate a "soap:MustUnderstand" fault when a message
contains a mandatory header block (i.e., one that has a
soap:mustUnderstand attribute with the value "1") targeted at the
receiver (via soap:actor) that the receiver does not understand.
R1028 When a Fault is generated by a RECEIVER, further processing SHOULD NOT be performed on the SOAP message aside from that which is necessary to rollback, or compensate for, any effects of processing the message prior to the generation of the Fault.
R1029 Where the normal outcome of processing a SOAP message would have resulted in the transmission of a SOAP response, but rather a SOAP Fault is generated instead, a RECEIVER MUST transmit a SOAP Fault message in place of the response.
R1030 A RECEIVER that generates a SOAP Fault SHOULD notify the end user that a SOAP Fault has been generated when practical, by whatever means is deemed appropriate to the circumstance.
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
SOAP 1.1 defines a single protocol binding, for HTTP. The Profile mandates the use of that binding, and places the following constraints on its use:
R1140 A MESSAGE SHOULD be sent using HTTP/1.1.
R1141 A MESSAGE MUST be sent using either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/1.0.
R1107
A RECEIVER MUST interpret SOAP messages containing only a
soap:Fault element as a Fault.
R1132 A HTTP request MESSAGE MUST use the HTTP POST method.
R1108 A MESSAGE MUST NOT use the HTTP Extension Framework (RFC2774).
SOAPAction HTTP
header field-value to be quoted increases interoperability of
implementations. Even though HTTP allows unquoted header field-values, some
SOAP implementations require that they be quoted.SOAPAction
is purely a hint to processors. All vital information regarding the intent
of a message is carried in soap:Envelope.
R1109
The value of the SOAPAction HTTP header field in a HTTP
request MESSAGE MUST be a quoted string. C
R1119
A RECEIVER MAY respond with a Fault if the value of the
SOAPAction HTTP header field is not quoted.
C
CORRECT:
A WSDL Description that has:
<soapbind:operation soapAction="foo" />
results in a message with a SOAPAction HTTP header field of:
SOAPAction: "foo"
CORRECT:
A WSDL Description that has:
<soapbind:operation />
or
<soapbind:operation soapAction="" />
results in a message with a corresponding SOAPAction HTTP header field as follows:
SOAPAction: ""
R1110 An INSTANCE MAY accept connections on TCP port 80 (HTTP). C
R1124 An INSTANCE MUST use a 2xx HTTP status code for responses that indicate a successful outcome of a request.
R1111 An INSTANCE SHOULD use a "200 OK" HTTP status code for responses that contain a SOAP message that is not a SOAP fault.
R1112 An INSTANCE SHOULD use either a "200 OK" or "202 Accepted" HTTP status code for a response that does do not contain a SOAP message but indicates successful HTTP outcome of a request.
R1130 An INSTANCE MUST use HTTP status code "307 Temporary Redirect" when redirecting a request to a different endpoint.
R1131 A CONSUMER MAY automatically redirect a request when it encounters a "307 Temporary Redirect" HTTP status code in a response.
R1125 An INSTANCE MUST use a 4xx HTTP status code for responses that indicate a problem with the format of the request.
R1113 An INSTANCE SHOULD use a "400 Bad Request "HTTP status code, if the request message is a malformed HTTP request, or not well-formed XML.
R1114 An INSTANCE SHOULD use a "405 Method not Allowed" HTTP status code if the request method was not "POST".
R1115 An INSTANCE SHOULD use a "415 Unsupported Media Type" HTTP status code if the Content-Type HTTP request header did not have a value consistent with the value specified for the corresponding binding of the input message.
R1126 An INSTANCE MUST use a "500 Internal Server Error" HTTP status code if the response message is a SOAP Fault.
R1120 An INSTANCE MAY use the HTTP state mechanism ("Cookies").
R1122 An INSTANCE using Cookies SHOULD conform to RFC2965.
R1121 An INSTANCE SHOULD NOT require consumer support for Cookies in order to function correctly.
R1123 The value of the cookie MUST be considered to be opaque by the CONSUMER.
The Profile uses Web Services Description Language (WSDL) to enable the description of services as sets of endpoints operating on messages.
This section of the Profile incorporates the following specifications by reference, and defines extensibility points within them:
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
WSDL 1.1 defines an XML-based structure for describing Web services. The Profile mandates the use of that structure, and places the following constraints on its use:
R2028 A DESCRIPTION using the WSDL namespace (prefixed "wsdl" in this Profile) MUST be valid according to the XML Schema found at "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/2003-02-11.xsd".
R2029 A DESCRIPTION using the WSDL SOAP binding namespace (prefixed "soapbind" in this Profile) MUST be valid according to the XML Schema found at "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/2003-02-11.xsd".
R2001 A DESCRIPTION MUST only use the WSDL "import" statement to import another WSDL description.
R2002 To import XML Schema Definitions, a DESCRIPTION MUST use the XML Schema "import" statement.
R2003
A DESCRIPTION MUST use the XML Schema "import" statement only within
the xsd:schema element of the types section.
R2004 A DESCRIPTION MUST NOT use the XML Schema "import" statement to import a Schema from any document whose root element is not "schema" from the namespace "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema".
R2009 An XML Schema directly or indirectly imported by a DESCRIPTION MAY include the Unicode Byte Order Mark (BOM).
R2010 An XML Schema directly or indirectly imported by a DESCRIPTION MUST use either UTF-8 or UTF-16 encoding.
R2011 An XML Schema directly or indirectly imported by a DESCRIPTION MUST use version 1.0 of the eXtensible Markup Language W3C Recommendation.
INCORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions"
xmlns:xsd1="http://example.com/stockquote/schemas""
...
xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/">
<import namespace="http://example.com/stockquote/schemas"
location="http://example.com/stockquote/stockquote.xsd"/>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="xsd1:TradePriceRequest"/>
</message>
...
</definitions>
CORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions">
<import namespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions"
location="http://example.com/stockquote/stockquote.wsdl"/>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="..."/>
</message>
...
</definitions>
CORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/"
xmlns:xsd1="http://example.com/stockquote/schemas"
...
xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/">
<import namespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions"
location="http://example.com/stockquote/stockquote.wsdl"/>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="xsd1:TradePriceRequest"/>
</message>
...
</definitions>
location attribute of
the wsdl:import statement is required, or what its content is
required to be.
R2007
A DESCRIPTION MUST specify a non-empty location attribute
on the wsdl:import element.
wsdl:import statement is modeled after the
xsd:import statement, the location attribute is required
by wsdl:import while the corresponding attribute on
xsd:import, schemaLocation is optional. Consistent with
location being required, its content is not intended to be
empty.
location
attribute on the wsdl:import statements it encounters.
R2008
In a DESCRIPTION the value of the location attribute of a
wsdl:import element SHOULD be treated as a hint.
C
location attribute on
a wsdl:import element because a WSDL processor may have other
ways of locating a WSDL description for a given namespace. For example, it
may already have a cached or built-in representation, or it may retrieve a
representation from a metadata repository or UDDI server.
wsdl:import.
R2022
When they appear in a DESCRIPTION, wsdl:import elements
MUST precede all other elements from the WSDL namespace except
wsdl:documentation.
R2023
When they appear in a DESCRIPTION, wsdl:types elements
MUST precede all other elements from the WSDL namespace except
wsdl:documentation and wsdl:import.
INCORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
...
xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/">
<import namespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions"
location="http://example.com/stockquote/stockquote.wsdl"/>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" type="tns:TradePriceRequest"/>
</message>
...
<service name="StockQuoteService">
<port name="StockQuotePort" binding="tns:StockQuoteSoap">
....
</port>
</service>
<types>
<schema targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/schemas"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
.......
</schema>
</types>
</definitions>
CORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/definitions">
<import namespace="http://example.com/stockquote/base"
location="http://example.com/stockquote/stockquote.wsdl"/>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="..."/>
</message>
...
</definitions>
CORRECT:
<definitions name="StockQuote"
...
xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/">
<types>
<schema targetNamespace="http://example.com/stockquote/schemas"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
.......
</schema>
</types>
<message name="GetLastTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="tns:TradePriceRequest"/>
</message>
...
<service name="StockQuoteService">
<port name="StockQuotePort" binding="tns:StockQuoteSoap">
....
</port>
</service>
</definitions>
R4004 A DESCRIPTION MUST use version 1.0 of the eXtensible Markup Language W3C Recommendation.
R4002 A DESCRIPTION MAY include the Unicode Byte Order Mark (BOM).C
R4003 A DESCRIPTION MUST use either UTF-8 or UTF-16 encoding.
wsdl:import is disallowed by the Profile.R2005
The targetNamespace attribute on the
wsdl:definitions element of a description that is being imported MUST
have same the value as the namespace attribute on the
wsdl:import element in the importing DESCRIPTION.
wsdl:documentation elements may be placed.R2020
The wsdl:documentation element MAY occur as a child of the
wsdl:import element in a DESCRIPTION.
WSDL20
R2021
The wsdl:documentation element MAY occur as a child of the
wsdl:part element in a DESCRIPTION.
WSDL20
R2024
The wsdl:documentation element MAY occur as a first child
of the wsdl:definitions element in a DESCRIPTION.
WSDL20
R2025 A DESCRIPTION containing WSDL extensions MUST NOT use them to contradict other requirements of the Profile.
R2026
A DESCRIPTION SHOULD NOT include extension elements with a
wsdl:required attribute value of "true" on any WSDL construct (wsdl:binding,
wsdl:portType, wsdl:message, wsdl:types
or wsdl:import) that claims conformance to the Profile.
R2027
If during the processing of an element in the WSDL namespace in a
description, a consumer encounters a WSDL extension element amongst its
element children, that has a wsdl:required attribute with a
boolean value of "true" that the consumer does not understand or cannot
process, the CONSUMER MUST fail processing of that element in the WSDL
namespace.
The following elements are extensible via attributes only:
wsdl:import wsdl:part wsdl:portType wsdl:input (in portType operation) wsdl:output (in portType operation) wsdl:fault (in portType operation) The following elements are extensible via elements as well as attributes:
wsdl:definitions wsdl:types wsdl:message wsdl:operation wsdl:binding wsdl:input (in binding operation) wsdl:output (in binding operation) wsdl:fault (in binding operation) wsdl:service wsdl:port The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
The wsdl:types element of WSDL 1.1 encloses data type
definitions that are relevant to the Web service described. The Profile places
the following constraints pertinent to those portions of the content of the
wsdl:types element that are referred to by WSDL elements that make
Profile conformance claims:
xsd:import
element). QName references to namespaces represented only by nested imports
are not allowed.WSDL 1.1 is unclear as to which schema target namespaces
are suitable for QName references from a WSDL element. The Profile allows
QName references from WSDL elements both to the target namespace defined by
the xsd:schema element, and to imported namespaces. Similar to
XML Schema, namespaces not referenced directly within the WSDL file (through
the targetNamespace attribute on xsd:schema, or
through the namespace attribute on xsd:import) are available
for use in QName reference. QName references to namespaces that are only
defined through a nested import are not allowed.
R2101 A DESCRIPTION MUST NOT use QName references to elements in namespaces that have been neither imported, nor defined in the referring WSDL document.
R2102
A QName reference to a Schema component in a DESCRIPTION MUST use the
namespace defined in the targetNamespace attribute on the
xsd:schema element, or to a namespace defined in the namespace
attribute on an xsd:import element within the xsd:schema
element.
wsdl:types is a good practice, places a minimal burden on
authors of WSDL documents, and avoids the cases that are not as clearly
defined as they might be.
R2105
All xsd:schema elements contained in a wsdl:types
element of a DESCRIPTION MUST have a targetNamespace attribute
with a valid and non-null value, UNLESS the xsd:schema element
has xsd:import and/or xsd:annotation as its only
child element(s).
R2110
In a DESCRIPTION, array declarations MUST NOT extend or restrict the
soapenc:Array type.
R2111
In a DESCRIPTION, array declarations MUST NOT use wsdl:arrayType
attribute in the type declaration.
R2112 In a DESCRIPTION, array declaration wrapper elements SHOULD NOT be named using the convention ArrayOfXXX.
R2113
A MESSAGE containing serialized arrays MUST NOT include the
soapenc:arrayType attribute.
INCORRECT:
Given the WSDL Description:
<xsd:element name="MyArray2" type="tns:MyArray2Type"/>
<xsd:complexType name="MyArray2Type"
xmlns:soapenc="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
xmlns:wsdl="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/" >
<xsd:complexContent>
<xsd:restriction base="soapenc:Array">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="x" type="xsd:string"
minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
</xsd:sequence>
<xsd:attribute ref="soapenc:arrayType"
wsdl:arrayType="tns:MyArray2Type[]"/>
</xsd:restriction>
</xsd:complexContent>
</xsd:complexType>
The SOAP message would serialize as (omitting namespace declarations for clarity):
<MyArray2 soapenc:arrayType="tns:MyArray2Type[]" > <x>abcd</x> <x>efgh</x> </MyArray2>
CORRECT:
Given the WSDL Description:
<xsd:element name="MyArray1" type="tns:MyArray1Type"/>
<xsd:complexType name="MyArray1Type">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="x" type="xsd:string"
minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:complexType>
The SOAP message would serialize as (omitting namespace declarations for clarity):
<MyArray1> <x>abcd</x> <x>efgh</x> </MyArray1>
R2114 The target namespace for WSDL definitions and the target namespace for schema definitions in a DESCRIPTION MAY be the same.WSDL20
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
In WSDL 1.1, wsdl:message elements are used to represent
abstract definitions of the data being transmitted. It uses wsdl:binding
elements to define how the abstract definitions are bound to a specific wire
format. The Profile places the following constraints on wsdl:message
elements and on how conformant wsdl:binding elements may use
wsdl:message element(s).
In this section the following definitions are used to make the requirements more compact and easier to understand.
An "rpc-literal binding" is a wsdl:binding element whose child
wsdl:operation elements are all rpc-literal operations.
An "rpc-literal operation" is a wsdl:operation child element of
wsdl:binding each of whose soapbind:body descendant
elements specifies the use attribute with the value "literal" and
each of which either:
soapbind:binding element which specifies
the style attribute with the value "rpc", and does not itself
have the style attribute specified. A "document-literal binding" is a wsdl:binding element whose
child wsdl:operation elements are all document-literal operations.
A "document-literal operation" is a wsdl:operation child element
of wsdl:binding each of whose soapbind:body descendent
elements specifies the use attribute with the value "literal" and
each of which either:
style attribute with the value "document"; or
soapbind:binding element which specifies
the style attribute with the value "document", and does not
itself have the style attribute specified; or soapbind:binding element which does not
have the style attribute specified, and does not itself have the
style attribute specified. wsdl:part
elements are permitted or required for document-literal and rpc-literal
bindings and how they must be defined.
R2201
A document-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST, in each of its
soapbind:body element(s), have at most one part listed in the
parts attribute, if the parts attribute is specified.
R2210
If a document-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION does not specify the
parts attribute on a soapbind:body element, the
corresponding abstract wsdl:message MUST define zero or one
wsdl:parts.
R2202
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MAY contain
soapbind:body element(s) that specify that zero parts form the
soap:Body.
R2203
An rpc-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST refer, in its
soapbind:body element(s), only to wsdl:part element(s)
that have been defined using the type attribute.
R2211
A MESSAGE described with an rpc-literal binding MUST NOT have the
xsi:nil attribute with a value of "1" or "true" on the part accessors.
R2207
A wsdl:message in a DESCRIPTION MAY contain
wsdl:parts that use the elements attribute provided those
wsdl:parts are not referred to by a soapbind:body in
an rpc-literal binding.
R2204
A document-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST refer, in each of its
soapbind:body element(s), only to wsdl:part
element(s) that have been defined using the element attribute.
R2208
A binding in a DESCRIPTION MAY contain soapbind:header
element(s) that refer to wsdl:parts in the same
wsdl:message that are referred to by its soapbind:body
element(s).
wsdl:message elements with zero parts is permitted in
Document styles to permit operations that can send or receive messages with
empty soap:Bodys. Use of wsdl:message elements
with zero parts is permitted in RPC styles to permit operations that have no
(zero) parameters and/or a return value.For document-literal bindings,
the Profile requires that at most one part, abstractly defined with the
element attribute, be serialized into the soap:Body
element.
When a wsdl:part element is defined using the type
attribute, the wire representation of that part is equivalent to an implicit
(XML Schema) qualification of a minOccurs attribute with the
value "1", a maxOccurs attribute with the value "1" and a
nillable attribute with the value "false".
wsdl:part elements
that describe soapbind:fault, soapbind:header, and
soapbind:headerfault may be defined.
R2205
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST refer, in each of its
soapbind:header, soapbind:headerfault and
soapbind:fault elements, only to wsdl:part element(s) that
have been defined using the element attribute.
soapbind:fault,
soapbind:header and soapbind:headerfault assume,
per WSDL 1.1, that the value of the style attribute is
"document". R2204 requires that all wsdl:part elements with a
style attribute whose value is "document" that are bound to
soapbind:body be defined using the element
attribute. This requirement does the same for soapbind:fault,
soapbind:header and soapbind:headerfault elements.
wsdl:binding to leave the binding for portions of the content defined
by a wsdl:portType unspecified.
R2209
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION SHOULD bind every
wsdl:part of a wsdl:message in the wsdl:portType
to which it refers to one of soapbind:body, soapbind:header,
soapbind:fault or soapbind:headerfault.
soapbind:body or soapbind:header
(and so forth) as appropriate when using the SOAP binding as defined in WSDL
1.1 Section 3.
element
attribute of a wsdl:part element.
R2206
A wsdl:message in a DESCRIPTION containing a
wsdl:part that uses the element attribute MUST refer, in
that attribute, to a global element declaration.
INCORRECT:
<message name="GetTradePriceInput">
<part name="tickerSymbol" element="xsd:string"/>
<part name="time" element="xsd:timeInstant"/>
</message>
INCORRECT:
<message name="GetTradePriceInput">
<part name="tickerSymbol" element="xsd:string"/>
</message>
CORRECT:
<message name="GetTradePriceInput">
<part name="body" element="tns:SubscribeToQuotes"/>
</message>
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
In WSDL 1.1, wsdl:portType elements are used to group a set of
abstract operations. The Profile places the following constraints on conformant
wsdl:portType element(s):
parameterOrder helps code generators in
mapping between method signatures and messages on the wire.
R2301
The order of the elements in the soap:body of a MESSAGE
MUST be the same as that of the wsdl:parts in the
wsdl:message that describes it.
R2302
A DESCRIPTION MAY use the parameterOrder attribute of an
wsdl:operation element to indicate the return value and method
signatures as a hint to code generators.
R2303
A DESCRIPTION MUST NOT use Solicit-Response and Notification type
operations in a wsdl:portType definition.
wsdl:portType is disallowed by
the Profile.
R2304
A wsdl:portType in a DESCRIPTION MUST have operations with
distinct values for their name attributes.
wsdl:operations
within a given wsdl:portType. A wsdl:portType may
have wsdl:operations with names that are the same as those
found in other wsdl:portTypes.
parameterOrder
attribute of the wsdl:portType should be constructed.
R2305
A wsdl:portType in a DESCRIPTION MUST be constructed so
that the parameterOrder attribute, if present, omits at most 1
wsdl:part from the output message.
wsdl:part from the output message is omitted from the list
of wsdl:parts that is the value of the parameterOrder
attribute, the single omitted wsdl:part is the return value.
There are no restrictions on the type of the return value. If no part is
omitted, there is no return value.
type and
element attributes cannot be specified to define a wsdl:part
in a wsdl:message.
R2306
A wsdl:message in a DESCRIPTION MUST NOT specify both
type and element attributes on the same
wsdl:part.
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
In WSDL 1.1, the wsdl:binding element supplies the concrete
protocol and data format specifications for the operations and messages defined
by a particular wsdl:portType. The Profile places the following
constraints on conformant binding specifications:
R2401
A wsdl:binding element in a DESCRIPTION MUST use WSDL SOAP
Binding as defined in WSDL 1.1 Section 3.
wsdl:binding elements. It does not place a requirement on
descriptions as a whole; in particular, it does not preclude WSDL documents
from containing non-conformant wsdl:binding elements.
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
WSDL 1.1 defines a binding for SOAP 1.1 endpoints. The Profile mandates the use of SOAP binding as defined in WSDL 1.1, and places the following constraints on its use:
transport attribute. The WSDL 1.1
specification requires it; however, the schema shows it to be optional.
R2701
The wsdl:binding element in a DESCRIPTION MUST be
constructed so that its soapbind:binding child element specifies
the transport attribute.
R2702
A wsdl:binding element in a DESCRIPTION MUST specify the
HTTP transport protocol with SOAP binding. Specifically, the transport
attribute of its soapbind:binding child MUST have the value
"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http".
style, "document" or "rpc", of an interaction is specified
at the wsdl:operation level, permitting wsdl:bindings
whose wsdl:operations have different styles. This
has led to interoperability problems.
R2705
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST use either be a rpc-literal
binding or a document-literal binding.
R2706
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST use the value of
"literal" for the use attribute in all soapbind:body,
soapbind:fault, soapbind:header and
soapbind:headerfault elements.
use attribute is optional on
soapbind:body, soapbind:header, and
soapbind:headerfault, and if so, what omitting the attribute means.
R2707
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION that contains one or more
soapbind:body, soapbind:fault, soapbind:header
or soapbind:headerfault elements that do not specify the
use attribute MUST be interpreted as though the value "literal" had
been specified in each case.
R2709
A wsdl:portType in a DESCRIPTION MAY have zero or more
wsdl:bindings that refer to it, defined in the same or other WSDL
documents.
wsdl:binding associated with an endpoint have a unique wire
signature.
R2710
The operations in a wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST
result in wire signatures that are different from one another.
wsdl:binding to be the fully qualified name of the child element of
the soap:Body of the SOAP input message it describes. For the
case of an empty soap:Body this name is an empty string.
In the case of rpc-literal binding, the operation name is used as a wrapper for the part accessors. In the document-literal case, since a wrapper with the operation name is not present, the message signatures must be correctly designed so that they meet this requirement.
wsdl:ports at
the same network endpoint are indistinguishable on the wire, it may not be
possible to determine the wsdl:port being invoked by them. This
may cause interoperability problems. However, there may be situations (e.g.,
SOAP versioning, application versioning, conformance to different profiles)
where it is desirable to locate more than one port on an endpoint;
therefore, the Profile allows this.R2711
A DESCRIPTION SHOULD NOT have more than one wsdl:port with
the same value for the location attribute of the
soapbind:address element.
soap:Body is.
R2712
A document-literal binding MUST be represented on the wire as a MESSAGE
with a soap:Body whose child element is an instance of the global
element declaration referenced by the corresponding wsdl:message
part.
R2714 For one-way operations, an INSTANCE MUST NOT return a HTTP response that contains a SOAP envelope. Specifically, the HTTP response entity-body must be empty.
R2750 A CONSUMER MUST ignore a SOAP response carried in a response from a one-way operation.
R2727 For one-way operations, a CONSUMER MUST NOT interpret a successful HTTP response status code (i.e., 2xx) to mean the message is valid or that the receiver would process it.
The HTTP response to a one-way operation indicates the success or failure of the transmission of the message. Based on the semantics of the different response status codes supported by the HTTP protocol, the Profile specifies that "200" and "202" are the preferred status codes that the sender should expect, signifying that the one-way message was received. A successful transmission does not indicate that the SOAP processing layer and the application logic has had a chance to validate the message or have committed to processing it.
Despite the fact that the HTTP 1.1 assigns different meanings to response status codes "200" and "202", in the context of the Profile they should be considered equivalent by the initiator of the request. The Profile accepts both status codes because some SOAP implementations have little control over the HTTP protocol implementation and cannot control which of these response status codes is sent.
soap:Envelope, which has led to
interoperability difficulties. The Profile defines these.
R2716
A document-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST NOT have the
namespace attribute specified on contained soapbind:body,
soapbind:header, soapbind:headerfault and
soapbind:fault elements.
R2717
An rpc-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST have the namespace
attribute specified, the value of which MUST be an absolute URI, on contained
soapbind:body elements.
R2726
An rpc-literal binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST NOT have the
namespace attribute specified on contained soapbind:header,
soapbind:headerfault and soapbind:fault elements.
soap:Body gets its namespace from the targetNamespace of the
schema that defines the element. Use of the namespace attribute
of the soapbind:body element would override the element's
namespace. This is not allowed by the Profile.Conversely, in a rpc-literal
SOAP binding, the serialized child element of the soap:Body
element consists of a wrapper element, whose namespace is the value of the
namespace attribute of the soapbind:body element
and whose local name is either the name of the operation or the name of the
operation suffixed with "Response". The namespace attribute is
required, as opposed to being optional, to ensure that the children of the
soap:Body element are namespace-qualified.
wsdl:portType
and wsdl:binding levels.
R2718
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST have the same set of
wsdl:operations as the wsdl:portType to which it
refers. C
soapbind:headerfaults.
R2719
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MAY contain no
soapbind:headerfault elements if there are no known header faults.
soapbind:headerfault
element mandatory on wsdl:input and wsdl:output
elements of an operation, whereas the WSDL 1.1 specification marks them
optional. The specification is correct.
R2740
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION SHOULD contain a
soapbind:fault describing each known fault.
R2741
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION SHOULD contain a
soapbind:headerfault describing each known header fault.
R2742
A MESSAGE MAY contain a fault detail entry in a SOAP fault that is not
described by a wsdl:fault element in the corresponding WSDL
description.
R2743
A MESSAGE MAY contain the details of a header processing related fault
in a SOAP header block that is not described by a wsdl:headerfault
element in the corresponding WSDL description.
soapbind:header and
soapbind:headerfault elements.
R2720
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST use the attribute
named part with a schema type of "NMTOKEN" on all contained
soapbind:header and soapbind:headerfault elements.
R2749
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST NOT use the attribute
named parts on contained soapbind:header and
soapbind:headerfault elements.
soapbind:header and
soapbind:headerfault element references a single wsdl:part.
CORRECT:
<binding name="StockQuoteSoap" type="tns:StockQuotePortType">
<soapbind:binding style="document"
transport="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http"/>
<operation name="SubscribeToQuotes">
<input message="tns:SubscribeToQuotes">
<soapbind:body parts="body" use="literal"/>
<soapbind:header message="tns:SubscribeToQuotes"
part="subscribeheader" use="literal"/>
</input>
</operation>
</binding>
name attribute.
R2721
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MUST have the name
attribute specified on all contained soapbind:fault
elements.
R2754
In a DESCRIPTION, the value of the name attribute on a
soapbind:fault element MUST match the value of the name
attribute on its parent wsdl:fault element.
use attribute.
R2722
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION MAY specify the use
attribute on contained soapbind:fault elements.
C
R2723
If in a wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION the use
attribute on a contained soapbind:fault element is present, its
value MUST be "literal".
R2728
A wsdl:binding in a DESCRIPTION that omits the use
attribute on a contained soapbind:fault element MUST be
interpreted as though use="literal" had been specified.
C
use attribute of
soapbind:fault is required while in the schema the use
attribute is defined as optional. The Profile defines it as optional, to be
consistent with soapbind:body.Since the use
attribute is optional, the Profile identifies the default value for the
attribute when omitted.
Finally, to assure that the Profile is self-consistent, the only
permitted value for the use attribute is "literal".
As specified by the SOAP processing model, (a) a "VersionMismatch"
faultcode must be generated if the namespace of the "Envelope" element is
incorrect, (b) a "MustUnderstand" fault must be generated if the instance
does not understand a SOAP header block with a value of "1" for the
soap:mustUnderstand attribute. In all other cases where a message is
inconsistent with its WSDL description, a fault with a "Client" faultcode
should be generated.
R2724
If an INSTANCE receives a message that is inconsistent with its WSDL
description, it SHOULD generate a soap:Fault with a faultcode of
"Client", unless a "MustUnderstand" or "VersionMismatch" fault is generated.
R2725 If an INSTANCE receives a message that is inconsistent with its WSDL description, it MUST check for "VersionMismatch", "MustUnderstand" and "Client" fault conditions in that order.
wsdl:operation.
R2729
A MESSAGE described with an rpc-literal binding that is a response
message MUST have a wrapper element whose name is the corresponding
wsdl:operation name suffixed with the string "Response".
R2735 A MESSAGE described with an rpc-literal binding MUST place the part accessor elements for parameters and return value in no namespace.
targetNamespace of the WSDL
description for the abstract parts.
R2737 A MESSAGE described with an rpc-literal binding MUST namespace qualify the children of part accessor elements for the parameters and the return value with the targetNamespace in which their types are defined.
However, it does not explicitly state that the element and attribute
content of the abstract (complexType) types is namespace qualified to the
targetNamespace in which those elements and attributes were defined. WSDL
1.1 was intended to function in much the same manner as XML Schema. Hence,
implementations must follow the same rules as for XML Schema. If a
complexType defined in targetNamespace "A" were imported and
referenced in an element declaration in a schema with targetNamespace
"B", the element and attribute content of the child elements of that
complexType would be qualified to namespace "A" and the element would be
qualified to namespace "B".
CORRECT:
Given this WSDL, which defines some schema in the "http://example.org/foo/"
namespace in the wsdl:types section contained within a
wsdl:definitions that has a targetNamespace attribute
with the value "http://example.org/bar/" (thus, having a type declared in
one namespace and the containing element defined in another);
<definitions xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/"
xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/"
xmlns:soapbind="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/"
xmlns:http="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/http/"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
xmlns:bar="http://example.org/bar/"
targetNamespace="http://example.org/bar/"
xmlns:foo="http://example.org/foo/">
<types>
<xsd:schema targetNamespace="http://example.org/foo/"
xmlns:tns="http://example.org/foo/"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
elementFormDefault="qualified"
attributeFormDefault="unqualified">
<xsd:complexType name="fooType">
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element ref="tns:bar"/>
<xsd:element ref="tns:baf"/>
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:complexType>
<xsd:element name="bar" type="xsd:string"/>
<xsd:element name="baf" type="xsd:integer"/>
</xsd:schema>
</types>
<message name="BarMsg">
<part name="BarAccessor" type="foo:fooType"/>
</message>
<portType name="BarPortType">
<operation name="BarOperation">
<input message="bar:BarMsg"/>
</operation>
</portType>
<binding name="BarSOAPBinding" type="bar:BarPortType">
<soapbind:binding
transport="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http/"
style="rpc"/>
<operation name="BarOperation">
<input message="bar:BarMsg">
<soapbind:body use="literal" namespace="http://example.org/bar/"/>
</input>
</operation>
</binding>
<service name="serviceName">
<port name="BarSOAPPort" binding="bar:BarSOAPBinding">
<soapbind:address location="http://example.org/myBarSOAPPort"/>
</port>
</service>
</definitions>
The resulting SOAP message for BarOperation is:
<s:Envelope xmlns:s="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
xmlns:foo="http://example.org/foo/">
<s:Header/>
<s:Body>
<m:BarOperation xmlns:m="http://example.org/bar/">
<BarAccessor>
<foo:bar>String</foo:bar>
<foo:baf>0</foo:baf>
</BarAccessor>
</m:BarOperation>
</s:Body>
</s:Envelope>
soapbind:headers
specified on the wsdl:input or wsdl:output
elements of a wsdl:operation element in the SOAP binding
section of a WSDL description must be included in the resultant SOAP
messages when they are transmitted. The Profile makes all such headers
mandatory, as there is no way in WSDL 1.1 to mark a header optional.R2738
A MESSAGE MUST include all soapbind:headers specified on a
wsdl:input or wsdl:output of a wsdl:operation
of a wsdl:binding that describes it.
R2739
A MESSAGE MAY contain SOAP header blocks that are not described in the
wsdl:binding that describes it.
R2753
A MESSAGE containing SOAP header blocks that are not described in the
appropriate wsdl:binding MAY have the mustUnderstand
attribute on such SOAP header blocks set to '1'.
soapbind:headers
in the description and the order of SOAP header blocks in the message.
Similarly, more than one instance of each specified SOAP header block may
occur in the message.R2751
The order of soapbind:header elements in
soapbind:binding sections of a DESCRIPTION MUST be considered
independent of the order of SOAP header blocks in the message.
R2752
A MESSAGE MAY contain more than one instance of each SOAP header block
for each soapbind:header element in the appropriate child of
soapbind:binding in the corresponding description.
SOAPAction HTTP header field-value to be quoted increases
interoperability of implementations. Even though HTTP allows for header
field-values to be unquoted, some implementations require that the value be
quoted.
The SOAPAction header is purely a hint to processors. All
vital information regarding the intent of a message is carried in the
Envelope.
R2744
A HTTP request MESSAGE MUST contain a SOAPAction HTTP
header field with a quoted value equal to the value of the soapAction
attribute of soapbind:operation, if present in the corresponding
WSDL description.
R2745
A HTTP request MESSAGE MUST contain a SOAPAction HTTP
header field with a quoted empty string value, if in the corresponding WSDL
description, the soapAction of soapbind:operation is
either not present, or present with an empty string as its value.
CORRECT:
A WSDL Description that has:
<soapbind:operation soapAction="foo" />
results in a message with a corresponding SOAPAction HTTP header field as follows:
SOAPAction: "foo"
CORRECT:
A WSDL Description that has:
<soapbind:operation />
or
<soapbind:operation soapAction="" />
results in a message with a corresponding SOAPAction HTTP header field as follows:
SOAPAction: ""
wsdl:required attribute has been widely misunderstood and
used by WSDL authors sometimes to incorrectly indicate the optionality of
soapbind:headers. The wsdl:required attribute, as
specified in WSDL1.1, is an extensibility mechanism aimed at WSDL
processors. It allows new WSDL extension elements to be introduced in a
graceful manner. The intent of wsdl:required is to signal to
the WSDL processor whether the extension element needs to be recognized and
understood by the WSDL processor in order that the WSDL description be
correctly processed. It is not meant to signal conditionality or optionality
of some construct that is included in the messages. For example, a
wsdl:required attribute with the value "false" on a
soapbind:header element must not be interpreted to signal to the WSDL
processor that the described SOAP header block is conditional or optional in
the messages generated from the WSDL description. It is meant to be
interpreted as "in order to send a message to the endpoint that includes in
its description the soapbind:header element, the WSDL processor
MUST understand the semantic implied by the soapbind:header
element."The default value for the wsdl:required attribute
for WSDL 1.1 SOAP Binding extension elements is "false". Most WSDL
descriptions in practice do not specify the wsdl:required
attribute on the SOAP Binding extension elements, which could be interpreted
by WSDL processors to mean that the extension elements may be ignored. The
Profile requires that all WSDL SOAP 1.1 extensions be understood and
processed by the consumer, irrespective of the presence or the value of the
wsdl:required attribute on an extension element.
R2747
A CONSUMER MUST understand and process all WSDL 1.1 SOAP Binding
extension elements, irrespective of the presence or absence of the
wsdl:required attribute on an extension element; and irrespective of
the value of the wsdl:required attribute, when present.
R2748
A CONSUMER MUST NOT interpret the presence of the wsdl:required
attribute on a soapbind extension element with a value of "false"
to mean the extension element is optional in the messages generated from the
WSDL description.
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
WSDL 1.1 uses XML Schema as one of its type systems. The Profile mandates the use of XML Schema as the type system for WSDL descriptions of Web Services.
R2800 A DESCRIPTION MAY use any construct from XML Schema 1.0.
R2801 A DESCRIPTION MUST use XML Schema 1.0 Recommendation as the basis of user defined datatypes and structures.
When publication or discovery of Web services is required, UDDI is the mechanism the Profile has adopted to describe Web service providers and the Web services they provide. Business, intended use, and Web service type descriptions are made in UDDI terms; detailed technical descriptions are made in WSDL terms. Where the two specifications define overlapping descriptive data and both forms of description are used, the Profile specifies that the descriptions must not conflict.
Registration of Web service instances in UDDI registries is optional. By no means do all usage scenarios require the kind of metadata and discovery UDDI provides, but where such capability is needed, UDDI is the sanctioned mechanism.
Note that the Web services that constitute UDDI V2 are not fully conformant with the Profile 1.0 because they do not accept messages encoded in both UTF-8 and UTF-16 as required by the Profile. (They accept UTF-8 only.) That there should be such a discrepancy is hardly surprising given that UDDI V2 was designed and, in many cases, implemented before the Profile was developed. UDDI's designers are aware of UDDI V2's nonconformance and will take it into consideration in their future work.
This section of the Profile incorporates the following specifications by reference, and defines extensibility points within them:
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
UDDI represents Web service instances as uddi:bindingTemplate
elements. The uddi:bindingTemplate plays a role that is the rough
analog of the wsdl:port, but provides options that are not
expressible in WSDL. To keep the WSDL description of an instance and its UDDI
description consistent, the Profile places the following constraints on how
uddi:bindingTemplate elements may be constructed.
soapbind:address element requires the network address of
the instance to be directly specified. In contrast, UDDI V2 provides two
alternatives for specifying the network address of instances it represents.
One, the uddi:accessPoint, mirrors the WSDL mechanism by
directly specifying the address. The other, the uddi:hostingRedirector,
provides a Web service-based indirection mechanism for resolving the
address, and is inconsistent with the WSDL mechanism.
R3100
REGDATA of type uddi:bindingTemplate representing a
conformant INSTANCE MUST contain the uddi:accessPoint element.
INCORRECT:
<bindingTemplate bindingKey="...">
<description xml:lang="EN">BarSOAPPort</description>
<hostingRedirector bindingKey="..."/>
<tModelInstanceDetails>
...
</tModelInstanceDetails>
</bindingTemplate>
CORRECT:
<bindingTemplate bindingKey="...">
<description xml:lang="EN">BarSOAPPort</description>
<accessPoint>http://example.org/myBarSOAPPort</accessPoint>
<tModelInstanceDetails>
...
</tModelInstanceDetails>
</bindingTemplate>
The following specifications (or sections thereof) are referred to in this section of the Profile;
UDDI represents Web service types as uddi:tModel elements. (See
UDDI Data Structures section 8.1.1.) These may, but need not, point (using a
URI) to the document that contains the actual description. Further, UDDI is
agnostic with respect to the mechanisms used to describe Web service types. The
Profile cannot be agnostic about this because interoperation is very much
complicated if Web service types do not have descriptions or if the descriptions
can take arbitrary forms.
The
UDDI API Specification, appendix I.1.2.1.1 allows but does not require
uddi:tModel elements that use WSDL to describe the Web service type they
represent to state that they use WSDL as the description language. Not doing so
leads to interoperability problems because it is then ambiguous what description
language is being used.
Therefore the Profile places the following constraints on how
uddi:tModel elements that describe Web service types may be constructed:
R3002
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel representing a conformant Web
service type MUST use WSDL as the description language.
R3003
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel representing a conformant Web
service type MUST be categorized using the uddi:types taxonomy and a
categorization of "wsdlSpec".
uddi:overviewURL in a uddi:tModel to
resolve to a wsdl:binding, the Profile must adopt a convention
for distinguishing among multiple wsdl:bindings in a WSDL
document. The UDDI Best Practice for Using WSDL in a UDDI Registry specifies
the most widely recognized such convention.
R3010
REGDATA of type uddi:tModel representing a conformant Web
service type MUST follow
V1.08 of the UDDI Best Practice for Using WSDL in a UDDI Registry.
wsdl:binding that is referenced
by the uddi:tModel does not conform to the Profile.R3011
The wsdl:binding that is referenced by REGDATA of type
uddi:tModel MUST itself conform to the Profile.
As is true of all network-oriented information technologies, the subject of security is a crucial one for Web services. For Web services, as for other information technologies, security consists of understanding the potential threats an attacker may mount and applying operational, physical, and technological countermeasures to reduce the risk of a successful attack to an acceptable level. Because an "acceptable level of risk" varies hugely depending on the application, and because costs of implementing countermeasures is also highly variable, there can be no universal "right answer" for securing Web services. Choosing the absolutely correct balance of countermeasures and acceptable risk can only be done on a case by case basis.
That said, there are common patterns of countermeasures that experience shows reduce the risks to acceptable levels for many Web services. The Profile adopts, but does not mandate use of, the most widely used of these: HTTP secured with either TLS 1.0 or SSL 3.0 (HTTPS). That is, conformant Web services may use HTTPS; they may also use other countermeasure technologies or none at all.
HTTPS is widely regarded as a mature standard for encrypted transport connections to provide a basic level of confidentiality. HTTPS thus forms the first and simplest means of achieving some basic security features that are required by many real-world Web service applications. HTTPS may also be used to provide client authentication through the use of client-side certificates.
This section of the Profile incorporates the following specifications by reference, and defines extensibility points within them:
R5000 An INSTANCE MAY require the use of HTTPS.
R5001
If an INSTANCE requires the use of HTTPS, the location attribute of the
soapbind:address element in its wsdl:port
description MUST be a URI whose scheme is "https"; otherwise it MUST be a URI
whose scheme is "http".
R5010 An INSTANCE MAY require the use of HTTPS with mutual authentication.
The following specifications' requirements are incorporated into the Profile by reference, except where superseded by the Profile:
This section identifies extensibility points, as defined in "Scope of the Profile," for the Profile's component specifications.
These mechanisms are out of the scope of the Profile; their use may affect interoperability, and may require private agreement between the parties to a Web service.
In Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) 1.1:
In RFC2616: Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1:
In Web Services Description Language (WSDL) 1.1:
In XML Schema Part 1: Structures:
In RFC2246: The TLS Protocol Version 1.0:
In The SSL Protocol Version 3.0:
In RFC2459: Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and CRL Profile:
This Profile is the work of the WS-I Basic Profile Working Group, whose members have included:
Mark Allerton (Crystal Decisions Corporation), George Arriola (Talking Blocks, Inc.), Keith Ballinger (Microsoft Corporation), Ilya Beyer (KANA), Rich Bonneau (IONA Technologies), Don Box (Microsoft Corporation), Andrew Brown (Verisign), Heidi Buelow (Quovadx), David Burdett (Commerce One, Inc.), Luis Felipe Cabrera (Microsoft Corporation), Maud Cahuzac (France Telecom), Bhaskar Chakrabarti (United Airlines), Chia Chao (IONA Technologies), Martin Chapman (Oracle Corporation), Richard Chin (Avinon), Roberto Chinnici (Sun Microsystems), Sergio Compean (Avanade, Inc.), Tim Cooke (Onyx Software), Ugo Corda (SeeBeyond Tech), Paul Cotton (Microsoft Corporation), Joseph Curran (Accenture), Ayse Dilber (AT&T), Dave Ehnebuske (IBM), Mark Ericson (Mindreef Inc.), Colleen Evans (Sonic Software), Tim Ewald (Microsoft Corporation), Chuck Fay (FileNet Corporation), Chris Ferris (IBM), Daniel Foody (Actional Corporation), Toru Fujii (NTT), Satoru Fujita (NEC Corporation), Shishir Garg (France Telecom), Yaron Goland (BEA Systems), Hans Granqvist (Verisign), Martin Gudgin (Microsoft Corporation), Marc Hadley (Sun Microsystems), Bob Hall (Unisys Corporation), Scott Hanselman (Corillian), Muir Harding (Autodesk, Inc.), Loren Hart (Verisign), Harry Holstrom (Accenture), Larry Hsiung (Quovadx), Hemant Jain (Tata Consultancy), Steve Jenisch (SAS Institute), Erik Johnson (Epicor Software Corporation), Bill Jones (Oracle Corporation), Menno Jonkers (Tryllian BV), Anish Karmarkar (Oracle Corporation), Takahiro Kawamura (Toshiba), Bhushan Khanal (WRQ, Inc.), Sunil Kunisetty (Oracle Corporation), Canyang Kevin Liu (SAP AG), Jonathan Marsh (Microsoft Corporation), David Meyer (Plumtree Software, Inc.), Jeff Mischkinsky (Oracle Corporation), Tom Moog (Sarvega Inc.), Gilles Mousseau (Hummingbird Ltd.), Richard Nikula (BMC Software, Inc.), Eisaku Nishiyama (Hitachi, Ltd.), Mark Nottingham (BEA Systems), David Orchard (BEA Systems), Jesse Pangburn (Quovadx), TJ Pannu (ContentGuard, Inc.), Eduardo Pelegri-Llopart (Sun Microsystems), Vijay Rajan (Novell), Eric Rajkovic (Oracle Corporation), Graeme Riddell (Bowstreet), Claus von Riegen (SAP AG), Tom Rutt (Fujitsu Limited), Roger Sanborn (Crystal Decisions Corporation), Krishna Sankar (Cisco Systems, Inc.), Don Schricker (Micro Focus), Dave Seidel (Mindreef Inc.), Akira Shimaya (NTT), Yasser Shohoud (Microsoft Corporation), David Smiley (Mercator Software, Inc.), Seumas Soltysik (IONA Technologies), Joseph Stanko (Plumtree Software, Inc.), Keith Stobie (Microsoft Corporation), Yasuo Takemoto (NTT), Nobuyoshi Tanaka (NEC Corporation), Jorgen Thelin (Cape Clear Software), Sameer Vaidya (Talking Blocks, Inc.), William Vambenepe (Hewlett-Packard), Rick Weil (Eastman Kodak Company), Scott Werden (WRQ, Inc.), Ajamu Wesley (IBM), Shannon Wheatley (Kinzan, Inc.), Ian White (Micro Focus), Sue Worthman (Tryllian BV), Prasad Yendluri (webMethods Inc.).
=