- From: Christopher B Ferris <chrisfer@us.ibm.com>
- Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2006 09:06:26 -0500
- To: Alastair Green <alastair.green@choreology.com>
- Cc: public-ws-addressing@w3.org, public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org, ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org
- Message-ID: <OF3AAD20D5.B7E782F9-ON852571C4.004CC340-852571C4.004D79DC@us.ibm.com>
Alastair, Is this a long and drawn out manner of stating that when a message is a true oneway (e.g. no response is expected) then the wsa:ReplyTo should be the WS-A none URI rather than simply leaving it absent and hence falling trap to the "if not present, default to anon" gotcha? I guess I am not seeing an issue here, although I guess it would be fine if we recommended or required that the MakeConnection wsa:ReplyTo MAP carry the WS-A none URI. Cheers, Christopher Ferris STSM, Software Group Standards Strategy email: chrisfer@us.ibm.com blog: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/blogs/dw_blog.jspa?blog=440 phone: +1 508 377 9295 public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org wrote on 08/08/2006 07:06:32 AM: > Doug, Paul -- > > I'm going to try to address both your comments. if I can summarize > Paul's it was: what's the big deal about [reply endpoint] when > MakeConnection is "one-way"?. > > Given RX timescales you may want to treat these remarks as "early > public review". > > * * * > > Doug's message 1 is an application-level set-up call which > establishes common understanding of the UUID. This type of message > is exemplified by that shown in the CD example Step 1, unless I have > completely misunderstood. > > In that example, a subscriber, who cannot listen, sends a subscribe > message to a publisher, saying something like "subscribe me for > topics A, B, C. The identity of this subscription request is UUID > X". Thereafter, the publisher knows that X equals "subscription for > topics A, B, C". > > Assertion 1 (please correct me if I am wrong): The format, content > etc of this type of message (and its manner of transmission) are > entirely application-specific. It may or may not require an > acknowledgement. It could be sent by carrier pigeon, or by fax. The > subscribe message, if sent as SOAP-with-Addressing, might receive a > reply, or might not receive a reply, and if it did, it might receive > it anon or addressable. There are no RM rules that apply to this > message. There are only application rules. It cannot do its job > usefully unless it passes the UUID: that is all we can say. > > Assertion 2. At present there is an RM rule which says: "the > mutually understood UUID must be reflected in the [destination > endpoint] according to an RM URI scheme". There are no RM rules to > say whether the connection UUID, during the course of establishing > mutual understanding, travels alone, embedded in a URI, in a body > element or a header element. These are all matters of bilateral > agreement at an app level between (in this case) the > consumer/subscriber and the producer/publisher. > > [The example is potentially a bit misleading in this respect. > > The use of the full "anon-URI?id={uuid}" value in the <targetEPR/>, > and the use of the element name "targetEPR" make one think > "addressing", when one would be better off thinking "subscription > identity" (at an app level). The example set-up message would work > perfectly well if it read: > > <S:Body> > <!-- subscription details --> > <SubscriptionIdentity>{uuid}</SubscriptionIdentity> > </S:Body> > > Btw, given that the use of MakeConnection requires a prior > understanding between two parties of the connection identity, there > seems no reason why {uuid} has to be a UUID. It does need to be > bilaterally unambiguous.] > > * * * > > Message 2 is MakeConnection. If the subscriber sends a > MakeConnection, specifying UUID X, then the publisher knows it is > dealing with traffic relating to subscription X, i.e. for topics A, > B and C. At an application level, we assume that the contract > thereafter is: start reliably communicating a stream of messages, > relating to topics A, B and C, therefore implying sequence creation > etc, until something causes the stream to close. > > So the subscriber will repeatedly send MakeConnection, citing the > UUID X, read the HTTP response, and handle the response as if it > were an inbound RM/RM-app message. > > The exchange that RM defines (rather than illustrates) is the > MakeConnection, back-call-on-the-connection one. It's this exchange > that I am discussing. MakeConnection is the message affected by the > WSAW anon=required discussion, as I see it. > > [While it is probably helpful for diagnostic reasons to repeat the > UUID back to the sender of MakeConnection in the [destination > endpoint], it is actually redundant, as the HTTP Response is > automatically and uniquely correlated with the HTTP Request. This > might lead one to the conclusion that the simple solution would have > been: send UUID on MakeConnection, and then respond to it on the > anonymous back-channel without reflection of UUID in any form > However, this would reduce the symmetry with the Sequence identified > use of MakeConnection, see comments later] > > * * * > > There are two modes in which this exchange can work (reflecting the > joint proposal, as I understand it): > > a) Send response as part of a sequence that already exists > b) Use response to create a new sequence, etc > > This is relevant to answering Paul F's question, relating to the > significance of ReplyTo. > > If there is a sequence, then the sequence Identifier is a > correlation synonym for the UUID. The reply message may be sent on > the back-channel; it must carry the wsrm:Identifier (as a separate > header element), it need not carry the UUID. > > If there is no sequence, then the reply message must carry or imply > the UUID. (I'm going to assume that carrying the UUID is better than > implying it.) The question is how? > > Looking at these two cases, it is striking that both > > a) require a response on the back-channel, > b) need to carry an identifier (one of the sequence, one of the > "connection"/"session") > > Doug's comment that there is no wsa:ReplyTo on the MakeConnection, > that it is "one way", is relevant here. In fact there is no such > thing (in the XML infoset) as a non-existent [reply endpoint]. If > wsa:ReplyTo is absent, then it is inferred to be the anon-URI. The > only way you can stop that inference is to set the [reply endpoint] > to none or to a "real address". I don't think you want to do either > of those things, in this context. > > With these points in mind, I think it is worth looking again at my > previous postings. > > The orthodox way of saying "respond on the back-channel" is setting > [reply endpoint] to anon. This can be done explicitly or by > inference from absence. > > I think there has to be a good reason to invent a new way of > expressing this semantic. Doing so has repercussions (see the > original starting point of this thread, re WSA W anon/required). The > (very valuable) use case of MakeConnection does not require an > alternate mechnanism for stating the back channel semantic. > > We can illustrate all of this by placing three examples side by side: > > * * * > > 1. Example using sequence Identifier: MakeConnection and reply [as per CD 04] > 2. Example using hypothetical connection identifier: MakeConnection > and reply [as it could be, simplified] > 3. Example using current Address [as per CD 04] > > 1a. Example using sequence Identifier: MakeConnection > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:Action>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/MakeConnection > </wsa:Action> > <wsa:To>http://example.org/subscriptionService</wsa:To> > <!-- absent wsa:ReplyTo is equivalent to: > <wsa:ReplyTo> > <wsa:Address>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/anonymous > </wsa:Address> > </wsa:ReplyTo> > --> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <wsrm:MakeConnection> > <wsrm:Identifier>http://Business456. > com/SubscribeTopics/Sequence/7456-3278</wsrm:Identifier> > </wsrm:MakeConnection> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > 1b. Example using sequence Identifier: reply to MakeConnection > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/71e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cfcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:RelatesTo>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:RelatesTo> > <wsa:ReplyTo><wsa:Address>http://example.org/subscriptionService > </wsa:Address></wsa:ReplyTo> > <wsa:Action>http://example.com/subscriptionService/publish > </wsa:Action> > <wsrm:Sequence> > <wsrm:Identifier>http://Business456. > com/SubscribeTopics/Sequence/7456-3278</wsrm:Identifier> > <wsrm:MessageNumber>1</wsrm:MessageNumber> > </wsrm:Sequence> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <!-- Publication re A, B or C --> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > 2a. Example using hypothetical connection identifier: MakeConnection > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:Action>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/MakeConnection > </wsa:Action> > <wsa:To>http://example.org/subscriptionService</wsa:To> > <!-- absent wsa:ReplyTo is equivalent to: > <wsa:ReplyTo> > <wsa:Address>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/anonymous > </wsa:Address> > </wsa:ReplyTo> > --> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <wsrm:MakeConnection> > <wsrm:ConnectionIdentifier>http://Business456.com/ > SubscribeTopics/Stream/7457</wsrm:ConnectionIdentifier> > </wsrm:MakeConnection> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > 2b. Example using hypothetical connection identifier: reply to > MakeConnection (CreateSequence) > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/71e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cfcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:RelatesTo>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:RelatesTo> > <wsa:Action>http://docs.oasis-open-org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/CreateSequence > </wsa:Action> > <wsa:ReplyTo>http://example.org/subscriptionService</wsa:ReplyTo> > <wsrm:ConnectionIdentifier> > http://Business456.com/SubscribeTopics/Stream/7457 > </wsrm:ConnectionIdentifier> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <wsrm:CreateSequence> > <wsrm:AcksTo> > <wsa:Address>http://example.org/subscriptionService > </wsa:Address> > </wsrm:AcksTo> > </wsrm:CreateSequence> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > 3a. Example using wsrm:Address: MakeConnection > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:Action>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/MakeConnection > </wsa:Action> > <wsa:To>http://example.org/subscriptionService</wsa:To> > <!-- absent wsa:ReplyTo is equivalent to: > <wsa:ReplyTo> > <wsa:Address>http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/anonymous > </wsa:Address> > </wsa:ReplyTo> > --> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <wsrm:MakeConnection> > <wsrm:Address> > http://docs.oasis-open. > org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/anonymous?id=550e8400-e29b-11d4-a716-446655440000 > </wsrm:Address> > </wsrm:MakeConnection> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > 3b. Example using wsrm:Address: reply to MakeConnection (CreateSequence) > > <S:Envelope xmlns:S="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" > xmlns:wsrm="http://docs.oasis-open.org/ws-rx/wsrm/200608" > xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing"> > <S:Header> > <wsa:MessageID>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/71e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cfcbc9e</wsa:MessageID> > <wsa:RelatesTo>http://example.org/subscriptionService/ > guid/61e0654e-5ce8-477b-bb9d-34f05cdcbc9e</wsa:RelatesTo> > <wsa:Action>http://docs.oasis-open-org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/CreateSequence > </wsa:Action> > <wsa:To> > > <!-- I believe this is WS-A illegal: reply To must equal request > ReplyTo/Address. --> > > http://docs.oasis-open.org/wsrx/wsrm/200608/anonymous? > id=550e8400-e29b-11d4-a716-446655440000 > </wsa:To> > <wsa:ReplyTo>http://example.org/subscriptionService</wsa:ReplyTo> > </S:Header> > <S:Body> > <wsrm:CreateSequence> > <wsrm:AcksTo> > <wsa:Address>http://example.org/subscriptionService > </wsa:Address> > </wsrm:AcksTo> > </wsrm:CreateSequence> > </S:Body> > </S:Envelope> > > Yours, > > Alastair > > Doug Davis wrote: > > Alastair, > I think you're mixing up the messages a bit. There are two messages > at play: > 1 - the message containing the EPR to send subsequent messages to. > In some cases this message will have the EPR in its wsa:ReplyTo > header, but it could also be placed someplace else depending > on its use. And it is this EPR that needs to be tagged as the > polling one (ie. it has the RM anon URI). > This message will contain application specific data in the Body > so your suggestion of placing some UUID in there will not work. > This gets back to the necessity to keep all info about where to > send messages encapsulated into whatever EPR we want to be tagged > as the polling one. > > 2 - the MakeConnection message. > This message does not have a wsa:ReplyTo, its a one-way. This > message does contain a Body which is the correlation info used > by the receiver of this message to find an appropriate message > to send back. So, basically the stuff in the Body must match > the EPR from message 1. And given that in some cases the only > thing remaining from the EPR in message 1 is the serialized > version of it, we must be able to find messages based solely > on what's in the outgoing message itself. Which means the > wsa:To field. Again, ref-p's are bad for this purpose. :-) > > HTH > > thanks > -Doug > > > > Alastair Green <alastair.green@choreology.com> wrote on 08/07/2006 > 02:02:55 PM: > > > Doug, > > > > I think I'm connecting, if you'll pardon the pun. > > > > 1. As I read WS-A, the [destination endpoint][address] must be set > > to [reply endpoint][address] for a reply. > > > > 2. If [reply endpoint] is omitted (as per the CD example), then > > [reply endpoint] = anon, by default. > > > > 3. If [destination endpoint] = "anon-URI?id={uuid}", then > > [destination endpoint] <> [reply endpoint][address] (which was > > simple, unornamented anon-URI), which contradicts premise 1. > > > > Does that make sense? If so, then I think you would need to set > > [reply endpoint] to none, explicitly, to avoid that clash (given > > RM's current approach). But this causes > > > > 4. The WS-A processor that sent MakeConnection to get very confused. > > It wasn't expecting anything but an HTTP 200 series by way of a > > response, but is about to get a full-scale SOAP message bounding back. > > > > +++ > > > > Further thoughts, which continue, in my mind, to question the > > current RM approach, but which may ease the WSA W problem. > > > > a) You could have defined an extension element in the [reply > > endpoint] for the UUID. > > > > b) Or, you could have chosen to send the UUID in the body element. > > > > c) In either case, this could team up with setting [reply > endpoint] to anon. > > > > d) As in 3. above, you shouldn't then set response [destination > > endpoint] to anon?id={uuid}. > > > > e) So, you need to set [reply endpoint] to anon, and set > > [destination endpoint][address] to anon. > > > > f) which begs the question, where does the UUID go? > > > > g) If you passed an extension element UUID, or a UUID in the body > > element, and then passed it back as an extension element in the anon > > EPR that should be OK, because you have followed the rules for reply > > formulation with respect to the [destination endpoint][address] > > /[reference parameters]. The fact you have chosen to put an > > extension element in the response is WS-A 3.3/3.4 legal, as I read > > it. That's a higher-layer behaviour that does not contradict WS-A > > base behaviour, which is constrained. > > > > +++ > > > > Why is g) not viable in your view? The processors that need to > > understand the body/extension UUID element are the RM senders and > > responders (not the WS-A processors, which passively pass on the > > UUID to the RM receiver of MakeConnection, and pass on the extension > > element to the RM receiver of the response). > > > > In other words, the awareness of RM-ness that is demanded in > > formulating MakeConnection, and in replying to it, resides in the > > same place, and at the same level, as in the current (CD) solution. > > > > The difference being: that the MakeConnection is now a regular > > [reply endpoint] = anon. At which point special WSAW rules are not needed. > > > > I don't see any lesser or greater problem with intermediaries, > > onward transmission etc than would apply with the current solution, > > if that is a concern. On this point, I think I may be missing > > something, or misunderstanding your area of concern? > > > > So, to summarize: > > > > 1. asimple-non out, special, ornamented-anon back is a problem. > > 2. none out, anon back is a problem. > > 3. extension element UUID out, extension element UUID back, is no > > different, in layer terms, than body UUID out, ornamented address > > back, i.e. is not a problem. > > 4. anon out means no problem with anon = required. > > > > > > * * * > > > > My last point was indeed completely beside the point of your issue : > > -) -- it is an independent issue about WSAW, and a limitation that > > the proposed syntax seems to impose by applying the flag across all > > "response endpoints". > > > > Alastair > > > > Doug Davis wrote: > > > > Alastair, > > We did consider adding some extra metadata to the EPR (outside of > > the wsa:Address and ref-p's), but there's a problem - this metadata > > is not copied over into the response message - just the wsa:Address > > and ref-p's are. This means that any data placed elsewhere in the > > EPR is lost once the message is serialized. So unless we assume the > > impl can hold on to the original EPR for the entire message path > > (which we can't in distributed systems), the identity part must be > > in either the address or ref-p's. And, as you said, ref-p's aren't > > good for this. > > > > What's interesting about your anon?unique-id example is that that > > solution might work very nicely (we talked about this in the past) - > > but as you said it would require WSA to say anon URIs 'start > > with...' - and WSA is closed :-( > > > > I got a bit lost on your last point - it almost sounded like a > > complaint about the current WSA WSDL spec instead of my issue - or > > did I not follow it? > > > > I noticed that on the agenda for tomorrow's WSA call (I think its > > tomorrow) is a CR issue that mentioned how this wording in the WSDL > > spec prevents the use of "none". I can't help but think that both > > issues (mine and the other CR issue) would be solved nicely if the > > wording were turned around a bit and said something about how this > > flag indicates whether or not the endpoint supports addressable > > endpoints in the response EPRs. Not sure of the exact wording, but > > if instead of taking about specific URIs (like anon and none) it > > talked about whether the endpoint supported the notion of creating > > it own connections to the EPR then it wouldn't need to get into the > > business of listing all of the URIs that are valid. And I think it > > would relay the exact same information. > > > > thanks > > -Doug > > > > > > > > > Alastair Green <alastair.green@choreology.com> > > 08/04/2006 10:57 AM > > > > To > > > > Doug Davis/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS > > > > cc > > > > public-ws-addressing@w3.org, public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org, > > ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org, abbieb@nortel.com, aclark@novell.com, > > akira.tanaka.pr@hitachi.com, aleyfer@actional.com, anash@reactivity.com, > > andreas.bjarlestam@ericsson.com, anil.edakkunni@soa.com, anil. > john@jhuapl.edu > > , Anish.Karmarkar@oracle.com, Anthony Nadalin/Austin/IBM@IBMUS, > > asakala@iona.com, ash@rainingdata.com, ashok.malhotra@oracle.com, > > asirveda@microsoft.com, atarashi@sv.nec-labs.com, atmanes@gmail.com, > > audet@nortel.com, barreto@adobe.com, bhakti.mehta@sun.com, blake. > > dournaee@intel.com, bob.freund@hitachisoftware.com, bob.sunday@pwgsc.gc.ca, > > b.eckenfels@seeburger.de, carolina.canales@ericsson.com, chamikara@wso2.com > , > > chappell@sonicsoftware.com, Charles Levay/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS, > > chouthri@sv.nec-labs.com, Christopher B Ferris/Waltham/IBM@IBMUS, > > Christopher.Kurt@microsoft.com, chris.hipson@bt.com, "'von Riegen, Claus'" > > <claus.von.riegen@sap.com>, coevans@microsoft.com, cunningham_david@bah.com > , > > dan@actional.com, "'Burdett, David'" <david.burdett@sap.com>, > > dconnelly@openapplications.org, Diane Jordan/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS, > > dkmin@konkuk.ac.kr, dleshc@tibco.com, dmoberg@us.axway.com, > dnickull@adobe.com > > , "'David Orchard'" <dorchard@bea.com>, doug.bunting@sun.com, > > eisaku.nishiyama.dd@hitachi.com, email@cbvenkat.net, eoghan.glynn@iona.com, > > Eric.Newcomer@iona.com, eric.rajkovic@oracle.com, eric. > > wells@hitachisoftware.com, ganga.sah@oracle.com, gatfora@uk.ibm.com, > > gboschi@sonicsoftware.com, gdaniels@sonicsoftware.com, "'Gilbert Pilz'" > > <Gilbert.Pilz@bea.com>, girish.juneja@intel.com, gregcarp@microsoft.com, > > greg.pavlik@oracle.com, hbenmalek@us.fujitsu.com, heiko.braun@jboss.com, > > ian.c.jones@bt.com, ian_robinson@uk.ibm.com, james.speer@capgemini.com, > > jamie.clark@oasis-open.org, jdurand@us.fujitsu.com, jeff. > > mischkinsky@oracle.com, jekanaya@cs.indiana.edu, Jiri.Tejkl@systinet.com, > > jjchoe@tmax.co.kr, jkchoi@methodi.com, jmarsh@microsoft.com, joeri. > > van_cleynenbreugel@alcatel.be, john.gotze@oasis-open.org, john. > kemp@nokia.com > > , joseph.2.waller@bt.com, junghc@nca.or.kr, jypyon@nca.or.kr, k- > > seki@da.jp.nec.com, kcyee@cecid.hku.hk, kiwasa@jp.fujitsu.com, > > lburch@novell.com, lily.liu@webmethods.com, "'Lei Jin'" <ljin@bea.com>, > > machi@nca.or.kr, "'Mark Little'" <mark.little@jboss.com>, > > "'Schenecker, Mark'" <mark.schenecker@sap.com>, "'de Boer, Martijn'" > > <martijn.de.boer@sap.com>, "'Raepple, Martin'" <martin.raepple@sap.com>, > > mary.mcrae@oasis-open.org, matsuki.yoshino.pw@hitachi.com, > mckierna@uk.ibm.com > > , mgoodner@microsoft.com, mhb@itst.dk, "'Bechauf, Michael'" > > <michael.bechauf@sap.com>, mike.grogan@sun.com, millwood@uk.ibm.com, > > mlovett@uk.ibm.com, mlyons@layer7tech.com, mschenecker@e2open.com, > > mwang@tibco.com, nickr@enosis.com, nilo.mitra@ericsson.com, > > nobuyuki.yamamoto.vw@hitachi.com, Ondrej.Hrebicek@microsoft.com, > paul@wso2.com > > , pauld@mitre.org, paul.cotton@microsoft.com, paul.knight@nortel.com, > > peter.furniss@erebor.co.uk, peter_niblett@uk.ibm.com, pete.wenzel@sun.com, > > prateek.mishra@oracle.com, pyendluri@webmethods.com, Richard > > Salz/Cambridge/IBM@IBMUS, robin@oasis-open.org, sada@jp.fujitsu.com, > > "'Patil, Sanjay'" <sanjay.patil@sap.com>, sanka@wso2.com, scayron@acord.org > > , Scott Hinkelman/Austin/IBM@IBMUS, shengsong.ni@oracle.com, > > shivajee@tibco.com, srcarter@novell.com, stefanba@microsoft.com, > > "'Rossmanith, Stefan'" <stefan.rossmanith@sap.com>, "'Winkler, Steve'" > > <steve.winkler@sap.com>, sumit.gupta@oracle.com, tboubez@layer7tech.com, > > tejeswar.das@iona.com, thomas.erl@soasystems.com, thomas.t.bui@boeing.com, > > timothy@drummondgroup.com, toby.considine@unc.edu, tom@coastin.com, > > "'Yalcinalp, Umit'" <umit.yalcinalp@sap.com>, vfurman@webmethods.com > > , "'Shipkowitz, Vicki'" <vicki.shipkowitz@sap.com>, vikas@sonoasystems.com > > , "'Videlov, Vladimir'" <vladimir.videlov@sap.com>, Martin Chapman > > <martin.chapman@oracle.com> > > > > Subject > > > > Re: Comment on WSDL spec: use of Anonymous Element > > > > > > > > > > Hi Doug, > > > > Comments interspersed: > > > > Doug Davis wrote: > > > > Alastair, > > There are a couple of different things at play here. First, sorry > > about the long cc-list but the wsrx mailing list still doesn't > > appear to work so I need to include the entire wsrx team manually :-( > > I thought my mail client was going to expire when I just did "reply all". > > > > In a non-anonymous world the wsa:Address field represents both the > > fact that the destination can access connections and it identifies > > the party. And I think that makes sense. There is no reason to not > > have a single URI do that (let's not get into the 'identity' issue > > w.r.t. ref-p's :-). So, if we then switch over to the anonymous > > case, IMO, I don't believe the implementation should need to change > > w.r.t. the purpose of this URI. > > Here's what I don't understand. In the non-anon case an EPR (address > > + stuff) is used to target. In the anon case, so far as I can tell, > > there is nothing in WS-A to stop the same "full EPR" (address + > > stuff) being used to target the reply. > > > > If one pursues this, what you intuitively want is: callback EPR = > > {address = anon URI, ref-param[0] = identity}. > > > > But ref-params are opaque. Not what you want. (Although I can't see > > how to stop an app contract, e.g. RM, specifying that we'll use a > > mutually-known type for a ref-param, and make its presence mandatory > > for certain messages). > > > > Assume that ref-param is not good. Why not add an RM extension > > element to the EPR? This retains the identity lexeme within the EPR. > > A WS-A impl should be happy to insert and extract such extension > > elements, even if it hasn't a clue what they mean. > > > > In the simple WS-Addr anon use-case the URI still indicates both > > things - whether or not (and 'not' in this case) the destination > > will accept a connection, and it also indicates the identity - sort > > of. The identity is implicitly defined by the fact that it is tied > > to the connection on which the request came in on. If we did what > > you're suggesting and add a second header then, IMO, RM would > > require quite a big change to people's soap processor. I think WS- > > Addr did a really good thing by keeping everything people need to > > know with a single structure - the EPR. Even with the introduction > > of the anonymous URI (which could very easily have been introduced > > in a much less cleaner fashion), most of the SOAP processor doesn't > > really need to know what the specific value of the wsa:Address > > element is until it tries to actually send the message over the wire. > > So, if we then switch over the MakeConnection use-case, I think RM > > did the right thing by using the same mechanism WS-Addr did - keep > > everything within a single EPR. > > OK, but I think you may be conflating "a single EPR" with "the > > address element of a single EPR". > > > > This allows for most of the SOAP processor to be totally unaware of > > the actually transport mechanism until (or close to) the time the > > message is serialized on the wire. If there were additional headers > > to carry this information then existing WS-Addr logic of mapping a > > wsa:ReplyTo over to a wsa:To + ref-p headers when constructing a > > response might need to also change. There's also lots of other use- > > cases where the logic to handle the RM code isn't on the same > > machine doing this WS-Addr mapping so if its not aware of RM at all > > it wouldn't even know to include some special bit on the outgoing > > message (either in the message or in the soap processor's metadata > > about the message) to indicate that MakeConnection will be used. > > Things are just a whole lot easier if everything is encapsulated in > > a single EPR, and more specifically in the wsa:Address field. Which > > is exactly how WS-Addr anon works today. > > Hmm, back to the conflation. I can't see anything in the WS-Addr > > spec that prevents use of ref params, metadata or extensibility > > elements within an anon EPR. Here, you want to use the special > > value of [address], and put an application-defined type/value in the > > rest of the EPR. That would fit your requirement to "keep it in the EPR". > > I don't think loosening the wording makes thing indeterminate - it > > still requires a URI with the proper semantics, but it allows for > > the composition of other specifications that may defined their own. > > And, IMO, as long as they are consistent with WS-Addr's definition > > of anon, from a WS-Addr perspective, then how they choose to add > > additional semantics is up to them. > > I'm not convinced. I think you are layer-violating -- introducing > > precisely the problem that you are trying to avoid. > > > > At the SOAP processing level this message is full of arcane headers > > of unknown meaning. At the WS-A processor level, these are > > commonplace headers with well-defined meanings, which may contain > > some arcane app ref params and extension elements of unknown meaning. > > > > [reply endpoint][address] = anon URI means: "send a response on the > > back-channel". At the last minute the WS-A processor whacks the > > arcana (ref-params, metadata and extensibility elements) into the > > header and whisks them off on the response. Receiving WS-A processor > > gives the arcana to the app, for which they are meaningful (for > > routing or correlation or whatever). > > > > This works because the WS-A receiver can look at well-known, > > expected endpoint [reply endpoint] and can find the well-known, > > expected anon URI -- and need think no further. Anon URI = use > back channel. > > > > If the URI is different (anon-URI?tum-ti-tum-ti-tum) then the WS-A > > processor has to assume that it's something special. In fact, it's > > going to try to address it as a "real address", surely? Only the RM > > layer knows that "?<string>" is irrelevant to back-channel choice. > > > > I can think of three ways of getting around this: > > > > 1) Amend WS-Addressing Core to say: the distinguished URI is "any > > URI which begins with the following distinguished string". > > > > 2) Amend WS-Addressing Core to say: the following distinguished > > metadata element or additional property means: whatever the content > > of [address], use the back-channel. > > > > 3) Put an extension element in the EPR that is routing data at theapp level. > > > > 1) & 2) involve amending WS-Addressing, which doesn't seem like a > great idea. > > > > 3) Involves no change to WS-Addressing. > > > > If the WSDL says: anon is required, then what is the value inserted > > on the wire for [reply endpoint][address]? If more definition is > > required to establish that, then we seem to be losing the low-level, > > generic capability WS-Addressing has defined. That's what I meant by > > indeterminacy. > > > > > > In talking about this with Chris Ferris, he mentioned another > > alternative... instead of saying "MUST", perhaps the text related to > > the wsaw:Anon flag could simply say "SHOULD". This clearly > > indicates that WS-Addr's anon URI is the URI of choice, but if there > > are good reasons for using some other one then the processor will > > allow those as well. > > Let me raise another point about the WSAW wording. It talks about > > "response endpoints" in the plural. Will the required, etc apply to > > all endpoints which can be responded to, i.e. [from e], [reply e], > > [fault e], or is it specific to each? It seems to imply the former. > > > > If ths is so, then it precludes routing tricks like the following > > (which is practically useful): > > > > [from endpoint] is my address if you need to send me a second (e.g. > > repeated) response. > > [reply endpoint] = anon-URI, which is where to send your first > > response, which we hope gets through. > > > > This feature allows retrying protocols to maximize use of HTTP > > responses, but not be limited by them. I would like to be able to > > express this as a contractual statement: this endpoint may be anon, > > this one must not be: from/prohibited, reply/optional. I have a use > > case in a customer business protocol for exactly this behaviour. I > > think it's a useful optimization in other contexts. > > > > Yrs, > > > > Alastair > > > > thanks, > > -Doug > > > > > > > Alastair Green <alastair.green@choreology.com> > > Sent by: public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org > > 08/04/2006 06:59 AM > > > > To > > > > Doug Davis/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS > > > > cc > > > > public-ws-addressing@w3.org, ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org > > > > Subject > > > > Re: Comment on WSDL spec: use of Anonymous Element > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Doug, > > > > This is probably a dumb question, but aren't you trying to change the > > wrong spec? > > > > In RM you are using a single header property to indicate two things: > > "we're doing back-channel here, and it's part of a logical connection, > > identified thus". > > > > Why can't you separate the communication of these two semantics, by > > using two properties: > > > > 1) wsa:ReplyTo = anonymous URI > > 2) wsrm:MakeConnection = connection identity? > > > > 2) without 1) would be illegal. > > > > In your example posted on the WS-RX list, you state that [reply > > endpoint] is not set because MakeConnection is a "one-way message". But > > it's a message that usually/frequently expects a reply (at a WS-A > > level). Unlike many other applications, a WS-RM MC sender will tolerate > > an empty response (no SOAP in the HTTP body), but I don't think that > > stops one viewing this as a utilization of the request-reply pattern > > implied by use of reply-to. > > > > If you loosen the WSAW wording, then surely it becomes indeterminate. > > What does "required" imply on the wire, thereafter? > > > > Alastair > > > > Doug Davis wrote: > > > > > > To elaborate a little on Bob's note [1], in the WSA WSDL spec, when > > > talking about the various values for the Anonymous Element it lists: > > > > > > "optional": This value indicates that a response endpoint EPR in a > > > request message MAY contain an anonymous URI as an address. > > > "required":This value indicates that all response endpoint EPRs in a > > > request message MUST always use anonymous URI as an address. > > > If a response endpoint EPR does not contain the anonymous URI as an > > > address value, then a predefined InvalidAddressingHeader fault defined > > > in Web Services Addressing 1.0 - SOAP Binding [WS-Addressing SOAP > > > Binding] MUST be generated. > > > "prohibited":This value indicates that any response EPRs in a request > > > message MUST NOT use anonymous URI as an address. > > > If a response endpoint EPR contains the anonymous URI as an address > > > value, then a predefined InvalidAddressingHeader fault defined in Web > > > Services Addressing 1.0 - SOAP Binding [WS-Addressing SOAP Binding] > > > MUST be generated. > > > > > > > > > The problem comes up when another spec defines their own version of > > > anonymous - like WS-RM does. It defines an anon URI which acts almost > > > exactly like the WSA one in that it means "send it on the transport > > > specific back-channel". However, if the wsaw:Anonymous element is set > > > to "required" then the above text would seem to imply that regardless > > > of whether or not the RM spec is supported by the endpoint, the client > > > can never send a wsa:ReplyTo with anything other than WSA's anonymous. > > > So the above text precludes another spec from ever extending WSA to > > > define their own anon URI where from a WSA perspective its equivalent. > > > If the text were loosened up a bit to not mention the WSA anon URI > > > specifically, but rather something more generic like: "... MUST always > > > use a URI implying the transport specific back-channel" then the use > > > of the wsaw:Anonymous element would not preclude other specs defining > > > their own anon URI and not violate the meaning of the wsaw:Anonymous. > > > > > > thanks > > > -Doug > > > > > > > > > > > > [1] > > > http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-ws-addressing/2006Aug/0009.html > > > >
Received on Tuesday, 8 August 2006 14:08:13 UTC