- From: Marc Goodner <mgoodner@microsoft.com>
- Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2006 08:32:29 -0800
- To: Marc Hadley <Marc.Hadley@Sun.COM>, "public-ws-addressing@w3.org List" <public-ws-addressing@w3.org>
It occurs to me we should not waste any more time worrying about <wsfoo:AnonReplies/> as we struck the text asking others to define their own anon URIs. We shouldn't close one invitation and then offer another. -----Original Message----- From: public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org [mailto:public-ws-addressing-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Marc Hadley Sent: Monday, November 13, 2006 3:41 PM To: public-ws-addressing@w3.org List Subject: Updated proposal for WS-Policy assertions The first part of the proposal is to remove the current wsaw:Anonymous WSDL marker. I think we might need to tweak the section describing the UsingAddressing marker to include the following text (modified to remove mentions of policy and anonymous) from the section describing the wsaw:Anonymous marker: "A WSDL-based service description that includes the wsaw:UsingAddressing makes no assertion regarding a requirement or a constraint in the use of the anonymous URI in EPRs contained in messages sent to the endpoint." The current text for UsingAddressing could be taken to imply that endpoints using it explicitly support anon and non-anon addresses but I think the intent is that UsingAddressing makes no claim about the types of address supported. The second part of the proposal is to define three new elements for use in WS-Policy. (i) <wsaw:AddressingRequired/> - the endpoint requires WS-Addressing, optionality can be conveyed using WS-Policy constructs. (ii) <wsaw:AnonymousResponses/> (a child element of <wsaw:AddressingRequired>) - the endpoint can send replies using WS-A anonymous; the endpoint can't send to anon if not present. (iii) <wsaw:NonAnonymousResponses/> (a child element of <wsaw:AddressingRequired>) - the endpoint can send replies using other addresses; the endpoint can't send to other addresses if not present (unless some other assertion adds a class of supported addresses). Element (iii) is deliberately vague, its presence means that a non- anon address might work but doesn't constrain what such an address might look like - a receiver can still reject an address that it doesn't grok or that requires a binding it doesn't support. The WG decided against specifying things like available response bindings so I think this is in line with that decision. Here are some examples: <wsp:Policy> <wsaw:AddressingRequired> <wsaw:AnonymousReplies/> </wsaw:AddressingRequired> </wsp:Policy> Means that addressing is required and only anonymous replies are supported. <wsp:Policy> <wsaw:AddressingRequired> <wsaw:NonAnonymousReplies/> </wsaw:AddressingRequired> </wsp:Policy> Means that addressing is required and only non-anonymous replies are supported. <wsp:Policy> <wsaw:AddressingRequired> <wsaw:AnonymousReplies/> <wsaw:NonAnonymousReplies/> </wsaw:AddressingRequired> </wsp:Policy> Means that addressing is required and both anonymous and non-anonymous replies are supported. <wsp:Policy> <wsaw:AddressingRequired/> </wsp:Policy> Wouldn't be too useful for anything other than a one-way message since neither anonymous nor non-anonymouse replies are supported. <wsp:Policy> <wsaw:AddressingRequired> <wsaw:AnonymousReplies/> <wsfoo:AnonReplies/> </wsaw:AddressingRequired> </wsp:Policy> Means that addressing is required and that anon replies as defined by WS-Addr or WS-Foo are supported. Marc. --- Marc Hadley <marc.hadley at sun.com> CTO Office, Sun Microsystems.
Received on Tuesday, 14 November 2006 16:36:16 UTC