- From: Bob Freund <bob@freunds.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 18:14:48 -0400
- To: <public-ws-policy@w3.org>, "[WS-A]" <public-ws-addressing@w3.org>
- Cc: "Paul Cotton" <Paul.Cotton@microsoft.com>, "Christopher B Ferris" <chrisfer@us.ibm.com>
- Message-id: <7D5D3FDA429F4D469ADF210408D6245A066D7F@jeeves.freunds.com>
As approved during the WS-Addressing WG Teleconference on 2007-04-23: This is in response to the WS-Policy group's last call review[1] of the WS-Addressing 1.0 Metadata Document[2]. The WS-Policy WG's review generated WS-Addressing issue lc133[4] which was resolved with a resolution which adopted "Proposal G"[3] as editorially by modified in section 3.1.1 and in examples by the resolution. We have attached the resulting section 3 of the WS-Addressing 1.0 Metadata Document so created. The WS-Addressing WG feels that this resolution substantially resolves your comments found in [1]. If you agree that this resolution satisfies the comments contained in [1], please so indicate by an affirmative response to this message. If not, please provide additional clarifying commentary. In detail, we have made the following adjustments: In response to points A and B contained in [2] "(A) The presence of either of the two nested assertions does not indicate a required behavior." The working group discussed this at length and was confused by the use of the phrase "required behavior" in [1] since in WS-Policy 1.5 Framework 1. "Introduction" it is stated: "A policy assertion represents a requirement, capability, or other property of a behavior" And in WS-Policy 1.5 Framework section 2.4 "Terminology" it is stated: "Definition: A policy assertion represents a requirement, a capability, or other property of a behavior" The working group assumed that "requirement, a capability, or other property of a behavior" was intended Further to (A), we have provided substitute policy assertions as incorporated within the attached to wit: "3.1.1 Addressing Assertion The wsam:Addressing policy assertion is a nested policy container assertion. The meaning of this assertion, when present in a policy alternative, is that WS-Addressing is required to communicate with the subject. The wsam:Addressing assertion indicates that there are no restrictions on the use of WS-Addressing unless otherwise qualified by assertions in its nested policy expression. In order to indicate that the subject supports WS-Addressing but does not require its use, an additional policy alternative should be provided which does not contain this assertion. This may be done in WS-Policy compact form by adding the attribute wsp:Optional="true" to the wsam:Addressing assertion." And: two nested assertions which may appear within the Addressing Assertion "3.1.2 AnonymousResponses Assertion The wsam:AnonymousResponses element MAY be used as a policy assertion nested within the wsam:Addressing assertion in accordance with the rules laid down by WS-Policy Framework 1.5 section 4.3.2. The appearance of this element within the wsam:Addressing policy assertion indicates that the endpoint requires request messages to use response endpoint EPRs that contain the anonymous URI ("http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing/anonymous") as the value of [address]. In other words, the endpoint requires the use of anonymous responses. The None URI ("http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing/none") may appear as the value of [address] in place of the anonymous URI; this value MUST be accepted." And: "3.1.3 NonAnonymousResponses Assertion The wsam:NonAnonymousResponses element MAY be used as a policy assertion nested within the Addressing assertion in accordance with the rules laid down by WS-Policy Framework 1.5 section 4.3.2. The wsam:NonAnonymousResponses policy assertion MUST NOT be used in the same policy alternative as the wsam:AnonymousResponses policy assertion. The appearance of this element within the wsam:Addressing assertion indicates that the endpoint requires request messages to use response endpoint EPRs that contain something other than the anonymous URI as the value of [address]. In other words, the endpoint requires the use of non-anonymous responses. This assertion is deliberately vague; its presence indicates that some non-anonymous addresses will be accepted but doesn't constrain what such an address might look like. A receiver can still reject a request that contains an address that it doesn't understand or that requires a binding it doesn't support. The None URI ("http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing/none") may appear as the value of [address] in place of a non-anonymous address; this value MUST be accepted." Response to "(D) The WS-Addressing Metadata draft does not specify a policy subject" The policy subject has been identified as endpoint to wit: "The wsam:Addressing policy assertion applies to the endpoint policy subject" Response to "(E) The WS-Addressing Metadata draft should rule out wsdl:portType and wsdl20:interface as possible attachment points." Such a prohibition has been included to wit: "A policy expression containing the wsam:Addressing policy assertion MUST NOT be attached to a wsdl:portType or wsdl20:interface. The wsam:Addressing policy assertion specifies a concrete behavior whereas the wsdl:portType or wsdl20:interface is an abstract construct" Thanks -bob Chair, WS-Addressing [1] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-ws-addressing/2007Feb/0006.ht ml [2] http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/WD-ws-addr-metadata-20070202/ [3] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-ws-addressing/2007Mar/att-004 3/WSA_Policy_-_alternative_G.pdf [4] http://www.w3.org/2002/ws/addr/lc-issues/Overview.html#lc133
Attachments
- application/msword attachment: WSAddrPolicyAlgerntiveGprime.doc
- text/html attachment: WSAddrPolicyAlgerntiveGprime.htm
Received on Monday, 23 April 2007 22:15:19 UTC