- From: Krishna Sankar <ksankar@cisco.com>
- Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2000 01:04:01 -0800
- To: "Anderson, William L" <WAnderson@crt.xerox.com>, "'Martin Gudgin'" <marting@develop.com>, <Noah_Mendelsohn@lotus.com>
- Cc: <xml-dist-app@w3.org>
How about : The XML Protocol message path model is defined in terms of XP senders and XP receivers that transmit and receive XP messages respectively and XP Processors that formulate and process the messages. An XP Processor (at the sender's side) formulates a message conforming to the XML Protocol rules and hands it over to a XP Sender which transmits the message. An XP Receiver accepts the message and hands it over to the receiving end's XP processor to processes the message according to the rules of the XML Protocol. > > -----Original Message----- > From: xml-dist-app-request@w3.org [mailto:xml-dist-app-request@w3.org]On > Behalf Of Anderson, William L > Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 9:55 AM > To: 'Martin Gudgin'; Noah_Mendelsohn@lotus.com > Cc: xml-dist-app@w3.org > Subject: RE: Proposed revised wording of 6.3 preamble > > > Noah and Martin, is this a useful picture of the communication piece? > > XP Processor | XP Communicator <------ XP Msg -------> XP > Communicator | XP Processor > > I know we need words but the end points are identical aren't > they? The role > of sender or receiver depends on the message direction. And I don't intend > to expose a specific design or implementation, but we are building on > existing well-known and shared understandings of network protocols. > > Maybe the preamble could say (trying to avoid "in front" and "behind"): > > Proposed new wording > > The XML Protocol message path model is defined in terms of XP > senders and XP > receivers that send and receive XP messages respectively. An XP Sender > generates a message conforming to the XML Protocol rules. An XP Receiver > receives and processes the message according to the rules of the XML > Protocol. > > > (Of course one problem here is that sending and receiving is defined using > the terms send and receive. Maybe need to say senders formulate > and transmit > and receivers accept and process?) > > comments? > > Bill Anderson > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: Martin Gudgin [mailto:marting@develop.com] > > Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 12:11 PM > > To: Noah_Mendelsohn@lotus.com > > Cc: xml-dist-app@w3.org > > Subject: Re: Proposed revised wording of 6.3 preamble > > > > > > Yeah, I'm not perfectly happy with those parts. I was trying > > to find some > > symmetry for senders with what was already there for > > receivers. I'm totally > > open to suggestions in this area and will spend some time > > over the holidays > > trying to formulate some better prose. > > > > Gudge > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: <Noah_Mendelsohn@lotus.com> > > To: "Martin Gudgin" <marting@develop.com> > > Cc: <xml-dist-app@w3.org> > > Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 2:16 PM > > Subject: Re: Proposed revised wording of 6.3 preamble > > > > > > > Thanks for doing this. On the whole this looks good, but I > > must say that > > > I find the terms "in front of" and "behind each" to be > > somewhat ambiguous > > > as to what really happens first (though you can easily > > guess) and perhaps > > > too informal. Thanks again. > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------- > > ---------- > > > Noah Mendelsohn Voice: > > 1-617-693-4036 > > > Lotus Development Corp. Fax: > > 1-617-693-8676 > > > One Rogers Street > > > Cambridge, MA 02142 > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------- > > ---------- > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > "Martin Gudgin" <marting@develop.com> > > > Sent by: xml-dist-app-request@w3.org > > > 12/21/00 11:15 PM > > > > > > > > > To: "XML Protocol Comments" <xml-dist-app@w3.org> > > > cc: (bcc: Noah Mendelsohn/CAM/Lotus) > > > Subject: Proposed revised wording of 6.3 preamble > > > > > > Existing wording > > > > > > The XML Protocol message path model is defined in terms of > > XP senders and > > > XP > > > receivers who can generate and accept XP messages > > respectively. Behind > > > each > > > XP receiver is an XP processor that processes the message > > according to the > > > rules of the XML Protocol. > > > > > > > > > Proposed new wording > > > > > > The XML Protocol message path model is defined in terms of > > XP senders and > > > receivers which send and receive XP messages respectively. > > In front of > > > each > > > XP sender is an XP processor which generates a message > > according to the > > > rules of the XML protocol. Behind each XP receiver is an XP > > processor that > > > processes the message according to the rules of the XML Protocol. > > > > > > > > > Gudge > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
Received on Saturday, 23 December 2000 04:06:38 UTC