- From: Ugo Corda <UCorda@SeeBeyond.com>
- Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2004 09:12:30 -0700
- To: "Amelia A Lewis" <alewis@tibco.com>
- Cc: <www-ws-desc@w3.org>, <hugo@w3.org>, <xml-dist-app@w3.org>
> -----Original Message----- > From: Amelia A Lewis [mailto:alewis@tibco.com] > Sent: Monday, June 14, 2004 7:32 AM > To: Ugo Corda > Cc: www-ws-desc@w3.org; hugo@w3.org; xml-dist-app@w3.org > Subject: Re: Describing which blobs are to be optimized. > > > On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 15:57:20 -0700 > Ugo Corda <UCorda@SeeBeyond.com> wrote: > > I also have my doubts about the rationale for focusing on > the endpoint > > declaration of the provider agent. For instance, what does that > > endpoint mean in the case of an Out-only pattern? Wouldn't > it be more > > useful to have the endpoint declaration of the "requester" agent > > instead? > > Only if you're locked into thinking about HTTP and > client/server models. > > In a pub/sub world, an out-only pattern (or any out-initial > pattern) is a nice fit, and we expect to see these widely > used. This is because, in pub/sub, the service is talking, > not listening; publishing, not serving. > The other nodes interacting with the service are not > requesters/clients, but listeners/subscribers. > That's exactly my point. In that kind of scenario, it should more important to focus on the endpoint of the listener/subscriber than on the endpoint of the service itself. > > > I don't see why it should be that way and why we should assume that > > the provider agent's behavior is better known than the requester > > agent's behavior. > > Because the WSDL is always from the point of view of the > service. This sounds more like an article of faith than a rational explanation. In any case, if you guys have already gone over this before, I won't insist (but I remain skeptical about the soundness of this assumption). > This is ground we have gone over multiple times. > > Amy! > -- > Amelia A. Lewis > Senior Architect > TIBCO/Extensibility, Inc. > alewis@tibco.com >
Received on Monday, 14 June 2004 12:13:01 UTC