Developing XML Web Services Using Microsoft ASP.NET
Course 2524—Three days—Instructor-led
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The topics below are guidelines to the courses and their structures. After speaking with
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Introduction
Audience
At Course Completion
Microsoft Certified
Professional Exams
Prerequisites
Course Materials
Course Outline
The goal of this course is to provide students with the
knowledge and skills that are required to develop Extensible
Markup Language (XML) Web services-based solutions to solve
common problems in the distributed application domain. The
course focuses on using Microsoft Visual Studio® .NET and
Microsoft ASP.NET to enable students to build, deploy, locate,
and consume Web services.
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This course is intended for experienced software developers
who have previously built component-based applications.
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After completing this course, students will be able to:
- Explain how Web services solve problems encountered with
traditional approaches to designing distributed
applications.
- Describe the architecture of a Web services-based
solution.
- Describe the underlying technologies of Web services and
explain how to use the Microsoft .NET Framework to implement
them.
- Implement a Web service consumer by using Visual Studio
.NET.
- Implement a simple Web service by using Visual Studio
.NET.
- Publish and deploy a Web service.
- Secure a Web service.
- Implement caching in a Web service.
- Evaluate the trade-offs and issues that are involved in
designing a real-world Web service.
- Implement nonstandard Web services such as Hypertext
Markup Language (HTML) screen scraping and aggregating Web
services.
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Before attending this course, students must have:
- Familiarity with C# or Microsoft Visual Basic® .NET.
- Programming in C++, Java, or Microsoft Visual Basic.
- An understanding of how to read and write XML documents.
- Experimented with simple C# applications.
- Developed distributed applications by using Visual Basic,
Java, or C++.
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| Microsoft
Certified Professional Exams |
- Exam
70-310: Developing XML Web Services and Server Components
with Microsoft Visual Basic .NET and the Microsoft .NET
Framework
- Exam
70-320: Developing XML Web Services and Server Components
with Microsoft Visual C# .NET and the Microsoft .NET Framework
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The student kit includes a comprehensive workbook and other
necessary materials for this class.
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| Module
1: The Need for XML Web Services |
This module provides students with an understanding of the
problem space that Web services address. The module compares
various approaches to implementing distributed applications.
Because the Web services in this course are implemented by using
Microsoft ASP.NET and the Microsoft .NET Framework, alternate
options for implementing distributed applications by using the
.NET Framework are discussed to better define what kinds of
solutions Web services are appropriate for.
After completing this module, you will be able to explain how
Web services emerged as a solution to the problems with
traditional approaches to designing distributed applications.
This includes:
- Describing the evolution of distributed applications.
- Identifying the problems with traditional distributed
application architectures and technologies.
- Describing Web services and briefly explaining how they
address the design problems in traditional distributed
applications.
- Listing the alternate options for distributed application
development.
- Identifying the kinds of scenarios where Web services are
an appropriate solution.
| Module
2: XML Web Service Architectures |
This module broadly describes the service-oriented
architecture, which is a conceptual architecture. Then, the
module explains the roles and how Web service architectures are
a type of service-oriented architecture.
After completing this module, you will be able to describe
the architecture of a Web services-based solution. This
includes:
- Identifying how Web service architectures are a type of
service-oriented architecture.
- Describing the elements of a Web service architecture and
explaining their roles.
- Describing the Web service programming model.
| Module
3: The Underlying Technologies of XML Web Services |
After completing this module, you will be able to describe
the underlying technologies of Web services and explain how to
use the .NET Framework to implement Web services by using these
technologies.
This includes:
- Describing the structures of an HTTP request and response.
- Issuing HTTP POST and GET requests and processing the
responses by using the .NET Framework.
- Describing data types by using the XML Schema Definition
language (XSD).
- Explaining how to control the way a .NET Framework object
is serialized to XML.
- Describing the structures of a Simple Object Access
Protocol (SOAP) request and response.
- Issuing a SOAP request and processing the response by
using the .NET Framework.
| Module
4: Consuming XML Web Services |
After completing this module, you will be able to implement a
Web service consumer by using Visual Studio .NET.
This includes:
- Explaining the structure of a Web Service Description
Language (WSDL) document.
- Explaining the Web services discovery process.
- Locating service contracts by using Disco.exe.
- Generating Web service proxies by using Wsdl.exe.
- Implementing a Web service consumer by using Visual Studio
.NET.
- Invoking a Web service synchronously and asynchronously by
using a Web service proxy.
| Module
5: Implementing a Simple XML Web Service |
This module provides students with the skills that are
required to implement and debug a Web service by using Visual
Studio .NET.
This includes:
- Creating a Web service project.
- Implementing Web service methods, exposing them, and
controlling their behavior.
- Managing state in an ASP.NET-based Web service.
- Debugging Web services.
| Module
6: Publishing and Deploying XML Web Services |
This module teaches students how to deploy and publish Web
services and locate Web services by using the Microsoft
Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration (UDDI)
software development kit (SDK). A local development UDDI
registry is used in the demonstrations for this module, but the
mechanics of publishing and finding Web services is no different
on the public UDDI registry nodes.
After completing this module, you will be able to publish and
deploy a Web service. This includes:
- Explaining the role of UDDI in Web services.
- Publishing a Web service in a UDDI registry by using the
UDDI SDK.
- Searching a UDDI registry to locate Web services by using
the UDDI SDK.
- Explaining the various options for publishing a Web
service on an intranet.
- Explaining some of the options for modifying the default
configuration of a Web service.
| Module
7: Securing XML Web Services |
This module teaches students how to use the security services
of the Microsoft Windows® operating system, Microsoft Internet
Information Services (IIS), and the.NET Framework and common
language runtime to secure Web services.
After completing this module, you will be able to secure a
Web service. This includes:
- Identifying the differences between authentication and
authorization.
- Explaining how to use the security mechanisms that
Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) and Windows
provide for authentication.
- Using SOAP headers for authentication in a Web service.
- Using role-based security and code access security for
authorization in a Web service.
- Encrypting the communication between a Web service
consumer and a Web service.
| Module
8: Designing XML Web Services |
This module teaches students which design issues to consider
when designing real-world Web services. The issues discussed are
related to data type constraints, performance, reliability,
versioning, deployment in Internet Service Provider (ISP) and
Application Service Provider (ASP) scenarios, and aggregating
Web services. The module also discusses HTML screen scraping as
a pseudo Web service.
After completing this module, you will be able to evaluate
the trade-offs and issues that are involved in designing a
real-world Web service. This includes:
- Identifying the restrictions that are imposed on data
types by the various Web services protocols.
- Explaining how the use of Application and Session state
can affect the performance and scaling of Web services.
- Explaining how to use output and data caching to improve
Web service performance.
- Implementing caching in a Web service.
- Explaining how asynchronous Web service methods can
improve performance.
- Explaining the need for instrumenting Web services.
- Identifying the components of a Web service that can be
versioned.
- Explaining how to implement a virtual Web service by using
screen scraping.
- Implementing a Web service that uses multiple Web
services.
- Identifying the trade-offs in the techniques that are used
for exposing aggregated Web services.
| Module
9: Global XML Web Services Architecture |
This module teaches students how to use the security services
of the Microsoft Windows operating system, IIS, and the .NET
Framework and common language runtime to secure Web services.
After completing this module, you will be able to:
- Describe limitations inherent to the specifications with
which today’s Web services are built.
- Describe the design principles and specifications of
Global XML Web services Architecture (GXA).
- Describe Web service application scenarios made possible
by Web Services Routing Protocol (WS-Routing) and Web
Services Referral Protocol (WS-Referral).
- Explain how to use Web Services Security Language
(WS-Security) and Web Services License Language (WS-License)
to perform authentication and authorization for Web
services.
- Design Web services that anticipate and can leverage the
features that GXA will offer when released.
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