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− | ==Module Information==
| + | [[Media:Exploration_of_the_Darts_dataset_using_statistics.pdf]] |
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− | ===Module Objectives===
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− | *How to implement a cloud based storage solution for a company's big data needs
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− | *The knowledge needed to integrate desktop and web applications to utilize web services and stored data.
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− | *How cloud based DNS solutions can help to optimize a company's IT infrastructure
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− | *How cloud based servers and service implementations can be easily deployed for rapid utilisation
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− | *The steps involved in data exchange between web services and cloud based applications
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− | ===Resources - References===
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− | *Programming Amazon EC2, Juirg van Vliet 1st 2011 O’Reilly
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− | *Google Compute Engine, Marc Cohen 1st 2011 O’Reilly
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− | *Python for Google App Engine, Massimiliano Pippi 1st 2015 Packet
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− | *Big Data Fundamentals Concepts, Drivers & Techniques, Thomas Erl, Wajid Khattak, and Paul Buhler, Prentice Hall
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− | ==Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)==
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− | *A service-oriented architecture (SOA) is a style of software design where services are provided to the other components by application components, through a communication protocol over a network.
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− | *A service is a discrete unit of functionality that can be accessed remotely and acted upon and updated independently, such as retrieving a credit card statement online.
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− | *SOA provides access to reusable Web services over a TCP/IP network,
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− | ==XML==
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− | ==Web service==
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− | *A software component stored on one computer that can be accessed via method calls by an application (or other software component) on another computer over a network
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− | *Web services communicate using such technologies as:
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− | **XML, JSON and HTTP
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− | **'''Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP):''' An XML-based protocol that allows web services and clients to communicate in a platform-independent manner
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− | '''Basic concepts:'''
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− | *'''Remote machine or server:''' The computer on which a web service resides
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− | *'''A client application''' that accesses a web service sends a method call over a network to the remote machine, which processes the call and returns a response over the network to the application
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− | *'''Publishing (deploying) a web service:''' Making a web service available to receive client requests.
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− | *'''Consuming a web service:''' Using a web service from a client application.
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− | *In Java, a web service is implemented as a class that resides on a server.
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− | '''An application that consumes a web service (client) consists needs:'''
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− | *An object of a '''''proxy class''''' for interacting with the web service.
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− | *The ''proxy object'' handles the details of communicating with the web service on the client's behalf
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− | [[File:Interaction_between_a_web_service_client_and_a_web_service.png|709x709px|thumb|center]] | |
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− | '''JAX-WS:'''
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− | *The Java API for XML Web Services (JAX-WS) is a Java programming language API for creating web services, particularly SOAP services. JAX-WS is one of the Java XML programming APIs. It is part of the Java EE platform.
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− | **Requests to and responses from web services are typically transmitted via SOAP.
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− | **Any client capable of generating and processing SOAP messages can interact with a web service, regardless of the language in which the web service is written.
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− | ===Creating - Publishing - Testing and Describing a Web Service using NetBeans===
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− | *In Netbeans, you focus on the logic of the web service and let the IDE handle the web service’s infrastructure
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− | *'''Example: HugeInteger web service:'''
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− | **Provide methods that take two “huge integers” (represented as Strings)
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− | **Can determine their sum, their difference, which is larger, which is smaller or whether the two numbers are equal
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− | ====Create a Web Service - Locally====
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− | * We first need to to do some configuration in NetBeans:
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− | ** Go to /home/hduser/netbeans-8.2/etc/netbeans.conf:
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− | *** Find the line: ''netbeans_default_options''
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− | *** If ''-J-Djavax.xml.accessExternalSchema=all'' is not between the quotes then paste it in.
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− | * If you are deploying to the ''GlassFish'' Server you need to modify the configuration file of the ''GlassFish'' Server (''domain.xml''):
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− | ** /home/hduser/glassfish-4.1.1/glassfish/domains/domain1/config/domain.xml
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− | *** Find : <java-config
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− | *** Check the jvm-options for the following configuration
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− | *** '''''<jvm-options>-Djavax.xml.accessExternalSchema=all</jvm-options>'''''
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− | *** It should be there by default, if not paste it in, save file and exit
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− | *** You can now start Netbeans IDE
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− | * '''Create a Web Service in NetBeans:'''
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− | ** Choose File > New Project
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− | ** Select Web Application from the Java Web category
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− | ==Consuming a Web Service in Java using NetBeans IDE==
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− | Netbeans 6.5 - 9 and Java EE enable programmers to "publish (deploy)" and/or "consume (client request)" web services
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− | This document provides step-by-step instructions to consume a web service in Java using NetBeans IDE.
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− | In the project, we will invoke a sorting web service through its WSDL link: http://vhost3.cs.rit.edu/SortServ/Service.svc?singleWsdl.
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