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Why do I need Web services management? |
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Written by FAQ
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Tuesday, 12 December 2006 |
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The promise of Web services is to enable the agile enterprise through service reuse within a service oriented architecture. Without an SOA enablement, or Web Services Management solution, much of this promise fails as developers are unable to comply with changing security and management policy and cannot keep track of changing service interfaces and locations. |
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Written by FAQ
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Tuesday, 12 December 2006 |
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An intermediary is a server (software or hardware – see XML Firewall) that sits between a web service consumer and provider endpoint. In the case of Web Services Management intermediaries, the intermediary provides varying degrees of security and monitoring functions. |
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Written by FAQ
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Tuesday, 12 December 2006 |
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From www.searchwebservices.com: “Firewalls have long been a mainstay of corporate security - but when it comes to Web services, they may well provide no security at all, because they can only filter at the packet level, and can't examine the contents of messages. Considering that Web services traffic may account for 25 percent of all enterprise traffic by 2006 according to the ZapThink Web services consulting group, that is a serious problem for any business looking to use Web services. |
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