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SCDJWS Objectives
Section 1: XML Web Service Standards
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1.1 Given XML documents, schemas, and fragments determine whether their
syntax and form are correct (according to W3C schema) and whether they
conform to the WS-I Basic Profile 1.0a.
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1.2 Describe the use of XML schema in J2EE Web services.
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1.3 Describe the use of namespaces in an XML document.
Section 2: SOAP 1.1 Web Service Standards
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2.1 List and describe the encoding types used in a SOAP message.
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2.2 Describe how SOAP message header blocks are used and processed.
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2.3 Describe the function of each element contained in a SOAP message, the
SOAP binding to HTTP, and how to represent faults that occur when processing
a SOAP message.
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2.4 Create a SOAP message that contains an attachment.
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2.5 Describe the restrictions placed on the use of SOAP by the WS-I Basic
Profile 1.0a.
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2.6 Describe the function of SOAP in a Web service interaction and the
advantages and disadvantages of using SOAP messages.
Section 3: Describing and Publishing (WSDL and UDDI)
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3.1 Explain the use of WSDL in Web services, including a description of
WSDL's basic elements, binding mechanisms and the basic WSDL operation types
as limited by the WS-I Basic Profile 1.0a.
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3.2 Describe how W3C XML Schema is used as a typing mechanism in WSDL 1.1.
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3.3 Describe the use of UDDI data structures. Consider the requirements
imposed on UDDI by the WS-I Basic Profile 1.0a.
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3.4 Describe the basic functions provided by the UDDI Publish and Inquiry
APIs to interact with a UDDI business registry.
Section 4: JAX-RPC
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4.1 Explain the service description model, client connection types,
interaction modes, transport mechanisms/protocols, and endpoint types as
they relate to JAX-RPC.
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4.2 Given a set of requirements for a Web service, such as transactional
needs, and security requirements, design and develop Web service
applications that use servlet-based endpoints and EJB based endpoints.
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4.3 Given an set of requirements, design and develop a Web sevice client,
such as a J2EE client and a stand-alone Java client, using the appropriate
JAX-RPC client connection style.
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4.4 Given a set of requirements, develop and configure a Web service client
that accesses a stateful Web service.
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4.5 Explain the advantages and disadvantages of a WSDL to Java vs. a Java to
WSDL development approach.
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4.6 Describe the advantages and disadvantages of web service applications
that use either synchronous/request response, one-way RPC, or non-blocking
RPC invocation modes.
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4.7 Use the JAX-RPC Handler API to create a SOAP message handler, describe
the function of a handler chain, and describe the role of SAAJ when creating
a message handler.
Section 5: SOAP and XML Processing APIs (JAXP, JAXB, and SAAJ)
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5.1 Describe the functions and capabilities of the APIs included within
JAXP.
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5.2 Given a scenario, select the proper mechanism for parsing and processing
the information in an XML document.
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5.3 Describe the functions and capabilities of JAXB, including the JAXB
process flow, such as XML-to-Java and Java-to-XML, and the binding and
validation mechanisms provided by JAXB.
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5.4 Use the SAAJ APIs to create and manipulate a SOAP message.
Section 6: JAXR
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6.1 Describe the function of JAXR in Web service architectural model, the
two basic levels of business registry functionality supported by JAXR, and
the function of the basic JAXR business objects and how they map to the UDDI
data structures.
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6.2 Use JAXR to connect to a UDDI business registry, execute queries to
locate services that meet specific requirements, and publish or update
information about a business service.
Section 7: J2EE Web Services
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7.1 Identify the characteristics of and the services and APIs included in
the J2EE platform.
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7.2 Explain the benefits of using the J2EE platform for creating and
deploying Web service applications.
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7.3 Describe the functions and capabilities of the JAXP, DOM, SAX, JAXR,
JAX-RPC, and SAAJ in the J2EE platform.
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7.4 Describe the role of the WS-I Basic Profile when designing J2EE Web
services.
Section 8: Security
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8.1 Explain basic security mechanisms including: transport level security,
such as basic and mutual authentication and SSL, message level security, XML
encryption, XML Digital Signature, and federated identity and trust.
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8.2 Identify the purpose and benefits of Web services security oriented
initiatives and standards such as Username Token Profile, SAML, XACML, XKMS,
WS-Security, and the Liberty Project.
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8.3 Given a scenario, implement J2EE based web service web-tier and/or
EJB-tier basic security mechanisms, such as mutual authentication, SSL, and
access control.
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8.4 Describe factors that impact the security requirements of a Web service,
such as the relationship between the client and service provider, the type
of data being exchanged, the message format, and the transport mechanism.
Section 9: Developing Web Services
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9.1 Describe the steps required to configure, package, and deploy J2EE Web
services and service clients, including a description of the packaging
formats, such as .ear, .war, .jar, deployment descriptor settings, the
associated Web services description file, RPC mapping files, and service
reference elements used for EJB and servlet endpoints.
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9.2 Given a set of requirements, develop code to process XML files using the
SAX, DOM, XSLT, and JAXB APIs.
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9.3 Given an XML schema for a document style Web service create a WSDL file
that describes the service and generate a service implementation.
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9.4 Given a set of requirements, develop code to create an XML-based,
document style, Web service using the JAX-RPC APIs.
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9.5 Implement a SOAP logging mechanism for testing and debugging a Web
service application using J2EE Web Service APIs.
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9.6 Given a set of requirements, develop code to handle system and service
exceptions and faults received by a Web services client.
Section 10: General Design and Architecture
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10.1 Describe the characteristics of a service oriented architecture and how
Web services fits to this model.
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10.2Given a scenario, design a J2EE service using the business delegate,
service locator, and/or proxy client-side design patterns and the adapter,
command, Web service broker, and/or faade server-side patterns.
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10.3 Describe alternatives for dealing with issues that impact the quality
of service provided by a Web service and methods to improve the system
reliability, maintainability, security, and performance of a service.
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10.4 Describe how to handle the various types of return values, faults,
errors, and exceptions that can occur during a Web service interaction.
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10.5 Describe the role that Web services play when integrating data,
application functions, or business processes in a J2EE application.
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10.6 Describe how to design a stateless Web service that exposes the
functionality of a stateful business process.
Section 11: Endpoint Design and Architecture
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11.1 Given a scenario, design Web service applications using information
models that are either procedure-style or document-style.
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11.2 Describe the function of the service interaction and processing layers
in a Web service.
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11.3 Describe the tasks performed by each phase of an XML-based, document
oriented, Web service application, including the consumption, business
processing, and production phases.
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11.4 Design a Web service for an asynchronous, document-style process and
describe how to refactor a Web service from a synchronous to an asynchronous
model.
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11.5 Describe how the characteristics, such as resource utilization,
conversational capabilities, and operational modes, of the various types of
Web service clients impact the design of a Web service or determine the type
of client that might interact with a particular service.
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