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Web Services and Data Integration Zachary G. Ives University of Pennsylvania CIS 455 / 555 – Internet and Web Systems September 20, 2015 Some slides by Berthier Ribeiro-Neto
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2 Reminders & Announcements Assignment 3 now officially released Midterm next Wednesday, 3/31
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3 How Do We Declare Functions? WSDL is the interface definition language for web services Defines notions of protocol bindings, ports, and services Generally describes data types using XML Schema In CORBA, this was called an IDL In Java, the interface uses the same language as the Java code
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4 A WSDL Service Service Port PortType Operation PortType Operation PortType Operation Binding
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5 Web Service Terminology Service: the entire Web Service Port: maps a set of port types to a transport binding (a protocol, frequently SOAP, COM, CORBA, …) Port Type: abstract grouping of operations, i.e. a class Operation: the type of operation – request/response, one-way Input message and output message; maybe also fault message Types: the XML Schema type definitions
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6 Example WSDL
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7 JAX-RPC: Java and Web Services To write JAX-RPC web service “endpoint”, you need two parts: An endpoint interface – this is basically like the IDL statement An implementation class – your actual code public interface BookQuote extends java.rmi.Remote { public float getBookPrice(String isbn) throws java.rmi.RemoteException; } public class BookQuote_Impl_1 implements BookQuote { public float getBookPrice(String isbn) { return 3.22; } }
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8 Different Options for Calling The conventional approach is to generate a stub, as in the RPC model described earlier You can also dynamically generate the call to the remote interface, e.g., by looking up an interesting function to call Finally, the “DII” (Dynamic Instance Invocation) method allows you to assemble the SOAP call on your own
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9 Creating a Java Web Service A compiler called wscompile is used to generate your WSDL file and stubs You need to start with a configuration file that says something about the service you’re building and the interfaces that you’re converting into Web Services
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10 Example Configuration File
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11 Starting a WAR The Web Service version of a Java JAR file is a Web Archive, WAR There’s a tool called wsdeploy that generates WAR files Generally this will automatically be called from a build tool such as Ant Finally, you may need to add the WAR file to the appropriate location in Apache Tomcat (or WebSphere, etc.) and enable it See http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/WebServices/ WSPack2/jaxrpc.html for a detailed example http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/WebServices/ WSPack2/jaxrpc.html
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12 Finding a Web Service UDDI: Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration registry Think of it as DNS for web services It’s a replicated database, hosted by IBM, HP, SAP, MS UDDI takes SOAP requests to add and query web service interface data
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13 What’s in UDDI White pages: Information about business names, contact info, Web site name, etc. Yellow pages: Types of businesses, locations, products Includes predefined taxonomies for location, industry, etc. Green pages – what we probably care the most about: How to interact with business services; business process definitions; etc Pointer to WSDL file(s) Unique ID for each service
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14 Data Types in UDDI businessEntity: top-level structure describing info about the business businessService: name and description of a service bindingTemplate: how to access the service tModel (t = type/technical): unique identifier for each service-template specification publisherAssertion: describes relationship between businessEntities (e.g., department, division)
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15 Relationships between UDDI Structures publisherAssertion businessEntity businessServicebindingTemplate tModel n 2 1 n 1n m n
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16 Example UDDI businessEntity http://uddi.ibm.com/registery/uddiget?businessKey=0123http://uddi.ibm.com/registery/uddiget?businessKey=0123... My Books Technical Book Wholesaler … … <!– keyedReferences to tModels …
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17 UDDI in Perspective Original idea was that it would just organize itself in a way that people could find anything they wanted Today UDDI is basically a very simple catalog of services, which can be queried with standard APIs It’s not clear that it really does what people really want: they want to find services “like Y” or “that do Z”
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18 The Problem There’s no universal, unambiguous way of describing “what I mean” Relational database idea of “normalization” doesn’t convert concepts into some normal form – it just helps us cluster our concepts in meaningful ways “Knowledge representation” tries to encode definitions clearly – but even then, much is up to interpretation The best we can do: describe how things relate
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19 This Brings Us to XQuery, Whose Main Role Is to Relate XML Suppose we define an XML schema for our target data and our source data XQuery allows us to define mappings from input XPath matches to output trees Can directly translate between XML schemas or structures Describes a relationship between two items Transform 2 into 6 by “add 4” operation Convert from S1 to S2 by applying the query described by view V Often, we don’t need to transfer all data – instead, we want to use the data at one source to help answer a query over another source…
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20 Let’s Look at Some Simple Mappings Beginning with examples of using XQuery to convert from one schema to another, e.g., to import data First: let’s review what our XQuery mappings need to accomplish…
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21 Challenges of Mapping Schemas In a perfect world, it would be easy to match up items from one schema with another Each element would have a simple correspondence to an element in the other schema Every value would clearly map to a value in the other schema Real world: as with human languages, things don’t map clearly! Different decompositions into elements Different structures Tag name vs. value Values may not exactly correspond It may be unclear whether a value is the same It’s a tough job, but often things can be mapped
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22 Example Schemas Bob’s Movie Database … … … … … * * Mary’s Art List … … … … … * Want to map data from one schema to the other
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23 Mapping Bob’s Movies Mary’s Art Start with the schema of the output as a template: $i $y $a $s $t Then figure out where to find the values in the source, and create XPaths
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24 The Final Schema Mapping Mary’s Art Bob’s Movies for $m in doc(“movie.xml”)//movie, $a in $m/director/text(), $i in $m/title/text(), $t in $m/title/text() return $i movie $a $t Note the absence of subject… We had no reasonable source, so we are leaving it out.
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25 Mapping Values Sometimes two schemas use different representations for the same thing ID SSN English Hungarian We typically use an intermediate table defining correspondences – a “concordance table” It can be generated automatically, and then corrected by hand (since there will often be exceptions)
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26 An Example Value Mapping Problem Penn student enrollment DB: … 12346 Mary McDonald F03 cse330 12345 Jon Doh Penn dental plan: 323-468-1212 Dental sealant Want to output student names + treatments…
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27 Translating Values with a Concordance Table return { { $n } { $tr }
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28 Translating Values with a Concordance Table for $p in doc (“student.xml”) /db/student, $pid in $p/pennid/text(), $n in $p/name/text(), $m in doc (“concord.xml”) /db/mapping, $f in $m/from/text(), $t in $m/to/text(), $d in doc(“dental.xml”)/db/patient, $s in $d/ssn/text(), $tr in $d/treatment/text() where ____________________ return { { $n } { $tr } student.xml: 12346 Mary McDonald F03 cse330 $pid: PennID $n: name
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29 Translating Values with a Concordance Table for $p in doc (“student.xml”) /db/student, $pid in $p/pennid/text(), $n in $p/name/text(), $d in doc(“dental.xml”)/db/patient, $s in $d/ssn/text(), $tr in $d/treatment/text(), $m in doc (“concord.xml”) /db/mapping, $f in $m/from/text(), $t in $m/to/text() where ____________________ return { { $n } { $tr } student.xml: 12346 Mary McDonald F03 cse330 dental.xml: 323-468-1212 Dental sealant $pid: PennID $n: name $s: ssn $tr: treatment
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30 Translating Values with a Concordance Table for $p in doc (“student.xml”) /db/student, $pid in $p/pennid/text(), $n in $p/name/text(), $d in doc(“dental.xml”)/db/patient, $s in $d/ssn/text(), $tr in $d/treatment/text(), $m in doc (“concord.xml”) /db/mapping, $f in $m/from/text(), $t in $m/to/text() where ____________________ return { { $n } { $tr } student.xml: 12346 Mary McDonald F03 cse330 dental.xml: 323-468-1212 Dental sealant concord.xml: 12346 323-468-1212 $pid: PennID $n: name $s: ssn $tr: treatment $f: PennID $t: ssn
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31 Translating Values with a Concordance Table for $p in doc (“student.xml”) /db/student, $pid in $p/pennid/text(), $n in $p/name/text(), $d in doc(“dental.xml”)/db/patient, $s in $d/ssn/text(), $tr in $d/treatment/text(), $m in doc (“concord.xml”) /db/mapping, $f in $m/from/text(), $t in $m/to/text() where ____________________ return { { $n } { $tr } student.xml: 12346 Mary McDonald F03 cse330 dental.xml: 323-468-1212 Dental sealant concord.xml: 12346 323-468-1212 $pid: PennID $n: name $s: ssn $tr: treatment $f: PennID $t: ssn
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32 Summary: Mapping, Integrating, and Sharing Data Mappings based on XQuery rather than XSLT Can do point-to-point mappings to exchange data UDDI versus this approach? What about search and its relationship to integration? In particular, search over Amazon, Google Maps, Google, Yahoo, …
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