Hi Mike,
You say:
<mje>
My observation is
that
if you are considering things that are simply proprietary to a
single vendor,
then you can do virtually as you wish - this can be outside any
standard,
since standards are all about portability and interoperability.
Here you are
painting a
scenario which involves neither portability nor
interoperability, so why
do the SCA specifications matter?
</mje>
<eej>
And yet, the current spec does not read that way. It says (6.2.1
#6):
"for checking the compatibility of 2 remotable interfaces which
are in different interface languages, both are mapped to WSDL 1.1
(if not already WSDL 1.1) and compatibility checking is done
between the WSDL 1.1 mapped interfaces." This is a definition that
gets used normatively in MUST level assertions.
As I interpret your statement, you're saying that the
implementation is free to ignore this definition in the context of
ASM80011, for example, because one or or other of the interfaces
happen to be specific to a vendor?
Then we agree! ;-)
I guess the difference is that I want the normative language of
the spec to reflect this, rather than confuse the reader as to our
intent.
</eej>
<mje>
The simple answer
is: you
can do as you please within TIBCO. Help yourselves. The specs
don't prevent this. There are no issues that I can see.
Of course, I argue
that
it would be a good idea even for TIBCO to write down the mapping
they intend
to use between tibcoWSDL20 and tibcoJMX, otherwise the TIBCO
customers
might get confused. However, that is no concern to the OASIS
SCA
specifications.
My concern is if
ever it
is expected that these different interface types are expected to
work across
SCA runtimes from different vendors. In that case there is a
need
to define how things are supposed to work. Please give me an
idea
of what you would put into the SCA specifications to cover this.
</mje>
<eej>
Well, except I believe that the spec doesn't read this way, or I
would not have spent all this time trying to clarify the spec. The
spec very clearly says that different interface type languages, if
"remotable" and considered for compatibility, MUST map to WSDL 1.1
for said comparison.
All my proposed language does is make what you allege is already
the case far more clearly the case. The fact that we cannot
control what other interface definitions do, and whether they
define a mapping at all, seems to speak to the folly of ostensibly
requiring that they map to WSDL 1.1 in the first place.
</eej>
<mje>
Fine, but how do you
intend
that this should be handled in the SCA specifications?
The wording used
below
in your proposal does nothing that I can see to provide any
information
about the mappings to be used - it seems to be left up to the
SCA runtime
to decide. I don't see how this provides any guarantee of
portability
or interoperability. So why would the SCA specifications want
to
leave a hole like this?
</mje>
<eej>
You seem to want it both ways - since it is outside of SCA, we don't
control it and shouldn't (and yet the current spec attempts to), and
yet you expect my proposal to define how to constrain such outside
interface definitions?
I'll turn this around. What constraint do you wish to see defined on
the OASIS CSA defined interfaces (interface.wsdl, interface.java -
there are no others, right?) that my proposal discards? I could
easily wrap up this proposal if I understand that.
</eej>
-Eric.
On 2/18/11 2:32 AM, Mike Edwards wrote:
OF4AD5C383.BD3C5E1E-ON8025783B.00380F87-8025783B.00393AA9@uk.ibm.com"
type="cite">
Eric,
Some comments inline as <mje>...</mje>
Yours, Mike
|
|
Dr
Mike Edwards
|
Mail Point
146, Hursley
Park
|
|
STSM
|
Winchester,
Hants SO21
2JN
|
SCA
& Services
Standards
|
United
Kingdom
|
Co-Chair
OASIS SCA
Assembly TC
|
|
|
IBM
Software Group
|
|
|
Phone:
|
+44-1962
818014
|
|
|
Mobile:
|
+44-7802-467431
(274097)
|
|
|
e-mail:
|
mike_edwards@uk.ibm.com
|
|
|
|
|
Hi Mike,
I'm confused by the particular concern related to portability.
If I've built a composite that works with vendor X, using
interface.vendorXIntfA
and interface.vendorXIntfB, why would I have any expectation
that I could
take said composite and move it to a different SCA runtime, and
have any
expectation that it would work?
For that matter, just using interface.vendorXIntfA, and
interface.vendorXIntfA,
even though SCA 1.1 defines and allows compatibility between
these two
- even if they don't map to WSDL 1.1, I still wouldn't stand a
chance of
moving said composite away from vendorX.
<mje>
My observation is
that
if you are considering things that are simply proprietary to a
single vendor,
then you can do virtually as you wish - this can be outside
any standard,
since standards are all about portability and
interoperability.
Here you are
painting a
scenario which involves neither portability nor
interoperability, so why
do the SCA specifications matter?
</mje>
Now, circling back to the first case, why do I need to know how
vendorX
determines compatibility between interface.vendorXIntfA &
interface.vendorXIntfB?
It should be up to the vendor to decide.
The key point here is that with my proposal, vendorX is not required
to determine compatibility between instances of vendorXIntfA and
vendorXIntfB
by mapping to WSDL 1.1. They should be able to map to a
different representation,
and ought to choose that representation based on what best
preserves the
semantics. There are numerous ways in which a WSDL 1.1 mapping
can drop
semantics. That is, unless you start adding all sorts of
extension elements
to WSDL 1.1, at which point it just becomes yet another
interface description
that happens to use WSDL 1.1 for a portion of its
representation.
<mje>
I actually agree
with you
for the case that you have here - something purely proprietary
to one vendor.
In such a case, the vendor can help themselves, do what they
please.
In such a case,
the SCA
specifications can be silent. There is nothing to say.
</mje>
As for a concrete example (completely made up) that you asked
for:
- interface.tibcoWSDL20 &
interface.tibcoJMX
Why,
oh why would I be expected to map both of these to WSDL 1.1 in
order to
determine compatibility, when I could just map the
interface.tibcoJMX instance
to interface.tibcoWSDL20?
<mje>
The simple answer
is: you
can do as you please within TIBCO. Help yourselves. The
specs
don't prevent this. There are no issues that I can see.
Of course, I argue
that
it would be a good idea even for TIBCO to write down the
mapping they intend
to use between tibcoWSDL20 and tibcoJMX, otherwise the TIBCO
customers
might get confused. However, that is no concern to the OASIS
SCA
specifications.
My concern is if
ever it
is expected that these different interface types are expected
to work across
SCA runtimes from different vendors. In that case there is a
need
to define how things are supposed to work. Please give me an
idea
of what you would put into the SCA specifications to cover
this.
</mje>
Putting this in a chart:
|
WSDL 1.1
|
interface.java
|
interface A
|
interface B
|
WSDL 1.1
|
directly compare
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
interface.java
|
map to either
|
directly compare
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
interface A
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
directly compare
|
map to either
|
interface B
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
map to either
|
directly compare |
The above is my proposal, whereas, the next table shows how the
spec currently
reads:
|
WSDL 1.1
|
interface.java
|
interface A
|
interface B
|
WSDL 1.1
|
directly compare
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
interface.java
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
directly compare
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
interface A
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
directly compare
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
interface B
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
map to WSDL 1.1
|
directly compare |
The difference lies not on the diagonal, but all the options
around that.
The problem is that interfaces A & B may have richer
semantics than
WSDL 1.1. The existing spec'd expectation potentially forces the
provider
of interface A to declare something incompatible when it isn't,
or worse,
declare something compatible when it isn't, because semantics
can be lost
when mapping to WSDL 1.1.
On top of all of that, it happens that there isn't actually a
test you
can define that normatively verifies any of this, except the top
left corner,
because SCA currently only defines interface.wsdl &
interface.java.
If you want, we could further nail down that detail in my
proposal.
However, I don't see any value in mandating that interface A
& interface
B have to be converted to WSDL 1.1 before being compared,
particularly
since we can't test that.
<mje>
Fine, but how do
you intend
that this should be handled in the SCA specifications?
The wording used
below
in your proposal does nothing that I can see to provide any
information
about the mappings to be used - it seems to be left up to the
SCA runtime
to decide. I don't see how this provides any guarantee of
portability
or interoperability. So why would the SCA specifications want
to
leave a hole like this?
</mje>
-Eric.
On 2/17/11 7:47 AM, Mike Edwards wrote:
Eric,
I'm sorry that this has been left lonely and uncommented on.
We're
clearly enjoying event processing too much.
There is a comment inline. I think that it would also help if
you
could describe at least one concrete example of
a mapping that you'd like us to support.
Yours, Mike
In a previous
email I proposed something
similar to the following
change. This time I tried to be more precise, so that this is
more
than just directional.
Change 6.2.1 #6, 6.2.2 #6, and 6.2.3 #6 in the following
pattern:
Replace text that reads:
"for checking the compatibility of 2 remotable interfaces which
are
in different interface languages, both are mapped to WSDL 1.1
(if not already
WSDL 1.1) and compatibility checking is done between the WSDL
1.1 mapped
interfaces.
For checking the compatibility of 2 local interfaces which are
in different
interface languages, the method of checking compatibility is
defined by
the specifications which define those interface types, which
must define
mapping rules for the 2 interface types concerned."
... with the following ...
"The interfaces, whether local or remotable, must map onto a
common
interface description language, and that the two interfaces are
compared
on the basis of that common interface description language. See
section
Comparing Interface Descriptions of Different Types for a
discussion."
... and then add a section 6.2.4:
6.2.4 Comparing Interface Descriptions Of Different Types
A variety of interface descriptions for services exist. Examples
of well-known
types include XML-RPC, CORBA, REST, WSDL 1.1, WSDL 2.0, SNMP,
and JMX.
Implementations ought to use the interface type mappings that
best
preserve the semantics of the underlying exchange.
To establish a basis of comparison between two different
interface definition
types, the implementation has to map one or both of the
interface descriptions
to a common definition type. The implementation has to identify
that
common type, and ought to keep possible conversion errors to a
minimum
by eliminating spurious conversions, and selecting the form with
the best
semantic relevance. For example, if one interface description
type
maps to WSDL 1.1, and the other interface type is WSDL 1.1, then
the SCA
implementation ought to compare on the basis of WSDL 1.1. When
neither
interface type can directly convert to the other interface type
in question,
and conversion to WSDL 1.1 is possible, implementations SHOULD
map both
interface descriptions to WSDL 1.1.
<mje>
The question is - who defines the mapping?
If I've got <interface.x.../> and
<interface.y.../>, who says
what the mapping between x and y is for some actual interfaces
of each
type?
Is this to be described in either or both of the
specifications for x and
y - or is it simply left to the SCA runtime to pick what it
pleases?
I am somewhat concerned by the potential for lack of
portability here,
if runtimes are left free to choose what they will. I think
the current
formulation of the SCA spec aims to get consistency between
runtime implementations.
How can we ensure this for the relaxed case?
</mje>
Justifications for the above:
The specification already allows for the use of remotable
interfaces defined
using something other than WSDL 1.1. For example, a Java JMX
interface
description can be marked remotable. The existing rules only
reject
the notion of compatibility when the two interfaces being
compared are
of different types, but don't actually reject the notion of
remotability
being applied to said interface types. As a possible example,
XML-RPC
can be represented by a variety of description languages.
The above change relaxes a constraint that imposes on an
implementation
the need to declare incompatibility where none may exist.
Specifically,
by allowing additional scenarios to interoperate, the composers
will be
able to express interface definitions that more closely align to
their
implementation language, and the semantics of the underlying
problem, rather
than by restricting themselves to the subset of the interface
description
that maps to WSDL 1.1.
Unless stated otherwise
above:
IBM United Kingdom Limited - Registered in England and Wales
with number
741598.
Registered office: PO Box 41, North Harbour, Portsmouth,
Hampshire PO6
3AU
Unless stated otherwise
above:
IBM United Kingdom Limited - Registered in England and Wales
with number
741598.
Registered office: PO Box 41, North Harbour, Portsmouth,
Hampshire PO6
3AU
|