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Subject: RE: [ws-rx] NEW ISSUE: anonymous AcksTo



At this version of the WSA spec:  http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/WD-ws-addr-core-20050331/
The last paragraph right before section 3.1 says:

Requests whose [reply endpoint], [source endpoint] and/or [fault endpoint] use this address MUST provide some out-of-band mechanism for delivering replies or faults (e.g. returning the reply on the same transport connection). This mechanism may be a simple request/reply transport protocol (e.g., HTTP GET or POST). This IRI MAY be used as the [destination] for reply messages and SHOULD NOT be used as the [destination] in other circumstances.

I believe this is the same "SHOULD NOT" Lei was referring to as well.
Might not be the absolute latest version of the spec but that's the latest version I saw on the WG home page.

thanks,
-Doug



"Jonathan Marsh" <jmarsh@microsoft.com>

07/12/2005 12:39 PM

To
Doug Davis/Raleigh/IBM@IBMUS, "Lei Jin" <ljin@bea.com>
cc
<ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org>
Subject
RE: [ws-rx] NEW ISSUE: anonymous AcksTo





Which “SHOULD NOT” are you referring to?
 



From: Doug Davis [mailto:dug@us.ibm.com]
Sent:
Tuesday, July 12, 2005 5:44 AM
To:
Lei Jin
Cc:
ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject:
Re: [ws-rx] NEW ISSUE: anonymous AcksTo

 

Lei,

 w.r.t using the anonymous IRI on non-reply messages - I'd like to point out

that even the WSA spec[1] itself doesn't adhere to their own "SHOULD NOT".

If you look at the text for wsa:To it says:


/wsa:To

This OPTIONAL element (of type xs:anyURI) provides the value for the [destination] property. If this element is NOT present then the value of the [destination] property is "http://www.w3.org/2005/03/addressing/role/anonymous". Otherwise the [children] of this element convey the value of this property.

This applies to all messages.


Some of this is reading between the lines, but to me the WSA spec was simply

trying to encourage people to use a real IRI for the wsa:To and trying to find a way

to have a copy of the transprt URL within the envelope in order to make the envelope

a self-contained/self-describing entity.  There are however cases where a
transport URL is not available (like on the HTTP response

flow), and these are the cases where anonymous IRI makes sense.


Since we need a way to deliver ACKs for one-way messages even when a

firewall is in place I believe using the anonymous IRI is a valid choice.


w.r.t. your intermediary examining the wsa:ReplyTo - be a bit careful here.

The presence of a wsa:ReplyTo does not imply anything about the MEP (sadly :-(.

There are cases where a wsa:ReplyTo could be present even for a one-way

message.  And the presence of an anonymous wsa:ReplyTo does not guarantee

that anything will flow back on the http response flow.  


thanks,

-Doug


[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/WD-ws-addr-core-20050331/


"Lei Jin" <ljin@bea.com>

07/11/2005 03:18 PM


To
<ws-rx@lists.oasis-open.org>
cc
 
Subject
[ws-rx] NEW ISSUE: anonymous AcksTo

 


   





I have the impression after talking to a few people that there is the
implicit assumption (though not specifically called out) in the spec
that if the AcksTo EPR is set to use the anonymous IRI, then all
subsequent acknowledgements for that reliable sequence will be sent back
synchronously on the http response path of either the application
message or an ack request message.

I think that is not a good idea.  First of all, we are saying that even
if my application message is one way (or asynchronous), I might still
receive something back on the http response(the WS-RX ack).  Nothing
really precludes this usage, but we are introducing unnecessary
dependency between WS-RX (acknowledgement messages) and WS-Addressing
(normal MEP).  For example, if I have an intermediary on the server side
that takes an incoming message, looks at the reply-to address (or
message MEP), and decides to close http connection if it's a oneway or
asynchronous message, everything works fine.  Now, with WS-RX, it has to
know that "hmm, maybe I shouldn't close that connection if WS-RX is
involved and synchronous ack is used".

Secondly, the paragraph below quoted from WS-Addressing spec says the
anonymous IRI shouldn't be used as the destination in any other
circumstances other than the destination for reply messages.  I don't
see acknowledgements as reply messages.

WS-Addressing defines the following well-known IRI for use by endpoints
that cannot have a stable, resolvable IRI:
"http://www.w3.org/2005/03/addressing/role/anonymous"  Requests whose
[reply endpoint], [source endpoint] and/or [fault endpoint] use this
address MUST provide some out-of-band mechanism for delivering replies
or faults (e.g. returning the reply on the same transport connection).
This mechanism may be a simple request/reply transport protocol (e.g.,
HTTP GET or POST). This IRI MAY be used as the [destination] for reply
messages and SHOULD NOT be used as the [destination] in other
circumstances.

Proposal 1:

Specifically call out that the AcksTo EPR should not use the anonymous
IRI.

-- One reason to use an anonymous IRI is so that the acknowledgement may
reach sending endpoints that may be sitting behind a NAT or firewall.
But we have to deal with the same problem with asynchronous response
messages anyway.

Proposal 2:

Specifically call out that an anonymous IRI in the AcksTo EPR would
indicate acknowledgement message will only be sent back in response to
ack request messages where the ack request message should be a
standalone synchronous invoke.

Flames?

Lei



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