IBM WebSphere Registry/Repository and Interop with .NET, part 2
In a prior post, I said that there was no good interop story between .NET and the IBM WebSphere Registry and Repository (WSRR). I said this based on an examination of the WSRR documentation. IBM's product doc is available online and keeping to the IBM standard, is usually very thorough and clear. I looked all through the doc and did not find any reference to a SOAP API, or any other option which would allow interop between .NET apps (or tools) and the IBM WSRR.
But I apparently missed it. Mea culpa! A colleague pointed out the doc reference to me today.
In fact there is a SOAP interface for the WSRR, IBM calls it a SOAP API.
It's a bit funny though; IBM has a big disclaimer on the doc page:
Deprecation of this API
IBM is working to define a standard API for a service registry such as WSRR. The current SOAP API will be deprecated when such a standard API is defined.
A quick look through the doc, it's pretty clear that it's a temporary measure. The usability of the thing looks iffy. I don't mean to cast stones. It just looks half-baked is all.
Anne Thomas Manes suggested that IBM could have supported UDDI as at least one of the network protocols to access this registry, and thereby support a number of tools that already speak UDDI. IBM could have done that but they didn't.
In a related note, today I heard about a customer who is implementing a custom Visual Studio plug-in that will access the IBM WSRR, via that SOAP API. It will be interesting to see how the exercise goes.
There ya have it.
Comments
Anonymous
August 29, 2007
Back in May, IBM had posted an article describing how to connect to its WebSphere Service Registry andAnonymous
June 04, 2010
You can also use Rest to access WSRR, so there are multiple ways to do this