Modified: websites/production/cxf/content/index.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/cxf/content/index.html (original)
+++ websites/production/cxf/content/index.html Tue Oct 21 16:46:55 2014
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ Apache CXF -- Index
          <td height="100%">
            <!-- Content -->
            <div class="wiki-content">
-<div id="ConfluenceContent"><h1 
id="Index-ApacheCXF:AnOpen-SourceServicesFramework">Apache CXF: An Open-Source 
Services Framework</h1><h2 id="Index-Overview">Overview</h2><p>Apache CXF is an 
open source services framework. CXF helps you build and develop services using 
frontend programming APIs, like JAX-WS and JAX-RS. These services can speak a 
variety of protocols such as SOAP, XML/HTTP, RESTful HTTP, or CORBA and work 
over a variety of transports such as HTTP, JMS or JBI.</p><h2 
id="Index-News">News</h2><h3 
id="Index-July21,2014-ApacheCXF3.0.1/2.7.12/2.6.15released!">July 21, 2014 - 
Apache CXF 3.0.1/2.7.12/2.6.15 released!</h3><p>The Apache CXF team is proud to 
announce the availability of the latest patch releases. Over 65 JIRA issues 
were fixed for 2.7.11 which many of those fixes back ported to 
2.6.14.</p><p>This is mostly a patch release to fix problems and issues that 
users have encountered.</p><p>Downloads are available&#160;<a shape="rect" 
href="download.html">here</a>.</p
 ><h3 
 >id="Index-January21,2014-ApacheCXFDistributedOSGi(DOSGi)1.6.0released!">January
 > 21, 2014 - Apache CXF Distributed OSGi (DOSGi) 1.6.0 released!</h3><p>This 
 >release mainly updates to cxf 2.7.8 and removes the jdom 
 >dependency.</p><p>Downloads are available at the&#160;&#160;<a shape="rect" 
 >href="dosgi-releases.html">DOSGi Releases</a>&#160;page.</p><h2 
 >id="Index-Features">Features</h2><p>CXF includes a broad feature set, but it 
 >is primarily focused on the following areas:</p><ul><li><strong>Web Services 
 >Standards Support:</strong> CXF supports a variety of web service standards 
 >including SOAP, the WS-I Basic Profile, WSDL, WS-Addressing, WS-Policy, 
 >WS-ReliableMessaging, WS-Security, WS-SecurityPolicy, WS-SecureConverstation, 
 >and WS-Trust (partial).</li><li><strong>Frontends:</strong> CXF supports a 
 >variety of "frontend" programming models.</li></ul><p>CXF implements the 
 >JAX-WS APIs. CXF JAX-WS support includes some extensions to the standard that 
 >make it significantly easier to us
 e, compared to the reference implementation: It will automatically generate 
code for request and response bean classes, and does not require a WSDL for 
simple cases.</p><p>It also includes a "simple frontend" which allows creation 
of clients and endpoints without annotations. CXF supports both contract first 
development with WSDL and code first development starting from Java.</p><p>For 
REST, CXF also supports a JAX-RS frontend.</p><ul><li><strong>Ease of 
use:</strong> CXF is designed to be intuitive and easy to use. There are simple 
APIs to quickly build code-first services, Maven plug-ins to make tooling 
integration easy, JAX-WS API support, Spring 2.x XML support to make 
configuration a snap, and much more.</li><li><strong>Binary and Legacy Protocol 
Support:</strong> CXF has been designed to provide a pluggable architecture 
that supports not only XML but also non-XML type bindings, such as JSON and 
CORBA, in combination with any type of transport.</li></ul><p>To get started 
using 
 CXF, check out the <a shape="rect" href="download.html">downloads</a>, the <a 
shape="rect" href="http://cxf.apache.org/docs/index.html";>user's guide</a>, or 
the <a shape="rect" href="mailing-lists.html">mailing lists</a> to get more 
information!</p><h2 id="Index-Goals">Goals</h2><h3 
id="Index-General">General</h3><ul><li>High 
Performance</li><li>Extensible</li><li>Intuitive &amp; Easy to Use</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-SupportforStandards">Support for Standards</h3><h5 
id="Index-JSRSupport">JSR Support</h5><ul><li>JAX-WS - Java API for XML-Based 
Web Services (JAX-WS) 2.0 - <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=224"; 
rel="nofollow">JSR-224</a></li><li>Web Services Metadata for the Java Platform 
- <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=181"; 
rel="nofollow">JSR-181</a></li><li>JAX-RS - The Java API for RESTful Web 
Services - <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=311"; rel="nofollow"
 >JSR-311</a></li><li>SAAJ - SOAP with Attachments API for Java (SAAJ) - <a 
 >shape="rect" class="external-link" 
 >href="http://jcp.org/aboutJava/communityprocess/mrel/jsr067/index3.html"; 
 >rel="nofollow">JSR-67</a></li></ul><h5 
 >id="Index-WS-*andrelatedSpecificationsSupport">WS-* and related 
 >Specifications Support</h5><ul><li>Basic support: WS-I Basic Profile 
 >1.1</li><li>Quality of Service: WS-Reliable Messaging</li><li>Metadata: 
 >WS-Policy, WSDL 1.1 - Web Service Definition Language</li><li>Communication 
 >Security: WS-Security, WS-SecurityPolicy, WS-SecureConversation, WS-Trust 
 >(partial support)</li><li>Messaging Support: WS-Addressing, SOAP 1.1, SOAP 
 >1.2, Message Transmission Optimization Mechanism (MTOM)</li></ul><h3 
 >id="Index-MultipleTransports,ProtocolBindings,DataBindings,andFormats">Multiple
 > Transports, Protocol Bindings, Data Bindings, and 
 >Formats</h3><ul><li>Transports: HTTP, Servlet, JMS, In-VM and many others via 
 >the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" href="http://camel.apache.
 org/camel-transport-for-cxf.html">Camel transport for CXF</a> such as 
SMTP/POP3, TCP and Jabber</li><li>Protocol Bindings: SOAP, REST/HTTP, pure 
XML</li><li>Data bindings: JAXB 2.x, Aegis, Apache XMLBeans, Service Data 
Objects (SDO), JiBX</li><li>Formats: XML Textual, JSON, 
FastInfoset</li><li>Extensibility API allows additional bindings for CXF, 
enabling additional message format support such as CORBA/IIOP</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-FlexibleDeployment">Flexible Deployment</h3><ul><li>Lightweight 
containers: deploy services in Jetty, Tomcat or Spring-based 
containers</li><li>JBI integration: deploy as a service engine in a JBI 
container such as ServiceMix, OpenESB or Petals</li><li>Java EE integration: 
deploy services in Java EE application servers such as Apache Geronimo, JOnAS, 
Redhat JBoss, OC4J, Oracle WebLogic, and IBM WebSphere</li><li>Standalone Java 
client/server</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-SupportforMultipleProgrammingLanguages">Support for Multiple 
Programming Languages</h3><ul><li
 >Full support for JAX-WS 2.x client/server programming model</li><li>JAX-WS 
 >2.x synchronous, asynchronous and one-way API's</li><li>JAX-WS 2.x Dynamic 
 >Invocation Interface (DII) API</li><li>JAX-RS for RESTful 
 >clients</li><li>Support for wrapped and non-wrapped styles</li><li>XML 
 >messaging API</li><li>Support for JavaScript and ECMAScript 4 XML (E4X) - 
 >both client and server</li><li>Support for CORBA</li><li>Support for JBI with 
 >ServiceMix</li></ul><h3 id="Index-Tooling">Tooling</h3><ul><li>Generating 
 >Code: WSDL to Java, WSDL to JavaScript, Java to JavaScript</li><li>Generating 
 >WSDL: Java to WSDL, XSD to WSDL, IDL to WSDL, WSDL to XML</li><li>Adding 
 >Endpoints: WSDL to SOAP, WSDL to CORBA, WSDL to service</li><li>Generating 
 >Support Files: WSDL to IDL</li><li>Validating Files: WSDL 
 >Validation</li></ul><h2 id="Index-GettingInvolved">Getting 
 >Involved</h2><p>Apache CXF is currently under heavy development. To get 
 >involved you can <a shape="rect" href="mailing-lists.html">subscribe to the 
 mailing lists</a>. You can also grab the code from the <a shape="rect" 
href="source-repository.html">Source Repository</a>. You also need to read 
about <a shape="rect" href="building.html">Building</a> CXF. For Eclipse users, 
you should read about <a shape="rect" href="setting-up-eclipse.html">Setting up 
Eclipse</a>.</p></div>
+<div id="ConfluenceContent"><h1 
id="Index-ApacheCXF:AnOpen-SourceServicesFramework">Apache CXF: An Open-Source 
Services Framework</h1><h2 id="Index-Overview">Overview</h2><p>Apache CXF is an 
open source services framework. CXF helps you build and develop services using 
frontend programming APIs, like JAX-WS and JAX-RS. These services can speak a 
variety of protocols such as SOAP, XML/HTTP, RESTful HTTP, or CORBA and work 
over a variety of transports such as HTTP, JMS or JBI.</p><h2 
id="Index-News">News</h2><h3 
id="Index-October15,2014-ApacheCXF3.0.2/2.7.13/2.6.16released!">October 15, 
2014 - Apache CXF 3.0.2/2.7.13/2.6.16 released!</h3><p>The Apache CXF team is 
proud to announce the availability of the latest patch releases. Over 90 JIRA 
issues were fixed for 3.0.2 which many of those fixes back ported to 
2.7.13.</p><p>This is mostly a patch release to fix problems and issues that 
users have encountered.</p><p>Downloads are available&#160;<a shape="rect" 
href="download.html">here</a
 >.</p><h3 id="Index-July21,2014-ApacheCXF3.0.1/2.7.12/2.6.15released!">July 
 >21, 2014 - Apache CXF 3.0.1/2.7.12/2.6.15 released!</h3><p>The Apache CXF 
 >team is proud to announce the availability of the latest patch releases. Over 
 >65 JIRA issues were fixed for 2.7.11 which many of those fixes back ported to 
 >2.6.14.</p><p>This is mostly a patch release to fix problems and issues that 
 >users have encountered.</p><p>Downloads are available&#160;<a shape="rect" 
 >href="download.html">here</a>.</p><h3 
 >id="Index-January21,2014-ApacheCXFDistributedOSGi(DOSGi)1.6.0released!">January
 > 21, 2014 - Apache CXF Distributed OSGi (DOSGi) 1.6.0 released!</h3><p>This 
 >release mainly updates to cxf 2.7.8 and removes the jdom 
 >dependency.</p><p>Downloads are available at the&#160;&#160;<a shape="rect" 
 >href="dosgi-releases.html">DOSGi Releases</a>&#160;page.</p><h2 
 >id="Index-Features">Features</h2><p>CXF includes a broad feature set, but it 
 >is primarily focused on the following areas:</p><ul><li><strong>Web Serv
 ices Standards Support:</strong> CXF supports a variety of web service 
standards including SOAP, the WS-I Basic Profile, WSDL, WS-Addressing, 
WS-Policy, WS-ReliableMessaging, WS-Security, WS-SecurityPolicy, 
WS-SecureConverstation, and WS-Trust 
(partial).</li><li><strong>Frontends:</strong> CXF supports a variety of 
"frontend" programming models.</li></ul><p>CXF implements the JAX-WS APIs. CXF 
JAX-WS support includes some extensions to the standard that make it 
significantly easier to use, compared to the reference implementation: It will 
automatically generate code for request and response bean classes, and does not 
require a WSDL for simple cases.</p><p>It also includes a "simple frontend" 
which allows creation of clients and endpoints without annotations. CXF 
supports both contract first development with WSDL and code first development 
starting from Java.</p><p>For REST, CXF also supports a JAX-RS 
frontend.</p><ul><li><strong>Ease of use:</strong> CXF is designed to be 
intuitive a
 nd easy to use. There are simple APIs to quickly build code-first services, 
Maven plug-ins to make tooling integration easy, JAX-WS API support, Spring 2.x 
XML support to make configuration a snap, and much more.</li><li><strong>Binary 
and Legacy Protocol Support:</strong> CXF has been designed to provide a 
pluggable architecture that supports not only XML but also non-XML type 
bindings, such as JSON and CORBA, in combination with any type of 
transport.</li></ul><p>To get started using CXF, check out the <a shape="rect" 
href="download.html">downloads</a>, the <a shape="rect" 
href="http://cxf.apache.org/docs/index.html";>user's guide</a>, or the <a 
shape="rect" href="mailing-lists.html">mailing lists</a> to get more 
information!</p><h2 id="Index-Goals">Goals</h2><h3 
id="Index-General">General</h3><ul><li>High 
Performance</li><li>Extensible</li><li>Intuitive &amp; Easy to Use</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-SupportforStandards">Support for Standards</h3><h5 
id="Index-JSRSupport">JSR Support</h5
 ><ul><li>JAX-WS - Java API for XML-Based Web Services (JAX-WS) 2.0 - <a 
 >shape="rect" class="external-link" href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=224"; 
 >rel="nofollow">JSR-224</a></li><li>Web Services Metadata for the Java 
 >Platform - <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
 >href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=181"; 
 >rel="nofollow">JSR-181</a></li><li>JAX-RS - The Java API for RESTful Web 
 >Services - <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
 >href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=311"; 
 >rel="nofollow">JSR-311</a></li><li>SAAJ - SOAP with Attachments API for Java 
 >(SAAJ) - <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
 >href="http://jcp.org/aboutJava/communityprocess/mrel/jsr067/index3.html"; 
 >rel="nofollow">JSR-67</a></li></ul><h5 
 >id="Index-WS-*andrelatedSpecificationsSupport">WS-* and related 
 >Specifications Support</h5><ul><li>Basic support: WS-I Basic Profile 
 >1.1</li><li>Quality of Service: WS-Reliable Messaging</li><li>Metadata: 
 >WS-Policy, WSDL 1.1 - Web Service Definition Language</li><li>Communication 
 >Sec
 urity: WS-Security, WS-SecurityPolicy, WS-SecureConversation, WS-Trust 
(partial support)</li><li>Messaging Support: WS-Addressing, SOAP 1.1, SOAP 1.2, 
Message Transmission Optimization Mechanism (MTOM)</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-MultipleTransports,ProtocolBindings,DataBindings,andFormats">Multiple 
Transports, Protocol Bindings, Data Bindings, and 
Formats</h3><ul><li>Transports: HTTP, Servlet, JMS, In-VM and many others via 
the <a shape="rect" class="external-link" 
href="http://camel.apache.org/camel-transport-for-cxf.html";>Camel transport for 
CXF</a> such as SMTP/POP3, TCP and Jabber</li><li>Protocol Bindings: SOAP, 
REST/HTTP, pure XML</li><li>Data bindings: JAXB 2.x, Aegis, Apache XMLBeans, 
Service Data Objects (SDO), JiBX</li><li>Formats: XML Textual, JSON, 
FastInfoset</li><li>Extensibility API allows additional bindings for CXF, 
enabling additional message format support such as CORBA/IIOP</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-FlexibleDeployment">Flexible Deployment</h3><ul><li>Lightweight 
containe
 rs: deploy services in Jetty, Tomcat or Spring-based containers</li><li>JBI 
integration: deploy as a service engine in a JBI container such as ServiceMix, 
OpenESB or Petals</li><li>Java EE integration: deploy services in Java EE 
application servers such as Apache Geronimo, JOnAS, Redhat JBoss, OC4J, Oracle 
WebLogic, and IBM WebSphere</li><li>Standalone Java client/server</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-SupportforMultipleProgrammingLanguages">Support for Multiple 
Programming Languages</h3><ul><li>Full support for JAX-WS 2.x client/server 
programming model</li><li>JAX-WS 2.x synchronous, asynchronous and one-way 
API's</li><li>JAX-WS 2.x Dynamic Invocation Interface (DII) API</li><li>JAX-RS 
for RESTful clients</li><li>Support for wrapped and non-wrapped 
styles</li><li>XML messaging API</li><li>Support for JavaScript and ECMAScript 
4 XML (E4X) - both client and server</li><li>Support for CORBA</li><li>Support 
for JBI with ServiceMix</li></ul><h3 
id="Index-Tooling">Tooling</h3><ul><li>Generating 
 Code: WSDL to Java, WSDL to JavaScript, Java to JavaScript</li><li>Generating 
WSDL: Java to WSDL, XSD to WSDL, IDL to WSDL, WSDL to XML</li><li>Adding 
Endpoints: WSDL to SOAP, WSDL to CORBA, WSDL to service</li><li>Generating 
Support Files: WSDL to IDL</li><li>Validating Files: WSDL 
Validation</li></ul><h2 id="Index-GettingInvolved">Getting 
Involved</h2><p>Apache CXF is currently under heavy development. To get 
involved you can <a shape="rect" href="mailing-lists.html">subscribe to the 
mailing lists</a>. You can also grab the code from the <a shape="rect" 
href="source-repository.html">Source Repository</a>. You also need to read 
about <a shape="rect" href="building.html">Building</a> CXF. For Eclipse users, 
you should read about <a shape="rect" href="setting-up-eclipse.html">Setting up 
Eclipse</a>.</p></div>
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          </td>


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