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Masih ada waktu 1 hari utk register, buruan.

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T Budi S


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FREE BETA: Sun Certified Developer for Java Web Services 5 Certification Exam

Are you a Developer who is responsible for creating web services
applications using Java technology components such as those supported
by the Glassfish Metro Web service stack and the Java Enterprise
Edition 5 platform? If so, this is your opportunity to get involved in
the creation of the Java Web Services exam!!!!!

As a beta tester, you officially test the test and will be able to
provide Sun with valuable comments and technical feedback about the
Java Web Services questions. The Sun beta exam counts towards official
SCDJWS 5 Certification!

Beta Dates: October 31st, 2008 thru November 21st, 2008

Registration Exam Start Date: October 29th, 2008 - November 5th, 2008

Passing the exam entitles you to the full status of Sun Certified
Developer for Java Web Services 5, and you will receive a Sun
"certification kit". A certification kit will have your certificate,
Logo Agreement and Letter.

Candidates will have 240 minutes to complete 160 questions, which
should allow you time to respond to all questions and provide your
valuable comments while taking the exam.

This beta exam is offered Worldwide at any Authorized Prometric Testing Center!


Recommended Prerequisites:

**Prior to attempting this certification, candidates MUST be certified
as a Sun Certified Programmer (SCJP), any edition
**Candidates should have at least six to twelve months experience
developing Java Web Services

BETA EXAM REGISTRATION PROCEDURE

Unlike other SUN Microsystems certification exams, this exam does NOT
require a voucher. To register for the "Sun Certified Developer for
Java Web Services 5", exam number (311-230)" Beta exam, you may
register online at www.prometric.com and follow the prompts. Or, you
may register by phone, by calling your regional Prometric registration
office, listed at http://www.prometric.com/Sun/default.htm.

Asia/Australia 61-2-96405830
Europe 31-320-239-800
Japan 81-0120-107737
Latin America* Contact your local Prometric testing center, listed at
www.2test.com
USA/Canada 1-800-795-3926


Please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for any questions

EXAM TESTING OBJECTIVES

Section 1: XML Web Service Standards

1.1 Given XML documents, schemas, and fragments determine whether
their syntax and form are correct (according to W3C schema) and
whether they conform to the WS-I Basic Profile 1.1.
1.2     Describe the use of XML schema in Java EE Web services

Section 2: SOAP 1.2 Web Service Standards
2.1     List and describe the encoding types used in a SOAP message.
2.2     Describe the SOAP Processing and Extensibility Model.
2.3     Describe SOAP Message Construct and create a SOAP message that
contains an attachment.

Section 3: Describing and Publishing (WSDL and UDDI)
3.1 Explain the use of WSDL in Web services, including a description
of WSDL's basic elements, binding mechanisms and the basic WSDL
operation types as limited by the WS-I Basic Profile 1.1.
3.2 Describe how WSDL enables one to separate the description of the
abstract functionality offered by a service from concrete details of a
service description such as "how" and "where" that functionality is
offered.
3.3     Describe the Component Model of WSDL including Descriptions,
Interfaces, Bindings, Services and Endpoints.
3.4     Describe the basic functions provided by the UDDI Publish and
Inquiry APIs to interact with a UDDI business registry.

Section 4: JAX-WS

4.1     Explain JAX-WS technology for building web services and client
that communicate using XML
4.2 Given a set of requirements for a Web service, such as
transactional needs, and security requirements, design and develop Web
service applications that use JAX-WS technology
4.3     Describe the Integrated Stack (I-Stack) which consists of JAX-WS,
JAXB, StAX, SAAJ
4.4     Describe and compare JAX-WS development approaches
4.5     Describe the features of JAX-WS including the usage of Java Annotations
4.6     Describe the architecture of JAX_WS including the Tools SPI that
define the contract between JAX-WS tools and Java EE.
4.7     Describe creating a Web Service using JAX-WS.
4.8     Describe JAX-WS Client Communications Models
4.9 Given an set of requirements, design and develop a Web service
client, such as a Java EE client and a stand-alone client, using
JAX-WS.
4.10    Given a set of requirements, create and configure a Web service
client that accesses a stateful Web service.

Section 5: REST, JSON, SOAP and XML Processing APIs (JAXP, JAXB and SAAJ)

5.1     Describe the characteristics of REST Web Services.
5.2     Describe the characteristics of JSON Web Services.
5.3     Compare SAOP web services to REST Web Services.
5.4     Compare SAOP web services to JSON Web Services.
5.5     Describe the functions and capabilities of the APIs included within 
JAXP.
5.6 Describe the functions and capabilities of JAXB, including the
JAXB process flow, such as XML-to-Java and Java-to-XML, and the
binding and validation mechanisms provided by JAXB.
5.7     Create and use a SOAP message with attachments using the SAAJ APIs.

Section 6: JAXR
6.1 Describe the function of JAXR in Web service architectural model,
the two basic levels of business registry functionality supported by
JAXR, and the function of the basic JAXR business objects and how they
map to the UDDI data structures.
6.2 Create JAXR client to connect to a UDDI business registry, execute
queries to locate services that meet specific requirements, and
publish or update information about a business service.

Section 7: Java EE Web Services

7.1     Identify the characteristics of and the services and APIs included
in the Java EE platform.
7.2     Explain the benefits of using the Java EE platform for creating
and deploying Web service applications.
7.3     Describe the functions and capabilities of the JAXP, DOM, SAX,
StAX, JAXR, JAXB, JAX-WS and SAAJ in the Java EE platform.
7.4     Describe the role of the WS-I Basic Profile when designing Java EE
Web services.

Section 8: Security

8.1 Explain basic security mechanisms including: transport level
security, such as basic and mutual authentication and SSL, message
level security, XML encryption, XML Digital Signature, and federated
identity and trust.
8.2 Identify the purpose and benefits of Web services security
oriented initiatives and standards such as Username Token Profile,
SAML, XACML, XKMS, WS-Security, and the Liberty Project.
8.3 Given a scenario, implement Java EE based web service web-tier
and/or EJB-tier basic security mechanisms, such as mutual
authentication, SSL, and access control.
8.4 Describe factors that impact the security requirements of a Web
service, such as the relationship between the client and service
provider, the type of data being exchanged, the message format, and
the transport mechanism.
8.5 Describe WS-Policy that defines a base set of constructs that can
be used and extended by other Web specifications to describe a broad
range of service requirements and capabilities.

Section 9: Developing Web Services

9.1 Describe the steps required to configure, package, and deploy Java
EE Web services and service clients, including a description of the
packaging formats, such as .ear, .war, .jar, annotations and
deployment descriptor settings.
9.2     Given a set of requirements, develop code to process XML files
using the SAX, StAX, DOM, XSLT, and JAXB APIs.
9.3 Given an XML schema for a document style Web service create a WSDL
file that describes the service and generate a service implementation.
9.4     Given a set of requirements, create code to create an XML-based,
document style, Web service using the JAX-WS APIs.
9.5     Implement a SOAP logging mechanism for testing and debugging a Web
service application using Java EE Web Service APIs.
9.6 Given a set of requirements, create code to handle system and
service exceptions and faults received by a Web services client.

Section 10: Web Services Interoperability Technologies

10.1 Describe WSIT, the features of each WSIT technology and the
standards that WSIT Implements for each technology and how it works.
10.2. Describe how to create a WSIT client from a Web Service
Description Language (WSDL) file.
10.3 Describe how to configure web service providers and clients to
use message optimization.
10.4 Create a Microsoft Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) client
that accesses a Java web service.
10.5 Describes the best practices for production and consumption of
data interoperability between WCF web services and Java web service
clients or between Java web services and WCF web service clients.

Section 11: General Design and Architecture

11.1 Describe the characteristics of a Service Oriented Architecture
(SOA) and how Web services fit to this model.

11.2 Given a scenario, design a Java EE web service using Web Services
Design Patterns (Asynchronous Interaction, JMS Bridge, Web Service
Cache, Web Service Broker), and Best Practices.

11.3 Describe how to handle the various types of return values,
faults, errors, and exceptions that can occur during a Web service
interaction.
11.4 Describe the role that Web services play when integrating data,
application functions, or business processes in a Java EE application.


Section 12: Endpoint Design and Architecture

12.1 Given a scenario, design Web Service applications using
information models that are either procedure-style or document-style.
12.2 Describe the function of the service interaction and processing
layers in a Web service.
12.3 Design a Web service for an asynchronous, document-style process
and describe how to refactor a Web Service from a synchronous to an
asynchronous model.
12.4 Describe how the characteristics, such as resource utilization,
conversational capabilities, and operational modes, of the various
types of Web service clients impact the design of a Web service or
determine the type of client that might interact with a particular
service.

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