Thank you for your interests in Tuscany. Please see my comments inline.
Raymond
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From: "Mohan, Mithun" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, June 06, 2008 10:04 AM
To: <tuscany-user@ws.apache.org>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Apache Tuscany doubts
Hello,
I am new to Apache Tuscany and it looks like a great tool . I am sort of
doing a project as an Intern .
I am trying to create a web service for sca components using Apache
Tuscany
I have a few doubts ,
1) Does Apache Tuscany take care of deploying the web-service or do we
need tools like Axis or CXF to deploy the web-service
As far as my understanding goes , in the home page of the Apache
Tuscany it takes care of making the web service online
http://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TUSCANY/Build+your+first+Web+
Services+with+Tuscany
Yes, Tuscany makes the Web Service available once you have a component with
"binding.ws" service binding configured. In the J2SE environment, it should
be registered with an embedded HTTP server such as Jetty or Tomcat and use
Axis2 stack underneath to handle the WS invocations. If it's deployed with a
web container such as Tomcat, we use the Servlet filter to trap the Web
Services traffic.
2) Also, we have Apache Tuscany implemented in Java and also in C++ .
Is it possible to have SCA components in Java and C++ and stil exposed
as a single web service .
There are two concepts:
1) A SCA runtime (or container) written in Java or C++
2) A SCA component written in Java or C++
At this point, Tuscany has both Java and C++ for 1). But the java runtime
doesn't support C++ component, and not C++ runtime supports Java component
either. So we have to use different runtimes to host the C++ and Java
components at this point, but it's potentially possible that the Java
runtime will be capable of hosting C++ component.
It will be great if anyone can spare some time and reply.
Thanks and Regards,
Mithun .