Google allows to create Custom Search Engine by restricting search results based on websites and pages. I created a search engine that will let you search contents from all the Web services sites from Sun Microsystems.
"Sun Web Services Search Engine" search contents from the following websites:
- java.net sites- Metro, GlassFish, WSIT, JAX-WS, JAXB, SAAJ, XWSS
- java.sun.com/webservices
- websvc.netbeans.org
- WSIT and JAX-WS & JAXB Forums
- WSIT, JAX-WS, JAXB & XWSS Users alias
- Aggregated Blog – planet.sun.com/webservices/group/blogs/
This is also accessible from the right hand column at blogs.sun.com/arungupta. Hope you find it useful!
Custom Search Blog gives you all the juicy details of how it works behind the scene.
Technorati: google cse webservices glassfish metro
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Hi there,
I’ve read very interesting your blog’s, because I’m a student and want to learn somethings about WSIT and JAX-WS. There is something I didn’t found with your search. I’ve been thinking about a webservice where I want to use something like a callback/bi-directional and would be happy if you could give me some hints.
So pls contact me.
Greets,Daniel
Comment by Daniel Manzke — July 9, 2007 @ 1:20 pm
Daniel, I realized you figured out a solution at: http://forums.java.net/jive/thread.jspa?threadID=28508&tstart=0
Comment by Arun Gupta — August 14, 2007 @ 6:42 pm
i am trying to find if real web service engines exist or if they can exist.
i have a simple scenario in mind,
someone develops software, he wants the components of his applications to be functionality coming from web services.
At present, he has to know about which web services he is going to use and from where to find these services. Is it possible to exist a search engine that searches public UDDIs metadata and returns possible web services related to the user query. Is this that your engine does, just for searching SUN’s UDDI?
thanks
Sarigiannis Charalampos
Comment by Sarigiannis Charalampos — November 13, 2007 @ 6:12 am
This search engine allows you to search contents from the websites mentioned above. You can however develop such a search engine using Java API for XML Registeries as explained at: http://java.sun.com/webservices/jaxr/index.jsp
However in most of the cases the Web service is hosted at a well known endpoint and so this step is not required.
Comment by Arun Gupta — November 13, 2007 @ 9:56 am
thanks for the answer but :
I am really confused with UDDI. I try to find public UDDI registries (i mean registries that everyone can access outside a company’s firewall) but i haven’t found anything. So UDDI servers are more inside companies firewalls and serve companies’ customers ? I could find web services like for example google’s web services or yahoo’s web service but not public UDDI registries that could
include these web services.
You said that Web service is hosted at a well known endpoint, if this is the case still i cannot understand why it should not be a web service search engine that has a crawler like a web engine and searches all public UDDIs servers. So when someone is searching for a public web service should use this engine. A user in this case can make a query describing the functionality he wants the service to support and the engine can return the URL of the service as well as the
quality of the service. So we don t have to search each public UDDI.
I am trying to understand things about web service discovery that has to do with a lot scientific communities like artificial intelligence, distributed software community, knowledge engineering and a so on, I am really lost.
thanks again
Comment by Sarigiannis Charalampos — November 13, 2007 @ 11:33 am
IBM, Microsoft and SAP used to host public UDDI servers couple of years ago but that service is now discontinued. Read more at: http://www.webservicessummit.com/News/UDDI2006.htm
and http://uddi.microsoft.com/about/FAQshutdown.htm.
This search engine is different from a UDDI server and instead allows to search on technical topics otherwise scattered in different forums.
Comment by Arun Gupta — November 13, 2007 @ 11:43 am
thanks
Comment by oyunlar — January 29, 2008 @ 7:42 pm
thanks
Comment by oyunlar — August 4, 2008 @ 5:16 am
thank you
Comment by oyun — August 4, 2008 @ 5:17 am
You said that Web service is hosted at a well known endpoint, if this is the case still i cannot understand why it should not be a web service search engine that has a crawler like a web engine and searches all public UDDIs servers. So when someone is searching for a public web service should use this engine. A user in this case can make a query describing the functionality he wants the service to support and the engine can return the URL of the service as well as the
quality of the service. So we don t have to search each public UDDI.
Comment by LAPTOP BATTERY — November 27, 2008 @ 5:00 pm