The Spring.NET Web Service Exporter Part 4 – Spring Configuration

This is the last part of the Spring.NET Web Service Exporter example. I’ve shown the Web.config entries and the application details. Now we are only missing the Spring configuration file – named Spring.xml in my example. This is the whole configuration file (note that I have not set up transaction handling or other aspects in this example):

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Date posted: July 1, 2009

By Anke Doerfel-Parker

Categories: .NET Web Services

The Spring.NET Web Service Exporter Part 3 – The Business Logic

In my previous posts here and here, I explained the advantages of using Spring.NET’s Web Service Exporter and how to initialize Spring and Spring Web Service Exporting in the Web.config file. Now we need a service to export. Below I’ve listed the most important parts of the application – for brevity, I’ll omit imports and namespace declarations.

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Date posted: June 22, 2009

By Anke Doerfel-Parker

Categories: .NET Web Services

The Spring.NET Web Service Exporter Part 2 – Setting up Web.config

In my previous post I discussed advantages of choosing the Spring.NET web service exporter over the standard .NET mechanism through decoration with attributes. Now I would like to show how to set up an web service exporter. Basic configuration details for the Spring.NET Web Service Exporter can be found in the Spring.NET Documentation but my example will add some important aspects like registering custom objects and session access that are not included in the above link.

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Date posted: June 17, 2009

By Anke Doerfel-Parker

Categories: .NET Web Services

The Spring.NET Web Service Exporter Part 1 – Introduction

Spring.NET is a .NET port of the popular Java Spring framework. It simplifies implementation and maintenance of large applications by:

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Date posted: June 14, 2009

By Anke Doerfel-Parker

Categories: .NET Web Services

Ticks and Milliseconds

We are currently developing a custom Web UI backed by a set of .NET web services. For transfer of date values, we are using millisecond values as returned by the Java and JavaScript Date.getTime() methods. We chose this format because it is easy to transfer and it is native to both JavaScript and Java (we’re planning to port the application to Java as well).

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Date posted: March 20, 2009

By Anke Doerfel-Parker

Categories: .NET

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