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IBM WebSphere Registry/Repository and Interop with .NET, part 2

In a prior post, I said that there was no good interop story between .NET and the IBM WebSphere Registry and Repository (WSRR).  I said this based on an examination of the WSRR documentation.  IBM's product doc is available online and keeping to the IBM standard, is usually very thorough and clear.  I looked all through the doc and did not find any reference to a SOAP API, or any other option which would allow interop between .NET apps (or tools) and the IBM WSRR.  

But I apparently missed it.  Mea culpa!  A colleague pointed out the doc reference to me today. 

In fact there is a SOAP interface for the WSRR, IBM calls it a SOAP API. 

It's a bit funny though; IBM has a big disclaimer on the doc page:

Deprecation of this API

IBM is working to define a standard API for a service registry such as WSRR. The current SOAP API will be deprecated when such a standard API is defined.

A quick look through the doc, it's pretty clear that it's a temporary measure.  The usability of the thing looks iffy. I don't mean to cast stones.  It just looks half-baked is all.

Anne Thomas Manes suggested that IBM could have supported UDDI as at least one of the network protocols to access this registry, and thereby support a number of tools that already speak UDDI.  IBM could have done that but they didn't.

In a related note, today I heard about a customer who is implementing a custom Visual Studio plug-in that will access the IBM WSRR, via that SOAP API.  It will be interesting to see how the exercise goes.

There ya have it.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    August 29, 2007
    Back in May, IBM had posted an article describing how to connect to its WebSphere Service Registry and

  • Anonymous
    June 04, 2010
    You can also use Rest to access WSRR, so there are multiple ways to do this