Publication | Closed Access
Toward Characterizing the Performance of SOAP Toolkits
63
Citations
12
References
2005
Year
Unknown Venue
Software MaintenanceWeb Service SpecificationEngineeringSoftware EngineeringData GridSoftware AnalysisSoap ImplementationsData ScienceDistributed EnvironmentParallel ComputingData ManagementPerformance MetricComputer EngineeringDistributed SystemsComputer SciencePerformance Analysis ToolSoftware DesignService-oriented ComputingSoap ToolkitsBenchmarking ToolDistributed ComputingProgram AnalysisSoftware TestingSoap ProtocolSystem Software
The SOAP protocol underpins Web services as the standard mechanism for exchanging information in a distributed environment. The XML-based protocol offers advantages including extensibility, interoperability, and robustness. The merger of Web services and grid computing promotes SOAP into a standard protocol for the large-scale scientific applications that computational grids promise to support, further elevating the protocol's importance and requiring high-performance implementations. Various SOAP implementations differ in their implementation language, invocation model and API, and supported performance optimizations. In this paper we compare and contrast the performance of widely used SOAP toolkits and draw conclusions about their current performance characteristics. We also provide insights into various design features that can lead to optimized SOAP implementations. The SOAP implementations included in our study are gSOAP 2.4, AxisC++ CVS May 28, AxisJava 1.2, .NET 1.1.4322 and XS0AP4/XSUL 1.1.
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