Currently the support within Axis 1.0 is in the form of a transport binding that can be used as an alternative to HTTP. This means it can be used for synchronous RPC, message-style request/response, and invokeOneWay(). Over the next several months we will be revamping the core Axis engine to support a asynchronous message exchange between the service and the client. This will include the decoupling of the request and response handler chains, and an asynchronous callback mechanism in the client. We will keep the axis-user list informed as we progress. Dave
> Enrique Rodr�guez wrote: > > Is there any JMS Asyncronous example, or could anybody give me any > clue to do it???? > > Thank you very much, Enrique. -- Sonic Software - Backbone of the Extended Enterprise -- David Chappell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Office: (781)999-7099 Mobile: (617)510-6566 Vice President and Chief Technology Evangelist, Sonic Software co-author,"Java Web Services", (O'Reilly 2002) "The Java Message Service", (O'Reilly 2000) "Professional ebXML Foundations", (Wrox 2001) --
begin:vcard n:Chappell;Dave tel;cell:617-510-6566 tel;work:781-999-7099 x-mozilla-html:FALSE url:www.sonicsoftware.com org:Sonic Software Corp. <BR><BR><A HREF="http://www.sonicsoftware.com/products/sonicxq.htm">Read about SonicXQ</A> - the first product to deliver <br>on the promise of the enterprise service bus.<BR><BR><A HREF="http://www.sonicsoftware.com"><IMG BORDER="0" SRC="http://www.sonicsoftware.com/media/email_signatures/schulte_quote_logo2.gif"></A> adr:;;14 Oak Park;Bedford;MA;01730;USA version:2.1 email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED] title:vice president & chief technology evangelist<a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/weblogs/author/207">[weblog]</a> fn:Dave Chappell end:vcard
