September 2015
Intermediate to advanced
928 pages
28h 39m
English

All services we have discussed in the previous chapters share at least one characteristic: they are all synchronous, two-way, request/reply services. This means that consumers of these services are blocked for the duration of the service execution, waiting for a response. There are many situations where a service does not need to return a response, or at least not synchronously. One-way (aka fire and forget) services have operations defined in their interface with an input but no output or fault. When invoked, the service returns an HTTP 200 acknowledgment (without payload) of the reception of the message, ...
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