Hi guys,<BR><BR>I need to consume a web service that requires incoming requests to be signed (WS-Security). The client is .NET.<BR><BR>What MS tools can I use to generate the key pairs and the ...
Quick question to see if anyone has an elegant solution for this: My current thought for this is to make a factory method that instantiates the 2nd web service client class, and contains logic to ...
Web services and binary attachments have proved a difficult pair to make work well together when it's time to implement security. But new functionality in Web Services Enhancement 3.0 (WSE3) should ...
InfoPath SP1 and the new .NET 2003 Toolkit let you implement business logic behind InfoPath forms with managed VB.NET or C# code instead of JScript or VBScript event handlers. Technology Toolbox: ...
As part of its growing portfolio of .NET services, Microsoft will expose its Passport authentication service as an XML Web service this summer, officials said. The forthcoming Microsoft Passport Web ...
The exodus from Visual Studio 6.0 to .NET has begun for most developers. But with this new coding model comes decoupled services in the form of Web services. However, if you still have to maintain and ...
Practical ASP.NET Writing the Code for a gRPC Service and Client in ASP.NET Core 3.0 Once you've got a contract that describes a gRPC service, creating the service itself and a client that can call ...
How do you access a RESTful web service? That depends on what you're trying to accomplish. If you just want to test connectivity, a terminal-based utility like curl is a great RESTful web service ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results