From: Brian P. C. <bm...@bm...> - 2006-08-10 13:58:50
|
Adam, Pursuant to your request, there is a socketized Bods demo at: http://socket.leeds.ac.uk/bodington/site/ Bodders are welcome to use the guest account: username: guest pw: guest1 The SOCKET links lead to the QMShibb sub-project and the main sub-project. The QMShibb page has shibbed links to a QuestionMark Perception test, a list of tests and the admin app (to which 'guest' will not have access). We have put up 2 SOCKET web services and a 'SOCKET web application'. (The create SOCKET service tool will not be visible to a guest user.) The web service producers are on an external server, while the consumer apps are in socket.leeds.ac.uk along with the bodington instance. Chemical Elements This is one of our test services. The stylesheets are development versions - we are making no claims that these are fit for teaching purposes. Jabber We have plugged in a Jabber applet which is served out from my (personal) remote server in a jsp. (The Jabber server uses an embedded Hypersonic. Wouldn't want any conflict with QuickBods.) I simply chose what looked like the simplest Jabber applet around: e4Applet 1.1.1 You can sign on with Jabber account: username: guest01 password: socket01 Or, if your name is Adam Marshall, username: adam password: socket1 You can join the following room: so...@co... No pw required. SSRun Although we will sign off with the ability to handle complex data types, the present socket engine handles simple datatypes only - strings, ints, floats, doubles, booleans, dates. (Client-side js validation comes as standard.) However, we have set up the JISC/Icodeon ASSIS/SSRun web service and passed the wsdl through the engine. The test data has not been loaded into the Web service and there are complex data types so the service is not functional, but this gives a basic impression of what the final turnkey product will do. As with Chemical Elements, there has been absolutely no tinkering with the Java, only some stylesheet tweaks (I added a fetching orange/yellow gradient fill to SSRun, for example). Two extremely valuable operations are working, though: ping and createRunId, proving that the service is live. We will be putting up a SOCKET development release soon, with perhaps a couple more over the next few weeks leading up to 1.0: simple types; arrays; complex types included. For further information: email me, sign into Jabber Bods and I'll be clayton. Regards, Brian |