Chapter 2. Using SCA components
Table 2.1. Multiplicity settings for references with their meanings
Chapter 4. Service interaction patterns
Chapter 5. Implementing components using the Java language
Table 5.1. Ways to declare SCA services in Java implementations
Table 5.2. The mapping between @Reference and reference multiplicity
Table 5.3. The mapping between @Property and SCA component property
Table 5.4. The implementation scopes supported by the Tuscany runtime
Table 5.5. The SCA features used to control conversational behavior
Chapter 7. Connecting components using bindings
Table 7.1. Options for the SCA Web Services binding
Table 7.2. Options for the SCA CORBA binding
Table 7.3. Options for the SCA RMI binding
Chapter 8. Web clients and Web 2.0
Table 8.1. Comparison of the Atom component implementation types
Chapter 9. Data representation and transformation
Table 9.2. The Java classes generated from the CreditCardPayment WSDL using wsimport
Table 9.3. SDO classes generated from the CreditCardPayment WSDL document
Chapter 10. Defining and applying policy
Table 10.1. Summary of useful intents and policies in Tuscany
Chapter 11. Running and embedding Tuscany
Table 11.1. Important files in a Tuscany SCA–enabled web application
Chapter 14. Extending Tuscany
Table 14.1. The artifacts required to implement our new implementation.pojo extension
Table 14.2. The artifacts required to implement your new binding.echo extension
Appendix A. Setting up
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