Reviews
Briefing: X-registry
- By Mike Gunderloy
- May 17, 2004
X-registry
starting at $35,000
Infravio
Cupertino, California
(877) 246-3728
www.infravio.com
X-registry is a new product from Infravio designed to help companies
with a portfolio of Web services manage them all. It's designed to
create an online "marketplace" of Web services for an intranet or
extranet, and to help people navigate through available offerings and
effectively consume them. It also ties into Infravio's other software
(and into their partnership with NetIQ) as a part of an overall Web
services management solution.
X-registry consolidates data from multiple UDDI and ebXML registries to
form a single federated registry that knows how to forward results.
Users can use a browser interface to see and test available Web
services, and to set up "contracts" (another Infravio concept) to use
those Web services in a particular way. X-registry also enables a
two-way information flow so that consumers of Web services also talk to
the providers. This lets X-registry handle things like versioning and
authorization based on information about consumers.
X-registry is aimed at both technical and business users. It lets you
test the Web services in the browser interface, and it's smart enough to
understand the relationship between multiple services (ie, if you want
to use service A you must also use services B and C in your
application). The metadata in the repository is extensible beyond that
supported by UDDI and ebXML, so you can customize X-registry to your own
needs (and the Infravio people tell me that most installations include
customization work). It's being used today in large companies including
Sabre and Providence Healthcare, and apparently doing them a world of
good. If your company is buying into Web services as the wave of the
future, you ought to check out Infravio's offerings.
About the Author
Mike Gunderloy has been developing software for a quarter-century now, and writing about it for nearly as long. He walked away from a .NET development career in 2006 and has been a happy Rails user ever since. Mike blogs at A Fresh Cup.