Exchange 2, below, is not something I have seen. (granted, in theory, it looks very plausible) Regards, -Suresh Sterling Commerce (on loan to RosettaNet) 469 524 2676 (O), 469 323 0234 (Cell) -----Original Message----- From: Dick Brooks [mailto:dick@tech-comm.com] Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 6:24 AM To: Damodaran, Suresh; 'Duane Nickull'; Anthony Ellis Cc: ebxml-dev@lists.ebxml.org Subject: RE: [ebxml-dev] MSH vs BSI acknowledgement messages I've seen 4 used as a "functional acknowledgement" to indicate that received data is syntactically good/bad. A typical scenario is as follows: Exchange 1 { A sends data (PO) to B. B sends 1,(2/3) in a single response message to A indicating reliable delivery complete of (PO). } Exchange 2 { B sends 4 (functional acknowledgement) to A indicating successful syntax validation of (PO). A sends 1,(2/3) in a single response message to B indicating reliable delivery complete of 4. } Exchange 3 { B sends Business level response indicating the results of processing (PO) (e.g. PO accepted - POA) to A. A sends 1,(2/3) in a single response message to B indicating reliable delivery complete of (POA). } The above scenario can also be completed in a single exchange (classic RPC), as follows: { A sends data (PO) to B. B sends 1,(2/3) and a Business level response (e.g. PO accepted - POA) to A in a single response message indicating reliable delivery and processing of (PO) complete. } Dick Brooks B2B Integration and Cyber Security Consultant http://www.tech-comm.com/dbc Mobile:602-684-1484 eFax:240-352-0714 -----Original Message----- From: Damodaran, Suresh [mailto:Suresh_Damodaran@stercomm.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2003 11:17 PM To: 'Duane Nickull'; Anthony Ellis Cc: ebxml-dev@lists.ebxml.org Subject: RE: [ebxml-dev] MSH vs BSI acknowledgement messages yes, 2 and 3 are same, and 4 is not used typically in practice (when there is a business response message, then that serves the same purpose, and when it is only one-way, i.e., notification, usually nobody cares to send a business ack). Regards, -Suresh Sterling Commerce (on loan to RosettaNet) 469 524 2676 (O), 469 323 0234 (Cell) -----Original Message----- From: Duane Nickull [mailto:duane@yellowdragonsoft.com] Sent: Monday, September 15, 2003 9:41 PM To: Anthony Ellis Cc: ebxml-dev@lists.ebxml.org Subject: Re: [ebxml-dev] MSH vs BSI acknowledgement messages Yes - 2 and 3 are the same. Duane Anthony Ellis wrote: >Thanks, > >I wasn't thinking about the http level ack at first but now I think the spec >can have up to 4 messages. > >Level 1 - Transport level. HTTP response >Level 2 - MSH reliable messaging acknowledgement (as defined in the ebMSS) >Level 3 - BSI ReceiptAcknowledgement message (as defined in the BPSS) >Level 4 - BSI (or BPM) AcceptanceAcknowledgement message (as defined in the >BPSS) > >Although I still think that Level 2 and Level 3 could be sent together as >they really do the same thing. Although I come from a technical approach, >not a business approach :) > >I know that the MSH and BSI layers should be seperate but I think there >should be some overlap for simplicity's sake... > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Duane Nickull [mailto:duane@yellowdragonsoft.com] >Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2003 10:23 AM >To: Anthony Ellis >Cc: ebxml-dev@lists.ebxml.org >Subject: Re: [ebxml-dev] MSH vs BSI acknowledgement messages > > >Anthony: > >Almost. You are correct in asserting that there may be three levels of >acks. First one couldbe an http ack (a basic 200 - ok). > >Second ack could be a message layer specific ack that says - yes - the >message content is validated and received. If specifically requested >within the Message, must be delivered (timneouts etc apply to this). > >The third is a potential business level acknowledgement. This is to say >"Yes - we accept the terms of your business proposition". It would be >foolhardy to say that any communication received indicates acceptance of >the business intent without checking it against the business rules >(credit limits, shipping to constraints etc.). > >Want to have some real fun? Try to imagine what happens if the business >level acknowledgement gets sent back before the http level ack (Actually >don't - we've been down this rathole before ;-) > >Duane > >Anthony Ellis wrote: > > > >>I have a question regarding the link between the ebXML MSH and BSI and >>regards to acknowledgement messages and was hoping to clear things up >>a bit. >> >>MSH specifies reliable delivery, and this can be performed with ebXML >>acknowledgment messages. >>The BPSS spec then specifies another layer of acknowledgement >>messaging, ie Receipt Acknowledgement and Acceptance Acknowledgement. >> >>Does this mean that there can be up to 3 acknowledgement messages sent? >> >>Firstly a MSH acknowledgement, which is simply an acknowledgement >>attribute in the header of a message, sent once the message has been >>delivered to the receiving application. There is no business document >>(ie payload) associated with this message (or there doesn't have to be). >> >>Then a BSI, ReceiptAcknowledgment if the BSI can determine a message >>is legible. This is a ebXML message with a payload containing an XML >>ReceiptAcknowledgement document. >> >>Then a BSI, AcceptanceAcknowledgement if the BSI can determine >>a payload document is legible and is successfully sent to the >>Application. This is a ebXML message with a payload containing an XML >>AcceptanceAcknowledgement document. >> >>It seems to me that the MSH acknowledgement message and the first BSI >>ReceiptAcknowledgement message are a little redundant, as they >>both signal that the original request message was succesfully >>received. The MSH should not be sending it's acknowledgement if the >>original message was not legible either. >>Is this understanding correct? >> >>It just seems to me that there is very little coherence between the >>MSH spec and the BPSS spec - or it could just be my understanding :) >> >>Thanks in advance.. >> >> >>Anthony Ellis >>Red Wahoo >>----------------------------- >>Tel: +61 438 878 003 >>www.redwahoo.com >> >> >> > > >-- >*************************************************** >Yellow Dragon Software - http://www.yellowdragonsoft.com >Web Services & ebXML Messaging / Registry Downloads >UN/CEFACT eBusiness Architecture/ ebXMl Technical Architecture >Phone: +1 (604) 738-1051 - Canada: Pacific Standard Time >Direct: +1 (604) 726-3329 > > > > > > > > -- *************************************************** Yellow Dragon Software - http://www.yellowdragonsoft.com Web Services & ebXML Messaging / Registry Downloads UN/CEFACT eBusiness Architecture/ ebXMl Technical Architecture Phone: +1 (604) 738-1051 - Canada: Pacific Standard Time Direct: +1 (604) 726-3329
<<attachment: winmail.dat>>