Get the real story via our bi-monthly newsletter

Search

    4
    0

rss

Send to a colleague

Home > Commentary > Trends Archive > Is CMIS RESTful? Or merely HYPEful?

Browse TrendWatch Blog

Recent Blog Entries

The Complete Archive

Trends by Vendor


TrendWatch by Channel

Web Content Management Trends

Enterprise Portals Trends

ECM Trends

Web Analytics Trends

Enterprise Search Trends

SharePoint Trends

Digital & Media Asset Management Trends

XML & Component Content Management Trends

E-mail Archiving & Management Trends

Enterprise Social Software & Collaboration Trends


Report Excerpt

The ECM Report looks at... Vignette's ECM Suite

"With its focus on content consumption, Vignette has differentiated itself from other ECM vendors by promoting its portal as the meeting ground for content across formats and repositories. The cost-effective portal and easily deployed records and document management module are among the platform's best features, but the vendor has yet to smooth over disparate infrastructure requirements and fully stabilize its complex VCM environment ..."

(p. 229)

More about The ECM Report

Our customers say

"The analysis of core technologies from a number of different perspectives will prove most helpful to ECM consumers. It is the most comprehensive analysis of the state of the industry for ECM that I have reviewed.
- - Len Asprey, Director, Practical Information Management Solutions Pty Ltd, and,
Author, Integrative Document and Content Management

NEW at CMS Watch

The Search and Information Access ReportThe Search & Information Access Report: This newly updated 341-page Search and Information Access Report critically evaluates 23 Search and Information Access offerings from around the globe... Read more

The Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software ReportThe Enterprise Collaboration & Community Software Report : This newly updated research critically evaluates 27 Enterprise Collaboration and Community Software products head-to-head... Read more

The Enterprise Content Management ReportThe Enterprise Content Management Report : This newly updated research critically evaluates 32 Enterprise Content Management products head-to-head... Read more

 
 

TrendWatch Blog

Is CMIS RESTful? Or merely HYPEful?

30-Sep-2008   --  

Not long ago I blogged about the newly announced Content Management Interoperability Services specification, which is a joint effort of EMC, IBM, Open Text, Oracle, SAP, Alfresco, and Microsoft. If you close your eyes and sniff, CMIS smells a bit like JCR minus the coffee aroma. It's a high-level spec aimed at making content repositories reachable via platform-neutral (RESTful and SOAP-based) protocols.

As such, CMIS opens the way (in theory, at least) to faster development, easier integrations between the ECM and enterprise-middleware worlds, less dependence on proprietary SDKs (thus less vendor lock-in), and so on.

At first glance, CMIS seems too good to be true. Certainly it seems well motivated (as was JSR 170, which failed to set the world on fire), and it has drawn considerable attention based on its use of technologies like Atom Publishing Protocol and REST.

But there are those who think it's all a bit strange... including Roy T. Fielding, the father of REST.

Fielding said in his blog yesterday: "I am getting tired of big companies making idiotic claims about REST and their so-called RESTful architectures. The only similarity between CMIS and REST is that they both have four-letter acronyms."

Fielding continues: "REST is an architectural style, not a protocol, and thus announcing it as a protocol binding is absurdly ignorant behavior for a group of technology companies."

In reality, Fielding says, CMIS is actually "a Web Services interface for document management." He adds wryly:  "It should be renamed WS-DMS and tossed on the same pile of other specs from that genre."

It's not just the non-RESTfulness of CMIS that perturbs Fielding, though. The real problem is the implied data model. According to Fielding, CMIS is just "a thin veneer on RDBMS-based data repositories that provides a data model for document-like objects within filesystem-like folders ... exactly the kind of document model one would expect within a legacy document management system that is backed by a large relational database and authored via Microsoft Office applications."

Some would argue that Fielding is not necessarily an unbiased observer, since he works for Day Software. But I think his analysis of CMIS in the context of "conventional CMS wisdom" (whether you agree with it 100 percent or not) offers a refreshing counterpoint to the breathless hype surrounding the original CMIS announcements. To have the merits of CMIS debated openly (after seeing IBM et al. present it to the world as a fait accompli) can only be a good thing.

- Submitted by: Kas Thomas, Analyst - Twitter: kasthomas

All ECM Channel Trends

Join the conversation

Digg This! Search Technorati Tag it on Del.icio.us




Get a Free Sample

Wondering about CMS Watch research? Sign up to receive free samples of any of our products.




What we do

CMS Watch™ evaluates content-oriented technologies, publishing head-to-head comparative reviews of leading solutions. What makes us special?

  • Our critical analysis exposes product weaknesses as well as strengths
  • We deliver unrivaled technical depth and comprehensive project advice
  • Our research is led by international topic experts
  • We only work for buyers -- never for vendors

Contact us

CMS Watch

info@cmswatch.com

3470 Olney-Laytonsville Road Suite 131

Olney, MD USA 20832

1 800 325 6190

1 617 340 6464

UK: +44 2033181911

Fax: +1 617 340 3541