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What does it mean when a web service is asynchronous? Is this only used when you call it with Ajax and you have a part on your page that refreshes when the web service is done? Thank you.

5 Answers 5

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I know this is an old topic, but whether a web service is synchronous or asynchronous depends on the design of the web service and has nothing to do with Ajax. An asynchronous web service transaction proceeds like this:

  1. The client calls the web service. In the call the client sends a callback end point implemented as a service by the client.
  2. The web service returns a "message received" reply. ... (Some other processing occurs) ...
  3. The web service completes its task, then calls the callback endpoint provided by the client.
  4. The client callback replies with message received.

See Developing Asynchronous Web Services or How to: Create Asynchronous Web Service Methods

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    Yes, there are important point 2. (request received acknowledgement) and 3. CALLBACK endpoint, which needs to be specified by WSDL. ... this really needs different processing on WS fwk side ... so this @Donals response is only correct one
    – Marek-A-
    Jun 15, 2016 at 9:03
  • The "How to" link refers to the legacy ASMX web service technology. That technology has been superseded by WCF. Aug 8, 2020 at 5:17
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The question is whether it's the web service that's asynchronous, or your access to it. In the context of a web page, it's more likely that the service is synchronous, but that it is being accessed asynchronously.

Most likely, the service is being called via AJAX. The call is made to the service, and the page then continues. When the response comes in, either the success or the failure functions are executed, asynchronously.

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    Ok. This is definitely a well stated answer. In the context of a web page where ajax call is sent the server runs the code synchronously, the connection on the server side is blocked or you can say the thread that opened the ajax connection from the browser side is also blocked, but the main execution thread is not and continues after creating the ajax call.
    – muasif80
    Jul 9, 2020 at 21:37
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Synchronous means that you call a web service (or function or whatever) and wait until it returns - all other code execution and user interaction is stopped until the call returns. Asynchronous means that you do not halt all other operations while waiting for the web service call to return. Other code executes and/or the user can continue to interact with the page (or program UI).

So, I would not say that the web service itself is asynchronous, I would say that your ajax call to the service is asynchronous.

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    honestly it is not a correct statement saying webservice itself is not asynchronous
    – sowen
    Feb 9, 2016 at 17:03
  • web service can also be asynchronous
    – Razel Soco
    Apr 24, 2018 at 7:50
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When you call synchronous web service the service processes the request and return HTTP status code 200 OK (1) if everything went as expected, or error 4xx. The call is blocked while processing and the request and can take significant time.

When web service is asynchronous the main difference is that call should return instantly with HTTP 202 ACCEPTED (2) which means that request is taken in queue but not processed yet.

(1) 200 OK http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.2.1
(2) 202 ACCEPTED http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.2.3

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An asynchronous web service allows a client to submit a request, process the request and respond to the client after a given time -- the client would not block all activity on receiving a response.

Comparatively, a web service that is synchronous would provide a client directly with a response, expecting the client to block all activity until a response is returned. In this case the web service would limit the client to process requests one at a time.

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    -1: sorry, but whether the service is synchronous or not has nothing to do with the client. Nov 19, 2010 at 19:31
  • 2
    Elaborate on "nothing" that is strong statement. Perhaps you have something more to add ... you gave the "what" but not "why". A server without a client is not very useful; examining how a web service works by how it can and cannot be consumed sheds light on how the web service itself works.
    – bn.
    Nov 22, 2010 at 0:10

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