Edit the Configuration properties and click OK.

Managing Web Service Policies 7-15 Importing an Assertion Template Follow the steps in this section to view an assertion template.

1. Navigate to the Web Services Assertions Templates page, as described in

Navigating to the Web Services Assertion Templates Page on page 7-8.

2. Click Import From File.

You are prompted to provide the assertion template file.

3. Click Browse to navigate to the directory where the assertion template file is

located and select the assertion template to be imported.

4. Click OK.

The assertion template appears in the Assertion Templates table. Deleting an Assertion Template Follow the steps in this section to delete an assertion template. 1. Navigate to the Web Services Assertions Templates page, as described in Navigating to the Web Services Assertion Templates Page on page 7-8. 2. Select the assertion template from the Assertion Templates table that you want to delete.

3. Click Delete.

You are prompted to confirm that you want to delete the assertion template.

4. Click OK.

Validating Web Services Policies There are restrictions on the type and number of policy assertions that are permitted in a Web service policy. When you validate a policy, Enterprise Manager checks to see if the policy is consistent with these restrictions. A policy can contain only assertions that belong to a single category. Therefore, you cannot combine a Security assertion with an MTOM assertion in the same policy. The policy type is determined by the category of the assertion. Therefore, a policy containing a security assertion is a security policy, a policy containing a management assertion is a management policy, and so on. Security assertions are further categorized into subcategories: authentication, logging, message protection msg-protection, and authorization. There are restrictions on the number and type of assertions you can have in a policy. The restrictions are as follows: ■ MTOM and Reliable Messaging policies can contain only one assertion. ■ A security policy can contain multiple security assertions; however, there can be only one assertion from the following subcategories in a policy: encryption, signing, and authentication. ■ Some assertions contain both authentication and message protection. For example, if you view the oraclewss11_username_token_with_message_protection_service_policy, you will see that the second assertion falls into two categories: securityauthentication and securitymsg-protection. See Figure 7–8 .