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Posted to kandula-dev@ws.apache.org by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com> on 2010/03/06 01:19:03 UTC

import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.

import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved


Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  

Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.

Thank you very much for any help you can provide

Dan Jonsen

Consultant, Security Software Solutions


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I tried to send the message below to the list early this morning, but it seems it never posted (?).  What you have written below looks quite helpful.

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  This book, for example, actually addresses the differences between the RPC and Document styles, a distinction not even mentioned in the 2001 book.  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one, and I won't run into issues like these with it...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions




On Mar 8, 2010, at 10:57 AM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> Good Morning Dan
> 
> Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
> call.setOperationStyle("document");
> call.setOperationUse("literal");
> 
> //then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
> String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
> Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
> //check the ret object coming back for a valid return
> 
> does this answer your question?
> many apologies for (weekend delay)
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: mgainty@hotmail.com
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500
> 
> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I tried to send the message below to the list early this morning, but it seems it never posted (?).  What you have written below looks quite helpful.

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  This book, for example, actually addresses the differences between the RPC and Document styles, a distinction not even mentioned in the 2001 book.  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one, and I won't run into issues like these with it...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions




On Mar 8, 2010, at 10:57 AM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> Good Morning Dan
> 
> Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
> call.setOperationStyle("document");
> call.setOperationUse("literal");
> 
> //then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
> String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
> Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
> //check the ret object coming back for a valid return
> 
> does this answer your question?
> many apologies for (weekend delay)
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: mgainty@hotmail.com
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500
> 
> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I tried to send the message below to the list early this morning, but it seems it never posted (?).  What you have written below looks quite helpful.

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  This book, for example, actually addresses the differences between the RPC and Document styles, a distinction not even mentioned in the 2001 book.  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one, and I won't run into issues like these with it...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions




On Mar 8, 2010, at 10:57 AM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> Good Morning Dan
> 
> Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
> call.setOperationStyle("document");
> call.setOperationUse("literal");
> 
> //then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
> String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
> Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
> //check the ret object coming back for a valid return
> 
> does this answer your question?
> many apologies for (weekend delay)
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: mgainty@hotmail.com
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500
> 
> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I tried to send the message below to the list early this morning, but it seems it never posted (?).  What you have written below looks quite helpful.

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  This book, for example, actually addresses the differences between the RPC and Document styles, a distinction not even mentioned in the 2001 book.  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one, and I won't run into issues like these with it...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions




On Mar 8, 2010, at 10:57 AM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> Good Morning Dan
> 
> Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
> call.setOperationStyle("document");
> call.setOperationUse("literal");
> 
> //then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
> String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
> Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
> //check the ret object coming back for a valid return
> 
> does this answer your question?
> many apologies for (weekend delay)
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: mgainty@hotmail.com
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500
> 
> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I tried to send the message below to the list early this morning, but it seems it never posted (?).  What you have written below looks quite helpful.

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  This book, for example, actually addresses the differences between the RPC and Document styles, a distinction not even mentioned in the 2001 book.  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one, and I won't run into issues like these with it...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions




On Mar 8, 2010, at 10:57 AM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> Good Morning Dan
> 
> Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
> call.setOperationStyle("document");
> call.setOperationUse("literal");
> 
> //then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
> String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
> Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
> //check the ret object coming back for a valid return
> 
> does this answer your question?
> many apologies for (weekend delay)
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: mgainty@hotmail.com
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500
> 
> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
Good Morning Dan

Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
call.setOperationStyle("document");
call.setOperationUse("literal");

//then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
//check the ret object coming back for a valid return

does this answer your question?
many apologies for (weekend delay)
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You




From: mgainty@hotmail.com
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500








currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions



On Mar 5, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
Good Morning Dan

Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
call.setOperationStyle("document");
call.setOperationUse("literal");

//then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
//check the ret object coming back for a valid return

does this answer your question?
many apologies for (weekend delay)
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You




From: mgainty@hotmail.com
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500








currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
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_________________________________________________________________
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Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions



On Mar 5, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
Good Morning Dan

Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
call.setOperationStyle("document");
call.setOperationUse("literal");

//then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
//check the ret object coming back for a valid return

does this answer your question?
many apologies for (weekend delay)
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You




From: mgainty@hotmail.com
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500








currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions



On Mar 5, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
Good Morning Dan

Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
call.setOperationStyle("document");
call.setOperationUse("literal");

//then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
//check the ret object coming back for a valid return

does this answer your question?
many apologies for (weekend delay)
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You




From: mgainty@hotmail.com
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500








currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions



On Mar 5, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you again Martin,

I decided that the book I had was just TOO OLD (c 2001).  Even though I found the text to be excellent and very easy to follow, I realized that so much has changed with web services since its publication that I ran a significant risk (case in point here) of being led toward obsolete technologies and other dead-ends.  I returned the old book and got a copy of "Java Web Services:  Up and Running", (c 2009, O'Reilly).  Hopefully this will be a _bit_ more current than the other one...

Sorry for the false alarm.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant 
Security Software Solutions



On Mar 5, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 
> tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development
> i'll take a look tommorow am..
>  
> look for a response by sun pm at the latest
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> Thank you Martin,
> 
> I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant
> Security Software Solutions
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> /*
>  * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
>  * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
>  * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
>  * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
>  * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
> */
> package com.ecerami.soap;
> 
> /**
>  * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
>  * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
> */
> import java.net.*;
> import java.util.Vector;
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;
> 
> public class HelloClient {
> 
>   /**
>    * Static Main method
>    */
>   public static void main (String[] args) {
>     String firstName = args[0];
>     System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
>     HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
>     try {
>       String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
>       System.out.print (greeting);
>     } catch (SOAPException e) {
>       String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
>       String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
>       System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
>       System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
>     } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
>       System.err.println (e);
>     }
>   }
> 
>   /**
>    * getGreeting Method
>   */
>   public String getGreeting (String firstName)
>     throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {
> 
>     //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
>     Call call = new Call ();
> 
>     // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
>     call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     // Set Object URI and Method Name
>     call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
>     call.setMethodName ("sayHello");
> 
>     //  Set Method Parameters
>     Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
>       firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> 
>     Vector paramList = new Vector ();
>     paramList.addElement (param);
>     call.setParams (paramList);
> 
>     //  Set the URL for the Web Service
>     URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");
> 
>     // Invoke the Service
>     Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");
> 
>     // Check for Faults
>     if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
>       // Extract Return value
>       Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
>       String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
>       return greeting;
>     }
>     else {
>       //  Extract Fault Code and String
>       Fault f = resp.getFault();
>       String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
>       String faultString = f.getFaultString();
>       System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
>       System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
>       System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
>       return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
>     }
>   }
> }
> 
> ===================================================================================================
> ===================================================================================================
> 
> 
> 
> On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:
> 
> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
Good Morning Dan

Call can be modified to use doc-literal as seen here
call.setOperationStyle("document");
call.setOperationUse("literal");

//then when you invoke send a ByteArrayInpueStream of the bytes you wish to transmit e.g.
String firstName=new String("\n<attachments xmlns=\"fubar.org/fubar.xsd\">\n<attachment href=\"dan\"/>\n</attachments>";
Object ret=call.invoke(new Object[]{new SOAPBodyElement(new ByteArrayInputStream(firstName.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"))) } );
//check the ret object coming back for a valid return

does this answer your question?
many apologies for (weekend delay)
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
please do not alter/modify or disrupt this transmission. Thank You




From: mgainty@hotmail.com
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
Subject: RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 23:12:54 -0500








currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it now. 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469228/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469228/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469228/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469228/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
currently 2300 Zulu+5 here 

tommorrow is saturday a day i can devote to leisure activities such as Axis Development

i'll take a look tommorow am..

 

look for a response by sun pm at the latest
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



 



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 21:44:21 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org

Thank you Martin,


I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.


Dan Jonsen


Consultant
Security Software Solutions


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;


/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;


public class HelloClient {


  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }


  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {


    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();


    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");


    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);


    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);


    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");


    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");


    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}


===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================







On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
 
any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  


From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions




Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.
 		 	   		  
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Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you Martin,

I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant
Security Software Solutions

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;

/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;

public class HelloClient {

  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }

  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {

    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();

    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");

    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);

    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");

    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");

    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you Martin,

I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant
Security Software Solutions

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;

/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;

public class HelloClient {

  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }

  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {

    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();

    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");

    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);

    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");

    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");

    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you Martin,

I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant
Security Software Solutions

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;

/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;

public class HelloClient {

  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }

  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {

    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();

    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");

    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);

    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");

    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");

    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you Martin,

I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant
Security Software Solutions

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;

/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;

public class HelloClient {

  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }

  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {

    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();

    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");

    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);

    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");

    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");

    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


Re: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Dan Jonsen <de...@gmail.com>.
Thank you Martin,

I can't imagine that RPC would be a requirement in this case; it's probably just what was easier to use in 2001.  I am simply trying to get the code below to build.  If there is a newer/better way to do this using Axis2 with minimal changes, that may be easier than downgrading just for RPC capability.  Any thoughts on how to get the code below to compile would be greatly appreciated.

Dan Jonsen

Consultant
Security Software Solutions

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2001 Ethan Cerami.  All rights reserved.
 * This code is from the book XML Web Services Essentials.
 * It is provided AS-IS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY either expressed or implied.
 * You may study, use, and modify it for any non-commercial purpose.
 * You may distribute it non-commercially as long as you retain this notice.
*/
package com.ecerami.soap;

/**
 * "Hello, SOAP!" SOAP Client
 * usage:  java HelloClient first_name
*/
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Vector;
import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;
import org.apache.soap.Fault;
import org.apache.soap.Constants;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;

public class HelloClient {

  /**
   * Static Main method
   */
  public static void main (String[] args) {
    String firstName = args[0];
    System.out.println ("Hello SOAP Client");
    HelloClient helloClient = new HelloClient();
    try {
      String greeting = helloClient.getGreeting(firstName);
      System.out.print (greeting);
    } catch (SOAPException e) {
      String faultCode = e.getFaultCode();
      String faultMsg = e.getMessage();
      System.err.println ("SOAPException Thrown (details below):");
      System.err.println ("FaultCode:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println ("FaultMessage:  "+faultMsg);
    } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
      System.err.println (e);
    }
  }

  /**
   * getGreeting Method
  */
  public String getGreeting (String firstName)
    throws SOAPException, MalformedURLException {

    //  Create SOAP RPC Call Object
    Call call = new Call ();

    // Set Encoding Style to standard SOAP encoding
    call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    // Set Object URI and Method Name
    call.setTargetObjectURI ("urn:examples:helloservice");
    call.setMethodName ("sayHello");

    //  Set Method Parameters
    Parameter param = new Parameter("firstName", String.class,
      firstName, Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);

    Vector paramList = new Vector ();
    paramList.addElement (param);
    call.setParams (paramList);

    //  Set the URL for the Web Service
    URL url = new URL ("http://localhost:8080/soap/servlet/rpcrouter");

    // Invoke the Service
    Response resp = call.invoke (url, "");

    // Check for Faults
    if (!resp.generatedFault()) {
      // Extract Return value
      Parameter result = resp.getReturnValue ();
      String greeting = (String) result.getValue();
      return greeting;
    }
    else {
      //  Extract Fault Code and String
      Fault f = resp.getFault();
      String faultCode = f.getFaultCode();
      String faultString = f.getFaultString();
      System.err.println("Fault Occurred (details follow):");
      System.err.println("Fault Code:  "+faultCode);
      System.err.println("Fault String:  "+faultString);
      return new String ("Fault Occurred.  No greeting for you!");
    }
  }
}

===================================================================================================
===================================================================================================



On Mar 5, 2010, at 9:11 PM, Martin Gainty wrote:

> axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
> if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability
>  
> any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
> Martin Gainty 
> ______________________________________________ 
> Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité
>  
> Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
> Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>   
> From: dejonsen@gmail.com
> Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
> Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
> To: java-dev@axis.apache.org
> 
> I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.
> 
> import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
> import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
> import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved
> 
> 
> Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  
> 
> Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.
> 
> Thank you very much for any help you can provide
> 
> Dan Jonsen
> 
> Consultant, Security Software Solutions
> 
> 
> Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection. Sign up now.


RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability

 

any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions

 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability

 

any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions

 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability

 

any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions

 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability

 

any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
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From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions

 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/

RE: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2

Posted by Martin Gainty <mg...@hotmail.com>.
axis2 document-literal style has progressed far beyond single RPC method with single parameter roots
if RPC *is a requirement* you may want to consider fallback to Axis 1.4 for RPC capability

 

any reason why your requirement would prefer RPC over doc-literal type?
Martin Gainty 
______________________________________________ 
Verzicht und Vertraulichkeitanmerkung/Note de déni et de confidentialité

 
Diese Nachricht ist vertraulich. Sollten Sie nicht der vorgesehene Empfaenger sein, so bitten wir hoeflich um eine Mitteilung. Jede unbefugte Weiterleitung oder Fertigung einer Kopie ist unzulaessig. Diese Nachricht dient lediglich dem Austausch von Informationen und entfaltet keine rechtliche Bindungswirkung. Aufgrund der leichten Manipulierbarkeit von E-Mails koennen wir keine Haftung fuer den Inhalt uebernehmen.
Ce message est confidentiel et peut être privilégié. Si vous n'êtes pas le destinataire prévu, nous te demandons avec bonté que pour satisfaire informez l'expéditeur. N'importe quelle diffusion non autorisée ou la copie de ceci est interdite. Ce message sert à l'information seulement et n'aura pas n'importe quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité pour le contenu fourni.



  



From: dejonsen@gmail.com
Subject: import header migration from Apache SOAP to Axis2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 19:19:03 -0500
To: java-dev@axis.apache.org


I am new to web services in general, and to Java development (though I have done a lot of C, C++, and C# development).  I am working through the book, "Web Services Essentials" by Ethan Cerami, (c) 2002 O'Reilly.  I am trying to compile one of the examples in the text, but since the book is so old, all of the packages it refers to are long since obsolete.  I have installed JDK 6u18, Tomcat 6.0-24, Axis2 1.5.1, Xerces 2.9.1, Javamail 1.4.3, and Java Activation Framework 1.1.1 on my (Vista Ultimate x64) system.  When I attempt to compile the code, it complains about unresolved external references b/c the package names are obsolete.  The offending import statements from the code are listed below.  I have resolved the first 3, but am still unable to do so for the last 3.



import org.apache.soap.SOAPException;   // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPException
import org.apache.soap.Fault;           // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPFault
import org.apache.soap.Constants;       // OK --> javax.xml.soap.SOAPConstants
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Call;        // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Parameter;   // still unresolved
import org.apache.soap.rpc.Response;    // still unresolved





Does anyone know what the last 3 package names should be changed to in order to reference equivalent classes in the Axis2 distribution?  


Also, does anyone know which JARs in the Axis2 distribution need to be on the classpath in order to compile this example?  Right now I have classpath set to include every JAR in the "lib" directory of the Axis2 distribution (62 JARs), which I'd really like to cut down on if I can.



Thank you very much for any help you can provide


Dan Jonsen


Consultant, Security Software Solutions

 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/