Network Deployment (Distributed operating systems), v8.0 > Reference > Developer detailed usage information


Map between Java language, WSDL and XML for JAX-RPC applications

Data for Java API for XML-based Remote Procedure Call (JAX-RPC) applications flows as extensible Markup Language (XML). JAX-RPC applications use mappings to describe the data conversion between the Java language and extensible Markup Language (XML) technologies, including XML Schema, WSDL and SOAP that are supported by the application server.

For JAX-RPC applications, most of the mappings between the Java language and XML are specified by the JAX-RPC specification. Some mappings that are optional or unspecified in JAX-RPC are also supported. Review the JAX-RPC specification for a complete list of APIs. For a complete list of the supported standards and specifications, see the web services specifications and API documentation.


Notational conventions

Namespace conventions. Describes the namespace prefixes and the corresponding namespace used in namespace conventions.

Namespace prefix Namespace
xsd http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
xsi http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance
soapenc http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/
wsdl http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/
wsdlsoap http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/
ns user-defined namespace
apache http://xml.apache.org/xml-soap
wasws http://websphere.ibm.com/webservices/


Detailed mapping information

The following sections identify the supported mappings, including:



Java-to-WSDL mapping

This section summarizes the Java-to-WSDL mapping rules. The Java-to-WSDL mapping rules are used by the Java2WSDL command for bottom-up processing. In bottom-up processing, an existing Java service implementation is used to create a WSDL file defining the web service. The generated WSDL file can require additional manual editing for the following reasons:

For simple services, the generated WSDL file is sufficient. For complicated services, the generated WSDL file is a good starting point. Read about the Java2WSDL command-line tool for Java API for XML-based Remote Procedure Call (JAX-RPC) applications to learn more about this tool.

General issues



WSDL-to-Java mapping

The WSDL2Java command generates Java classes using information described in the WSDL file.

General issues

Read about the WSDL2Java command-line tool for Java API for XML-based Remote Procedure Call (JAX-RPC) applications to learn more about this tool.




Map between WSDL and SOAP messages

The WSDL file defines the format of the SOAP message that are transmitted through network connections. The WSDL2Java command and the WAS runtime use the information in the WSDL file to ensure that the SOAP message is properly serialized and deserialized.

DOCUMENT versus RPC, LITERAL versus ENCODED

If a wsdl:binding element indicates that a message is sent using an RPC format, the SOAP message contains an element defining the operation. If a wsdl:binding element indicates that the message is sent using a document format, the SOAP message does not contain the operation element.

If the wsdl:part element is defined using the type attribute, the name and type of the part are used in the message. If the wsdl:part element is defined using the element attribute, the name and type of the element are used in the message. The element attribute is not supported by the JAX-RPC specification when use="encoded".

If a wsdl:binding element indicates that a message is encoded, the values in the message are sent with xsi:type information. If a wsdl:binding element indicates that a message is literal, the values in the message are typically not sent with xsi:type information. For example:

DOCUMENT/LITERAL
WSDL:


<xsd:element name="c" type="xsd:int"/>
<xsd:element name="method">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="a" type="xsd:string"/>
<xsd:element ref="ns:c"/>
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element> ...

<wsdl:message name="request">

<part name="parameters" element="ns:method"/>

</wsdl:message>  ...

<wsdl:operation name="method">

<input message="request"/>
 ...

Message:

<soap:body>
<ns:method>
<a>ABC
</a>
<c>123
</a>
<ns:method>
</soap:body> 
RPC/ENCODED
WSDL:

<xsd:element name="c" type="xsd:int"/>
...

<wsdl:message name="request">

<part name="a" type="xsd:string"/>
<part name="b" element="ns:c"/>
</wsdl:message>  ...

<wsdl:operation name="method">

<input message="request"/>
 ...

Message:

<soap:body>

<ns:method>

<a xsi:type="xsd:string">ABC
</a>
<element attribute is not permitted in rpc/encoded mode>

</ns:method>
</soap:body>
DOCUMENT/LITERAL  not wrapped
WSDL:

<xsd:element name="c" type="xsd:int"/>
...

<wsdl:message name="request">

<part name="a" type="xsd:string"/>
<part name="b" element="ns:c"/>
</wsdl:message>  ...

<wsdl:operation name="method">

<input message="request"/>
...

Message:

<soap:body>
<a>ABC
</a>
<c>123
</a>

</soap:body> 

WS-I Basic Profile
Implement web services applications with JAX-RPC
Implement web services applications from existing WSDL files with JAX-RPC


Related


Java2WSDL command for JAX-RPC applications
WSDL2Java command for JAX-RPC applications
Web services specifications and APIs

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