I have a very simple SOAP web service that I need to consume from a Java client. What is the easiest way to accomplish this without using any third party libraries? A requ
If you can relax your "no 3rd party libraries" requirement, and you have a WSDL for the web service then Axis makes it really easy. Just compile the WSDL using wsdl2java, and you can use the generated Java classes to consume the web service.
I can recommend you CXF library. Using it you will have several options for calling web services:
Use dynamic proxy for calling (don't need to make Java stubs using wsdl2java).
DynamicClientFactory dcf = DynamicClientFactory.newInstance();
Client client = dcf.createClient("http://admin:password@localhost:8080"+
"/services/MyService?wsdl");
Object[] a = client.invoke("test", "");
System.out.println(a);
Using Java stub generated from WSDL, using wsdl2java.
If your server was created using CXF you can reuse your interface code directly (instead of using wsdl2java on the WSDL which was created from your interface!)
For both #2 and #3, the following code exemplifies the CXF usage:
JaxWsProxyFactoryBean factory = new JaxWsProxyFactoryBean();
factory.setAddress("http://admin:password@localhost:8080/services/MyService");
factory.setServiceClass(ITest.class);
ITest client = (ITest) factory.create();
client.test();
Without using any third party libraries? Get to know the SOAP standard really well and learn to love SAX.
If you can't love SAX, then lax your no-third-party-libs requirement and use StAX (with woodstox) instead.
This approach might be the "easiest" (considering the no-third-party-libs requirement) but I don't think it will be easy.
Depending on which version of JAVA you're using, some of the JAX-WS is built into it. JDK 6 has Java's JAX-WS standard implementation and you could just use it.
See the following:
JAX-WS 2.1 and JAXB 2.1 is available in JDK 6 Update 4 release
Getting Started with JAX-WS Web Services (tutorial to use the JDK built-in JAX-WS for deploying and consuming a web service)