Changing the URL on a webservice client generated with wsimport

守給你的承諾、 提交于 2019-11-30 12:36:03
McDowell

This approach requires me to also supply a javax.xml.namespace.QName object, which I don't yet understand, as the second argument.

Copy the one from your generated source. A QName is an XML qualified name - a "unique" identity.

I still don't understand why the WSDL is needed at runtime.

I can't say I know for sure, but a WSDL is basically a schema. By providing it, I'm guessing you give JAX-WS a mechanism to validate the SOAP response. I don't think the JAXB bindings are enough to do this.

I always use the two-argument constructor in the generated service to provide a URL via the ClassLoader.getResource method to embed the WSDL in my jar. As with any schema, using a remote or file system URL for this is stupid less than optimal.

See this question for how to set the end-point at runtime:

HelloService service = new HelloService();
Hello port = service.getHelloPort();
BindingProvider bindingProvider = (BindingProvider) port;
bindingProvider.getRequestContext().put(
      BindingProvider.ENDPOINT_ADDRESS_PROPERTY,
      "http://foo:8086/HelloWhatever");
String response = port.sayHello(name);

This answer has been eluding me for a couple of days, but somehow the act of writing the question always focuses me on finding an answer, and a couple more websearches have pointed to it:

http://www.fransvanbuul.net/?p=98

It seems that wsimport created a class, com.example.WebService, which extends javax.xml.ws.Service. This WebService class has two constructors. The no-arg constructor is hardcoded with a file:// URL to use the original WSDL I generated from. (I suppose that if I had supplied an https:// URL on the wsimport command-line, that would be the URL that is hardcoded.) Alternatively I can use a two-arg constructor and supply a WSDL URL at instantiation time! This approach requires me to also supply a javax.xml.namespace.QName object, which I don't yet understand, as the second argument.

Using this two-arg constructor will probably resolve my problem.

It seems that wsimport, which I am using from JDK 1.6, is a part of the JAX-WS package. JDK 1.6, in recent versions, contains JAX-WS 2.1, and JAX-WS 2.2 will address the difficulties I am raising in this question.

I'll be happy to accept any answer that explains some or all of the rest of this situation. I still don't understand why the WSDL is needed at runtime. More practically, it would help me for someone to show me how to use the two-argument constructor, or how to generate my code with JDK 1.6 and JAX-WS 2.2.

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