That's the way most people handle it. Just use an invoke/receive in your bpel process.
Regards, Matthieu. >No, I have to use http.But I think i will try the following approach:- Java class with knowledge of the running bpel process and callback port- providing the asynchronous operation as void method- after processing the request somehwere in my java code I'm goint to use axis2 client api to return the [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb am 05.03.06 11:28:02:- Show quoted text ->> Cant you use SOAP over JMS rather than SOAP over HTTP??> I think it provides async invocations using queues.>> Rgds> Prashanth>>> SOA Work <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> Hi there,>> almost every BPEL guide is talking about invoking services in a asynchronous way and reveiving the result via callback later. Now I was thinking about how such a service in axis or axis2 would look like.>> I guess the service has to now the callback port and maybe the endpoint. At the end of the operation the service has to use the client side axis and callback the process.>> Does somebody do any similar? Any examples? Is there a way how to determine from which sender the invocation was received?>> Best> regards> Dominik> __________________________________________________________________________> Erweitern Sie FreeMail zu einem noch leistungsstarkeren E-Mail-Postfach!> Mehr Infos unter http://freemail.web.de/home/landingpad/?mcu003d021131>>>>>> -----------------------------------------------------------------> Do you Yahoo!?> New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - 1GB free storage!______________________________________________________________Verschicken Sie romantische, coole und witzige Bilder per SMS!Jetzt bei WEB.DE FreeMail: http://f.web.de/?mcu003d021193