You can define additional informations to be carried with the
soap header in the <binding> element's <operation> child element,
e. g.
<operation name="registration">
<soap:operation soapAction="">
<input>
<soap:header message="..." part="expiration" use="encoded"
namespace="" encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"/>
The <soap:header> element indicates that the expiration part of the message
appears as a SOAP header.
The part="expiration" has to be defined in the message definition of the
operation, e. g.
<message name="...">
<part name="expiration" element="xsd:string">
...
</message>
Hope, the information helped a bit... ;-)
cu
Dipl. Inform. (FH) Walter Stocker
T-Systems International GmbH
Software Developer
System Integration
Address: Memmelsdorfer Str. 209a, 96052 Bamberg
Phone: +49 (09 51) 40 97 - 1 46
Fax: +49 (09 51) 40 97 - 2 00
E-Mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Internet: http://www.t-systems.com
> -----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: Cun Yong Tan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Gesendet am: Mittwoch, 3. Juli 2002 18:21
> An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Betreff: How do you get to the Call object from
> auto-genenerated client
> stub ?
>
>
> I used WSDL2Java to generate the client source files.
> I would like to add some headers using Call.addHeader( ) before
> the invocation of a method.
> But I don't see how to get to the Call object with the
> auto-generated client code. Looking at the client stub, each
> method creates
> a Call object internally and does the invocation.
>
> Is it not possible to add headers with auto-gen source code ?
>
> Thanks
>
> Cun Yong Tan
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
> http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
>