Hmm, i have the same question.

But is it really necessary to use the wsprovide tool. From the wiki it says:
anonymous wrote : 
  | A JSE or EJB3 deployment can be built using this class, and it is the only 
Java code needed to deploy on JBossWS. The WSDL, and all other Java artifacts 
called "wrapper classes" will be generated for you at deploy time. This 
actually goes beyond the JAX-WS specification, which requires that wrapper 
classes be generated using an offline tool. The reason for this requirement is 
purely a vender implementation problem, and since we do not believe in 
burdening a developer with a bunch of additional steps, we generate these as 
well. However, if you want your deployment to be portable to other application 
servers, you will unfortunately need to use a tool and add the generated 
classes to your deployment.
  | 
  | This is the primary purpose of the wsprovide tool, to generate portable 
JAX-WS artifacts. Additionally, it can be used to "provide" the abstract 
contract (WSDL file) for your service. This can be obtained by invoking 
wsprovide using the "-w" option: 

>From which i get the impression i would not need to use any other tools...
Or is it so that the CLIENT will need the generated classes from wsprovide to 
be able to use the webservice?

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