Re: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-03-03 Thread Daniel Kulp



On Monday 03 March 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> So I added a header on the server side using the code below,
> I can see the header in client side logging, but how do I
> grab it on the client side?  I tried an interceptor but it is
> not finding any headers.  What am I doing wrong?

READ phase is propably too early.   They probably haven't been read yet.   
Change the phase to USER_LOGICAL.

That said, on the client side, like the server side, you don't need the 
interceptor.   

((BindingProvider)proxy).getResponseContext().get(Header.HEADER_LIST);

should return the List objects.

One more note though:  header elements SHOULD be namespace qualfied per 
the soap spec.   You aren't putting the overflow element into a 
namespace when you create it so many toolkits may have issues with that.   
Use the createElementNS call.

Dan



>
> Server side code:
>
> Document d = DOMUtils.createDocument();
> Element overflowElem = d.createElement("overflow");
> overflowElem.setTextContent(String.valueOf(overflow));
> QName q = new QName(SCHEMA_PREFIX + "headers_ns.xsd",
> "OverflowHeader", "h");
> SoapHeader overflowHeader = new SoapHeader(q, overflowElem);
> ...
> List headers = CastUtils.cast((List)
> messageContext.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
> ...
> headers.add(overflowHeader);
>
>
> Client side logging shows:
>
> http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/";>
> false
> ...
>
> Client side code:
>
> class HeaderInterceptor extends AbstractSoapInterceptor {
>
> public HeaderInterceptor() {
> super(Phase.READ);
> }
>
> public void handleMessage(SoapMessage message) throws Fault {
> List headers = message.getHeaders();
> if(headers.size() == 0) {
> log.info("HEADER.size = 0");
> return;
> }
> for (int i = 0; i < headers.size(); i++) {
> log.info("HEADER " + i + ": " + headers.get(i).getName());
>     }
> }
> }
>
> Thanks,
> Dan
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Daniel Lipofsky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 1:23 PM
> > To: cxf-user@incubator.apache.org
> > Subject: RE: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor
> >
> > Those all sound good, but unfortunately I am pretty much
> > a web-services newbie, I don't have a clue how to
> > implement that, especially the @WebParam sugestion.
> > Do I need some entries in the WSDL, etc?
> >
> > the old implementation was basically outputing this:
> >
> >  > xmlns:h="http://www.foobar.com/connector-1.5/headers_ns.xsd";>
> > 
> > false
> > 
> > ...
> >
> > or
> > ...
> > true
> > ...
> >
> > so there are a few involved: a namespace, a node, and
> > an attribute.  I don't have to keep it the same, so maybe
> > I can make it a lot simplier, I just need to basically
> > communicate overflow=[true|false] somehow.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Dan
> >
> > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > > Of course, I typed all that and forgot the most obvious way:
> > >
> > > Just add a parameter to your method like:
> > >
> > > @WebParam(header = true, mode = Mode.OUT)
> > > Holder header
> > >
> > > Dan
> > >
> > > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > > > OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that
> > >
> > > possibly needs
> > >
> > > > a sample
> > > >
> > > > There are a couple options open to you:
> > > >
> > > > First, you need the context injected in:
> > > > @Resource
> > > > WebServiceContext context;
> > > >
> > > > 1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the
> >
> > WebServiceContext
> >
> > > > and in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ object
> >
> > model.   This
> >
> > > > is pure JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS implementation.  The
> > > > "problem" is that with the SAAJ model, it breaks streaming and
> > > > performance suffers.
> > > >
> > > > 2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw
> > >
> > > a value in
> > >
> > > > the WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in
> > > > your interceptor.   You can then call the
> > &

RE: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-03-03 Thread Daniel Lipofsky
So I added a header on the server side using the code below,
I can see the header in client side logging, but how do I
grab it on the client side?  I tried an interceptor but it is
not finding any headers.  What am I doing wrong?

Server side code:

Document d = DOMUtils.createDocument();
Element overflowElem = d.createElement("overflow");
overflowElem.setTextContent(String.valueOf(overflow));
QName q = new QName(SCHEMA_PREFIX + "headers_ns.xsd",
"OverflowHeader", "h");
SoapHeader overflowHeader = new SoapHeader(q, overflowElem);
...
List headers = CastUtils.cast((List)
messageContext.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
...
headers.add(overflowHeader);


Client side logging shows:

http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/";>
false
...

Client side code:

class HeaderInterceptor extends AbstractSoapInterceptor {

public HeaderInterceptor() {
super(Phase.READ);
}

public void handleMessage(SoapMessage message) throws Fault {
List headers = message.getHeaders();
if(headers.size() == 0) {
log.info("HEADER.size = 0");
return;
}
for (int i = 0; i < headers.size(); i++) {
log.info("HEADER " + i + ": " + headers.get(i).getName());
}
}
}

Thanks,
Dan


> -Original Message-
> From: Daniel Lipofsky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 1:23 PM
> To: cxf-user@incubator.apache.org
> Subject: RE: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor
> 
> Those all sound good, but unfortunately I am pretty much
> a web-services newbie, I don't have a clue how to
> implement that, especially the @WebParam sugestion.
> Do I need some entries in the WSDL, etc?
> 
> the old implementation was basically outputing this:
> 
>  xmlns:h="http://www.foobar.com/connector-1.5/headers_ns.xsd";>
> 
> false
> 
> ...
> 
> or
> ...
> true
> ...
> 
> so there are a few involved: a namespace, a node, and
> an attribute.  I don't have to keep it the same, so maybe
> I can make it a lot simplier, I just need to basically
> communicate overflow=[true|false] somehow.
> 
> Thanks,
> Dan
> 
> On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > 
> > Of course, I typed all that and forgot the most obvious way:
> > 
> > Just add a parameter to your method like:
> > 
> > @WebParam(header = true, mode = Mode.OUT)
> > Holder header
> > 
> > Dan
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > > OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that 
> > possibly needs
> > > a sample
> > >
> > > There are a couple options open to you:
> > >
> > > First, you need the context injected in:
> > > @Resource
> > > WebServiceContext context;
> > >
> > > 1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the 
> WebServiceContext
> > > and in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ object 
> model.   This
> > > is pure JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS implementation.  The
> > > "problem" is that with the SAAJ model, it breaks streaming and
> > > performance suffers.
> > >
> > > 2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw 
> > a value in
> > > the WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in your
> > > interceptor.   You can then call the 
> > soapMessage.getHeaders() thing to
> > > get the list of headers and add a Header object to it.
> > >
> > > 3) Context only: no interceptors needed.  In you impl do:
> > >
> > > context.
> > > ... build a org.apache.cxf.headers.Header object ...
> > > List hdrList = (List)ctx.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
> > > hdrList.add(hdr);
> > >
> > > And example of this would be our system test that test this:
> > > 
> > 
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/cxf/trunk/systests/src/test/
> > >java/org/apache/cxf/systest/outofband/header/
> > >
> > >
> > > 3 is definitely the simplest.   No interceptors needed.  Nothing
> > > really to configure, etc
> > >
> > >
> > > Dan
> > >
> > > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> > > > I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
> > > > response header based on what happened in the execution of
> > > > the method implementation.
> > > >
> > > > I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
> > > > I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
> > > > to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
> > > > ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
> > > > that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.
> > > >
> > > > also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > Dan
> 


Re: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-03-03 Thread Daniel Kulp



On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> Those all sound good, but unfortunately I am pretty much
> a web-services newbie, I don't have a clue how to
> implement that, especially the @WebParam sugestion.
> Do I need some entries in the WSDL, etc?

If you want to define it in the wsdl, you would create a new schema 
element like:


Then to your out message, just add another part like:



And then in your soap binding for the output:



You can see the wsdl in our samples/soap_header dir as an example.

Dan



>
> the old implementation was basically outputing this:
>
>  xmlns:h="http://www.foobar.com/connector-1.5/headers_ns.xsd";>
> 
> false
> 
> ...
>
> or
> ...
> true
> ...
>
> so there are a few involved: a namespace, a node, and
> an attribute.  I don't have to keep it the same, so maybe
> I can make it a lot simplier, I just need to basically
> communicate overflow=[true|false] somehow.
>
> Thanks,
> Dan
>
> On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > Of course, I typed all that and forgot the most obvious way:
> >
> > Just add a parameter to your method like:
> >
> > @WebParam(header = true, mode = Mode.OUT)
> > Holder header
> >
> > Dan
> >
> > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > > OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that
> >
> > possibly needs
> >
> > > a sample
> > >
> > > There are a couple options open to you:
> > >
> > > First, you need the context injected in:
> > > @Resource
> > > WebServiceContext context;
> > >
> > > 1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the
> > > WebServiceContext and in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ
> > > object model.   This is pure JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS
> > > implementation.  The "problem" is that with the SAAJ model, it
> > > breaks streaming and performance suffers.
> > >
> > > 2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw
> >
> > a value in
> >
> > > the WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in your
> > > interceptor.   You can then call the
> >
> > soapMessage.getHeaders() thing to
> >
> > > get the list of headers and add a Header object to it.
> > >
> > > 3) Context only: no interceptors needed.  In you impl do:
> > >
> > > context.
> > > ... build a org.apache.cxf.headers.Header object ...
> > > List hdrList = (List)ctx.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
> > > hdrList.add(hdr);
> > >
> > > And example of this would be our system test that test this:
> >
> > http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/cxf/trunk/systests/src/tes
> >t/
> >
> > >java/org/apache/cxf/systest/outofband/header/
> > >
> > >
> > > 3 is definitely the simplest.   No interceptors needed.  Nothing
> > > really to configure, etc
> > >
> > >
> > > Dan
> > >
> > > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> > > > I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
> > > > response header based on what happened in the execution of
> > > > the method implementation.
> > > >
> > > > I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
> > > > I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
> > > > to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
> > > > ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
> > > > that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.
> > > >
> > > > also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > Dan



-- 
J. Daniel Kulp
Principal Engineer, IONA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.dankulp.com/blog


RE: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-02-29 Thread Daniel Lipofsky
Those all sound good, but unfortunately I am pretty much
a web-services newbie, I don't have a clue how to
implement that, especially the @WebParam sugestion.
Do I need some entries in the WSDL, etc?

the old implementation was basically outputing this:

http://www.foobar.com/connector-1.5/headers_ns.xsd";>

false

...

or
...
true
...

so there are a few involved: a namespace, a node, and
an attribute.  I don't have to keep it the same, so maybe
I can make it a lot simplier, I just need to basically
communicate overflow=[true|false] somehow.

Thanks,
Dan

On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> 
> Of course, I typed all that and forgot the most obvious way:
> 
> Just add a parameter to your method like:
> 
> @WebParam(header = true, mode = Mode.OUT)
> Holder header
> 
> Dan
> 
> 
> 
> On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> > OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that 
> possibly needs
> > a sample
> >
> > There are a couple options open to you:
> >
> > First, you need the context injected in:
> > @Resource
> > WebServiceContext context;
> >
> > 1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the WebServiceContext
> > and in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ object model.   This
> > is pure JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS implementation.  The
> > "problem" is that with the SAAJ model, it breaks streaming and
> > performance suffers.
> >
> > 2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw 
> a value in
> > the WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in your
> > interceptor.   You can then call the 
> soapMessage.getHeaders() thing to
> > get the list of headers and add a Header object to it.
> >
> > 3) Context only: no interceptors needed.  In you impl do:
> >
> > context.
> > ... build a org.apache.cxf.headers.Header object ...
> > List hdrList = (List)ctx.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
> > hdrList.add(hdr);
> >
> > And example of this would be our system test that test this:
> > 
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/cxf/trunk/systests/src/test/
> >java/org/apache/cxf/systest/outofband/header/
> >
> >
> > 3 is definitely the simplest.   No interceptors needed.  Nothing
> > really to configure, etc
> >
> >
> > Dan
> >
> > On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> > > I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
> > > response header based on what happened in the execution of
> > > the method implementation.
> > >
> > > I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
> > > I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
> > > to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
> > > ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
> > > that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.
> > >
> > > also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Dan


Re: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-02-29 Thread Daniel Kulp

Of course, I typed all that and forgot the most obvious way:

Just add a parameter to your method like:

@WebParam(header = true, mode = Mode.OUT)
Holder header

Dan



On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that possibly needs
> a sample
>
> There are a couple options open to you:
>
> First, you need the context injected in:
> @Resource
> WebServiceContext context;
>
> 1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the WebServiceContext
> and in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ object model.   This
> is pure JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS implementation.  The
> "problem" is that with the SAAJ model, it breaks streaming and
> performance suffers.
>
> 2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw a value in
> the WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in your
> interceptor.   You can then call the soapMessage.getHeaders() thing to
> get the list of headers and add a Header object to it.
>
> 3) Context only: no interceptors needed.  In you impl do:
>
> context.
> ... build a org.apache.cxf.headers.Header object ...
> List hdrList = (List)ctx.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
> hdrList.add(hdr);
>
> And example of this would be our system test that test this:
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/cxf/trunk/systests/src/test/
>java/org/apache/cxf/systest/outofband/header/
>
>
> 3 is definitely the simplest.   No interceptors needed.  Nothing
> really to configure, etc
>
>
> Dan
>
> On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> > I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
> > response header based on what happened in the execution of
> > the method implementation.
> >
> > I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
> > I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
> > to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
> > ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
> > that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.
> >
> > also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Dan



-- 
J. Daniel Kulp
Principal Engineer, IONA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.dankulp.com/blog


Re: passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-02-29 Thread Daniel Kulp

OK.   This is turning into another FAQ type thing that possibly needs a 
sample

There are a couple options open to you:

First, you need the context injected in:
@Resource
WebServiceContext context;

1) Standard JAX-WS API's:  throw the value in the WebServiceContext and 
in a SoapHandler, use it to modify the SAAJ object model.   This is pure 
JAXWS and would work on any JAX-WS implementation.  The "problem" is 
that with the SAAJ model, it breaks streaming and performance suffers.

2) context + CXF interceptor: again, from your impl, throw a value in the 
WebServiceContext and then grab that from the message in your 
interceptor.   You can then call the soapMessage.getHeaders() thing to 
get the list of headers and add a Header object to it.  

3) Context only: no interceptors needed.  In you impl do:

context.
... build a org.apache.cxf.headers.Header object ...
List hdrList = (List)ctx.get(Header.HEADER_LIST));
hdrList.add(hdr);

And example of this would be our system test that test this:
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/cxf/trunk/systests/src/test/java/org/apache/cxf/systest/outofband/header/


3 is definitely the simplest.   No interceptors needed.  Nothing really 
to configure, etc


Dan




On Friday 29 February 2008, Daniel Lipofsky wrote:
> I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
> response header based on what happened in the execution of
> the method implementation.
>
> I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
> I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
> to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
> ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
> that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.
>
> also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?
>
> Thanks,
> Dan






-- 
J. Daniel Kulp
Principal Engineer, IONA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.dankulp.com/blog


passing a flag from impl method to interceptor

2008-02-29 Thread Daniel Lipofsky
I have a csae where I want to set something in the SOAP
response header based on what happened in the execution of
the method implementation.

I suppose I want to extend AbstractSoapInterceptor, but what
I can't figure out is how to pass a flag from the method
to the interceptor.  I thought about sticking it in the
ServletRequest attribute map but I don't see a way to access
that from the interceptor.  Any way to do it would be fine.

also is there an example of adding an element to a SOAP header?

Thanks,
Dan