To call a SOAP web service you have to send it a properly formatted SOAP message that respects the service's contract. That's it!
So basically to create a client you just need to build that XML message, for example, given this service, you can do the following (I'm assuming Java since you tagged the question like that - but it applies to any programming language):
1) use string concatenation (this is as basic as you can get):
int number1 = 1;
int number2 = 2;
String myMessage = "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\"?>"
+ "<soap:Envelope xmlns:xsi=\"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance\" xmlns:xsd=\"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema\" xmlns:soap=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\">"
+ " <soap:Body>"
+ " <Add xmlns=\"http://tempuri.org/\">"
+ " <intA>" + number1 + "</intA>"
+ " <intB>" + number2 + "</intB>"
+ " </Add>"
+ " </soap:Body>"
+ "</soap:Envelope>";
then do a (basic) POST that to the service taking care to provide it with the required HTTP headers (like SOAPAction
, etc).
2) manually build an XML document to send to the service, something like using SAAJ for example.
3) use the service WSDL and feed it to a tool (wsimport, wsdl2java, etc) from some framework/library (JAX-WS, Axis2, CXF, etc) to get back a client that abstracts the call to a simple method invocation taking Java objects and returning Java objects.
4) Any other method you can think of to create the SOAP message and send it as a POST request (I see you tagged the question JAXB, that will do too...).
Calling a SOAP web service is so common these days that nobody bothers to spend time building a client when there are tools for almost every language to generate one from the WSDL. It's boilerplate code.
People just want a client, to shove it in the project, to use it, and to move on to doing more important stuff in their application. That's why most go for point 3).
I see the ways of developing a clients for SOAP web services are independent of the web service implementation
Yes, you can have a service in a programming language/technology stack and the client in another. The SOAP protocol is the common denominator. Respect the protocol and service contract and the service can work with any client.