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I started recently to develop some SOAP and REST web services. In SOAP web services, I found out that I must develop a client first so I can consume the service.

I would like to know the different ways to develop a client for a web service.

I see the ways of developing a clients for SOAP web services are independent of the web service implementation (CXF, AXIS, JAXB). For example, a way to create a client is using the wsimport command line that generates a client code by giving the WSDL as an argument.

What about other ways?

1 Answer 1

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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.

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