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A client of mine has asked me to integrate a 3rd party API into their Rails app. The only problem is that the API uses SOAP. Ruby has basically dropped SOAP in favor of REST. They provide a Java adapter that apparently works with the Java-Ruby bridge, but we'd like to keep it all in Ruby, if possible. I looked into soap4r, but it seems to have a slightly bad reputation.

So what's the best way to integrate SOAP calls into a Rails app?

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We used the built in soap/wsdlDriver class, which is actually SOAP4R. It's dog slow, but really simple. The SOAP4R that you get from gems/etc is just an updated version of the same thing.

Example code:

require 'soap/wsdlDriver'

client = SOAP::WSDLDriverFactory.new( 'http://site.com/service.wsdl' ).create_rpc_driver
result = client.doStuff();

That's about it

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Part of the reason why this is "Dog Slow" is that you are building the proxy every time you connect to the service. You could avoid this pain by using wsdl2ruby to build the proxy permanently and then call the pre-generated proxy. – Steve Weet Feb 20 at 22:56
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Try SOAP4R

And I just heard about this on the Rails Envy Podcast (ep 31):

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Kent Sibilev from Datanoise had also ported the Rails ActionWebService library to Rails 2.1 (and above). This allows you to expose your own Ruby-based SOAP services. He even has a scaffold/test mode which allows you to test your services using a browser.

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