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tl;dr version: Is there a way to force a strict mode for JAX-WS that rejects invalid base64 for the base64Binary XSD data type?


Longer version: I have a web service that receives binary data which gets mapped to the XSD type base64Binary. While testing the service I found out that JAX-WS is very lenient when it comes to parsing of Base64 strings. No matter how invalid my input was, I could not get JAX-WS to produce an error.

I created a small test service and client that illustrates the problem. It can be copied more or less verbatim:

Service interface:

@WebService
public interface ITest2 {
    @WebMethod
    void foo(byte[] bs);
}

Service implementation and test:

@WebService(endpointInterface="foo.bar.ITest2")
public class Test2 implements ITest2 {

    private static final String requestTemplate = "<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\" xmlns:bar=\"http://bar.foo/\">" +
            "<soapenv:Header/>" +
            "<soapenv:Body>" +
            "<bar:foo>" +
            "<arg0>%s</arg0>" +
            "</bar:foo>" +
            "</soapenv:Body>" +
            "</soapenv:Envelope>";

    private static final String[] testVector = {
        "////==",
        "///==",
        "//==",
        "/==",
        "/==/==/==",
        "&lt;&gt;",
        "=====",
        "%%%///%%%==%%"
    };

    private static PrintWriter pw;

    static {
        try {
            pw = new PrintWriter("/tmp/output");
        } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            throw new RuntimeException(e);
        }
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {

        Endpoint e = Endpoint.publish("http://localhost:54321/foo", new Test2());

        URL requestUrl = new URL("http://localhost:54321/foo");

        for(String testVal : testVector) {
            pw.println("[client] >" + testVal + "<");
            HttpURLConnection urlc = (HttpURLConnection) requestUrl.openConnection();
            urlc.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "text/xml;charset=UTF-8");

            urlc.setDoOutput(true);

            OutputStream out = urlc.getOutputStream();

            String request = String.format(requestTemplate, testVal);

            out.write(request.getBytes());
            out.flush();

            InputStream in = urlc.getInputStream();
            int read = -1;
            byte[] buf = new byte[1024];
            while((read = in.read(buf)) != -1) {
                System.err.print(new String(buf, 0, read));
            }
            System.err.println();
        }

        pw.flush();
        pw.close();

    }

    @Override
    public void foo(byte[] bs) {
        String encoded;
        if(bs == null) {
            encoded = "<null>";
        } else if(bs.length == 0) {
            encoded = "<empty>";
        } else {
            encoded = new String(Base64.encodeBase64(bs));
        }
        pw.println("[server] >" + encoded + "<");
    }

}

This produces the following output in /tmp/output (I'm using Jetty which logs quite a lot to the console and didn't want to bother with that):

[client] >////==<
[server] ><null><
[client] >///==<
[server] ><null><
[client] >/w==<
[server] >/w==<
[client] >/==<
[server] ><null><
[client] >/==/==/==<
[server] >/////w==<
[client] >&lt;&gt;<
[server] ><empty><
[client] >=====<
[server] >/w==<
[client] >%%%///%%%==%%<
[server] >//8=<

So it's a complete mess. Sometimes I receive null, sometimes an empty string and sometimes garbage gets replaced by other garbage. Also every request produces an HTTP reply 200 so nobody knows that anywhere something went wrong.

I know that you can force JAXB to validate this by adding a schema to an Unmarshaller. Since JAX-WS uses JAXB internally I hope that there is a possibility to turn that on for web services as well. Does anybody know if that's possible and how?

I use the default JAX-WS implementation from Oracle Java 1.6.0_24 on Ubuntu.

share|improve this question

1 Answer

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You can enable schema validation in Metro (the JAXWS-RI) by adding the com.sun.xml.internal.ws.developer.SchemaValidation annotation on your endpoint implementation - Test2.

This causes a SOAP fault of the form:

...
<S:Fault xmlns:ns4="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope">
  <faultcode>S:Server</faultcode>
  <faultstring>com.sun.istack.internal.XMLStreamException2:
       org.xml.sax.SAXParseException: cvc-datatype-valid.1.2.1: 
       'foo' is not a valid value for 'base64Binary'.</faultstring>
...

Technically, I believe that faultcode should be S:Client, but what do I know.

To the best of my knowledge there is no implementation agnostic way to do this; so if you deploy the code in another JAX-WS container, you'll have to use the mechanism for that container.

share|improve this answer
It's a bummer that you need to use an implementation specific annotation but what can you do. Now I just have to find out how to use that in an OSGI container but this is another question. I also think you made a typo in the package for the annotation; I think it should be com.sun.xml.ws.developer. Oh, I also share your concerns that this should be a client error... – musiKk May 17 '11 at 8:48
@musiKk - Thanks - I'd missed that (IDE import tooling, then cut'n'paste.) I expect this is part of the re-namespacing the core API developers do when consuming libraries. To use the namespace in the link, you may need to download the RI and place it in an endorsed part of the classpath to override the default implementation. If you're doing this anyway you might want to pick an implementation that doesn't require annotations for schema validation. – McDowell May 17 '11 at 10:02

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