How to unmarshall SOAP response using JAXB if namespace declaration is on SOAP envelope?

Arci picture Arci · Jul 13, 2012 · Viewed 50.5k times · Source

JAXB can only unmarshall an XML if the soap envelope has already been removed. However, the SOAP response I'm trying to unmarshall has its namespace declaration on the soap envelope. If I remove the soap envelope, the namespace declaration will also be removed. As such the prefix of the tags will be referring to none. This causes JAXB to throw an error. How can I unmarshall a SOAP response using JAXB if the namespace is declared on the SOAP envelope?

A similar sample of the XML that I need to unmarshall is below:

<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:ns="http://example.com/">
    <soapenv:Body>
        <ns:getNumberResponse>
            <number>123456789</number>
        </ns:getNumberResponse>
    </soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>

This is what happens if I remove the soap envelope:

<ns:getNumberResponse>
    <number>123456789</number>
</ns:getNumberResponse>

If I removed the soap envelope, the namespace declaration will also be gone. JAXB won't be able to unmarshall the above xml because the namespace definition for the prefix "ns" is missing. As such it will return a "The prefix "ns" for element "ns:getNumberResponse" is not bound." error message. How do I fix it?

Please note that I'm using JDK 1.5. I'm not sure if there is a way to solve this in JDK 1.6. I was able to use JAXB because I downloaded the required jars for using JAXB.

Answer

bdoughan picture bdoughan · Jul 13, 2012

You can use a StAX parser to parse the SOAP message and then advance the XMLStreamReader to the getNumberResponse element and use the unmarshal method that takes a class parameter. A StAX parser is included in Java SE 6, but you will need to download one for Java SE 5. Woodstox is a popular StAX parser.

Response

package forum11465653;

public class Response {

    private long number;

    public long getNumber() {
        return number;
    }

    public void setNumber(long number) {
        this.number = number;
    }

}

Demo

An XMLStreamReader has a NamespaceContext. The NamespaceContext knows all the active namespace declarations for the current level. Your JAXB (JSR-222) implementation will be able to leverage this to get the necessary information.

package forum11465653;

import java.io.FileReader;
import javax.xml.bind.*;
import javax.xml.stream.*;

public class Demo {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception{
        XMLInputFactory xif = XMLInputFactory.newFactory();
        XMLStreamReader xsr = xif.createXMLStreamReader(new FileReader("src/forum11465653/input.xml"));
        xsr.nextTag(); // Advance to Envelope tag
        xsr.nextTag(); // Advance to Body tag
        xsr.nextTag(); // Advance to getNumberResponse tag
        System.out.println(xsr.getNamespaceContext().getNamespaceURI("ns"));

        JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance(Response.class);
        Unmarshaller unmarshaller = jc.createUnmarshaller();
        JAXBElement<Response> je = unmarshaller.unmarshal(xsr, Response.class);
        System.out.println(je.getName());
        System.out.println(je.getValue());
    }

}

Output

http://example.com/
{http://example.com/}getNumberResponse
forum11465653.Response@781f6226