Before anything else, I want you to know that I can already connect to the web service server. I'm asking this question because I want to gain a deeper knowledge on how a wsimport generated client works. Based from my research, wsimport uses JAXWS. Please note that I have no knowledge from JAXWS.
I generated my client using wsimport. The WSDL I used is from an Axis2 web service and was automatically generated by Axis2. The classes below are the results of wsimport:
Under com.datamodel.xsd
DataBeanRequest.java
DataBeanResponse.java
ObjectFactory.java
package-info.java
Under com.service
MyWebService.java
MyWebServicePortType.java
MyMethod.java
MyMethodResponse.java
ObjectFactory.java
package-info.java
With the classes above, I can that tell that com.datamodel.xsd
contains the beans used by the web service server (excluding ObjectFactory
and package-info
). Meanwhile, MyMethod
and MyMethodResponse
are also beans used to set the request and response parameter of the web service method/operation.
Below are my questions: (You don't really have to answer all of it if you don't know the answers on some of my questions. :) And please feel free to share any info that you think I might find useful.)
Am I correct with
MyWebService
and it contains an annotation referring to the absolute location of the WSDL I used to generate the client. What is the relevance of specifying the wsdllocation
in the client? How does the client use that info?wsimport
command has a wsdllocation
attribute wherein the value of the wsdllocation
can be specified.)Before I answer the questions, some clarification: JAX-WS is a specification for implementing web services in Java. It describes how WSDL artifacts can be mapped to Java classes and how this mapping can be applied using annotations. You can download the specification here. The tool wsimport is part of the reference implementation of this specification and the reference implementation is part of the Java class library. There are several alternative implementations, such as Axis2, CXF or Metro, that enhance the basic JAX-WS support with support for additional standards such as WS-ReliableMessaging or WS-Security.
Now to your questions:
Am I correct with my assumptions above?
Yes, you are.
What are the function of the other classes?
The package-info
exists to map the XML namespace used in the web service to the package in which your implementation classes reside. The namespace normally looks different from a Java package name (normally, it is a URL) and this makes the mapping necessary.
The ObjectFactory
allows you to create any of the messages sent and received by the service. You need this if you want to hook in code in front of your stub class, provide modified messages or similar things.
I can't see the content of your classes, but if I understand it right MyWebServicePortType
is an interface that resembles the portType
in your WSDL. That is, it maps the operations and their signatures in the WSDL to Java methods. If you want to provide the service (which you don't, you are asking about the client), you would need to implement this interface. As you implement the client, you simply use it.
Finally, the class MyWebService
contains the client stub you need if you want to invoke the web service.
I inspected MyWebService and it contains an annotation referring to the absolute location of the WSDL I used to generate the client. What is the relevance of specifying the wsdllocation in the client? How does the client use that info?
The interface you generated contains the signature of the portType
of the service, but it does not explain how you can talk to the service. This is part of the binding in the WSDL. The most basic setting is a document/literal style for the messages using SOAP over HTTP. Other configurations, such as SOAP over JMS, are possible and your client needs to know what protocol to use. Therefore it needs the binding WSDL. Also, as you state later, there is no endpoint address in your Java files. This address is also read from the WSDL.
I noticed that the actual URL of the web service is not declared in any of the classes generated. How does the client know where it needs to connect to?
It reads the address
from the port
of the service
in the WSDL. This is located of the end of the WSDL.
Was the WSDL file annotated so that the client can read the URL on the WSDL file upon connection?
No, the port
is a typical element of a concrete web service endpoint. There's nothing special needed here.
If so, then does it mean that the WSDL file is always read when a new connection must be established?
Well, there could be caching at the client side (I don't know about the details of the reference implementation on this one). From a conceptual point of view: yes, it is.
What if I need to connect to an HTTPS. How can I set the server certificate
This can be tricky, I can't give you an out-of-the-box answer. I would suggest to read through questions on this topic, such as this one.
Is there any difference when I generate my client using wsimport and when I generate it using Axis2 or Apache CXF
Yes, there is. wsimport is better, don't use wsdl2java. Here is a description, why.