What's the difference between XML-RPC and SOAP?

Scott Saad picture Scott Saad · Sep 17, 2008 · Viewed 69.3k times · Source

I've never really understand why a web service implementer would choose one over the other. Is XML-RPC generally found in older systems? Any help in understanding this would be greatly appreciated.

Answer

Christopher Mahan picture Christopher Mahan · Sep 18, 2008

Differences?

SOAP is more powerful, and is much preferred by software tool vendors (MSFT .NET, Java Enterprise edition, that sort of things).

SOAP was for a long time (2001-2007ish) seen as the protocol of choice for SOA. xml-rpc not so much. REST is the new SOA darling, although it's not a protocol.

SOAP is more verbose, but more capable.

SOAP is not supported in some of the older stuff. For example, no SOAP libs for classic ASP (that I could find).

SOAP is not well supported in python. XML-RPC has great support in python, in the standard library.

SOAP supports document-level transfer, whereas xml-rpc is more about values transfer, although it can transfer structures such as structs, lists, etc.

xm-rpc is really about program to program language agnostic transfer. It primarily goes over http/https. SOAP messages can go over email as well.

xml-rpc is more unixy. It lets you do things simply, and when you know what you're doing, it's very fast to deploy quality web services, even when using terminal text editors. Doing SOAP that way is a zoo; you really need a good IDE to make it feasible.

Knowing SOAP, though, will look much better on your resume/CV if you're vying for a Fortune 500 IT job.

xml-rpc has some issues with non-ascii character sets.

XML-RPC does not support named parameters. They must be in correct order. Not sure about SOAP, but think so.