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Published byRonald Casey Modified over 8 years ago
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WSTK Development toolkit for Java Implementation of Web Services By Keping Jia
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1.Intruduction Soap HTTP
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Why? 1.Facilitate software integration ----Platform and language independent. WSDL,SOAP,XML ----Dynamic finding & binding UDDI 2.Comply with existing Internet infrastructure. ----SOAP over HTTP
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Implementation practice 1.Abstract architecture client Web service deployment environment SOAP/HTTP binding 2.Implementation architecture client http parsersoap parser service implementation http 3.Java implementation architecture client web serverServlet Java class J2EE http soap private protocol
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2. WSTK --- Web service tool kit 2.1 Composition
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Client side
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Service side
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Example: public class jkpAdd { public int add(int a,int b) { return a+b; } 1.Compile jkpAdd.java 2. Creating jkpAdd WSDL Descriptions. There are two files that need to be created: (1) A service interface definition and (2) A service implementation definition.
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Interface WSDL:
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Service WSDL: Generating command: java -cp %WSTK_CP% org.apache.axis.wsdl.Java2WSDL -N http://jkpAddhttp://jkpAdd -n http://jkpAdd-interfacehttp://jkpAdd-interface -o c:\wstk-3.1\services\applications\jkpAdd\webapp\jkpAdd_Interface.wsdl -O c:\wstk-3.1\services\applications\jkpAdd\webapp\jkpAdd_Impl.wsdl -L "http://localhost:80/jkpAdd/jkpAdd_Interface.wsdl" -m "add" -l http://localhost:80/jkpAdd/services/jkpAddhttp://localhost:80/jkpAdd/services/jkpAdd jkpAdd
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3.Deploying services (1) Creating the axis deployment descriptor (2) Deploying the service WAR with the WSTK configuration tool
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3.Registering the service with Axis DEPLOY http://localhost:^ /jkpAdd/services/AdminService deploy.wsdd
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Service publishing
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More in detail ……
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Example:
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--- TModel
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//Program example: import java.util.Vector; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.client.UDDIWSDLProxy; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.provider.ServiceProvider; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.axis.AxisServiceDefinition; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.definition.ServiceInterface; import org.uddi4j.util.CategoryBag; import org.uddi4j.util.KeyedReference; import com.ibm.wstk.uddi.TModelKeyTable; import com.ibm.wstk.WSTKConstants; public class NQPublish{ public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception { try { //------------------------------------------------------ // let's collect the input arguments //------------------------------------------------------ String serviceImplementationWSDL = args[0]; String serviceInterfaceWSDL = args[1]; //------------------------------------------------------ // this will use whatever UDDI registry you selected // in the WSTK Configuration Tool //------------------------------------------------------ UDDIWSDLProxy uwp = new UDDIWSDLProxy(WSTKConstants.UDDI_INQUIRY_URL, WSTKConstants.UDDI_PUBLISH_URL, WSTKConstants.UDDI_USERID, WSTKConstants.UDDI_CRED, WSTKConstants.TRANSPORT_CLASS);
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//------------------------------------------------------ // assuming that you haven't yet registered yourself as // a Service Provider, do the following steps. If you // have already registered as a service provider, you // should use your existing registration //------------------------------------------------------ KeyedReference keyedReference = new KeyedReference(TModelKeyTable.UNSPSC, "84.12.18.01.00"); keyedReference.setTModelKey(TModelKeyTable.UNSPSC_TMODEL_KEY); Vector keyedReferenceVector = new Vector(); keyedReferenceVector.add(keyedReference); // Create category bag CategoryBag spCatList = new CategoryBag(); spCatList.setKeyedReferenceVector(keyedReferenceVector); ServiceProvider sp = new ServiceProvider("WSTK 3.1 jkpAdd", "WSTK 3.1 jkpAdd", spCatList); sp = uwp.publish(sp); //------------------------------------------------------ // now we publish the service interface //------------------------------------------------------ ServiceInterface si = new ServiceInterface(serviceInterfaceWSDL); si = uwp.publish(si);
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//------------------------------------------------------ // now we deploy and publish the service itself //------------------------------------------------------ keyedReference = new KeyedReference(TModelKeyTable.UNSPSC, "84.12.18.01.00"); keyedReference.setTModelKey(TModelKeyTable.UNSPSC_TMODEL_KEY); keyedReferenceVector = new Vector(); keyedReferenceVector.add(keyedReference); // Create category bag CategoryBag sdCatList = new CategoryBag(); spCatList.setKeyedReferenceVector(keyedReferenceVector); // AxisServiceDefinition sd = new AxisServiceDefinition( serviceImplementationWSDL, sdCatList, serviceDeployment, serviceMgr); uwp.publish(sp, sd); //- publish the service } catch (Exception e) { System.out.println("There was an error (" + e + ")"); }
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UDDI APIs tend to fall into four broad categories. 1. There are messages used to search for things such as businesses or services. These messages start with find_xxx where xxx is the name type of object you are searching for, e.g. find_business and find_service. Like any search mechanism, find messages let you specify search criteria such as names, categories and identifiers. When searching by names, you can specify a % sign as a wildcard character. 2.The second group of messages is the detail messages which follow the naming convention get_xxxDetail where xxx is the type of object for which you want detailed information. For example, get_businessDetail and get_tModelDetail return the details of a business and a tModel respectively. A get_xxxDetail message contains the unique identifier of the object for which you want detailed information. For example, get_businessDetail contains a businessKey while get_tModelDetail contains a tModelKey. 3.The third group is the save messages, e.g save_business and save_binding. These APIs can be used to save new objects or to replace existing objects. When saving new objects, the response message contains the newly saved object key. 4.Finally, the delete messages such as delete_business and delete_publisherAssertions, delete specified objects. Similar to get_xxxDetail messages, most delete messages also require a key that uniquely identifies the object to be deleted. Finding services in UDDI
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Finding a Business by Name
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Finding Businesses by Categories
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Finding Service Interfaces
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Finding Businesses by Service Interface
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Finding Services by Name
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Example: import java.util.Vector; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.client.UDDIWSDLProxy; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.definition.ServiceDefinition; import com.ibm.uddi4j.wsdl.provider.ServiceProvider; import com.ibm.wstk.wsdl.*; import com.ibm.wstk.*; public class NasdaqQuotesClient { public static String findUDDI(String service) throws Exception { try { UDDIWSDLProxy uwp = new UDDIWSDLProxy(WSTKConstants.UDDI_INQUIRY_URL, WSTKConstants.UDDI_PUBLISH_WSTK Constants.UDDI_USERID, WSTKConstants.UDDI_CRED, WSTKConstants.TRANSPORT_CLASS); Vector providerNameVector = new Vector(); providerNameVector.add(new Name("WSTK 3.1 jkpAdd")); ServiceProvider[] sps = uwp.findAllServiceProviders(null, providerNameVector, null,null,null,null,true); if (sps.length > 0) { ServiceDefinition sd = sps[0].getServiceDefinition(service); //service: jkpAdd return sd.getServiceImplementation().getWSDLFilename(); } else { return null; } } catch (Exception e) { System.out.println(e.getMessage()); System.exit(0); return null; }
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2.2 WSTK structure
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