Blog : JAX-WS Hello World Example – RPC Style

JAX-WS Hello World Example – RPC Style



JAX-WS is bundled with JDK 1.6, which makes Java web service development easier to develop. This tutorial shows you how to do the following tasks:

1.Create a SOAP-based RPC style web service endpoint by using JAX-WS.
2.Create a Java web service client manually.
3.Create a Java web service client via wsimport tool.
4.Create a Ruby web service client.
You will be surprise of how simple it is to develop a RPC style web service in JAX-WS.

Note
In general words, “web service endpoint” is a service which published outside for user to access; where “web service client” is the party who access the published service.
JAX-WS Web Service End Point
The following steps showing how to use JAX-WS to create a RPC style web service endpoint.

1. Create a Web Service Endpoint Interface
File : HelloWorld.java

package com.mkyong.ws;
 
import javax.jws.WebMethod;
import javax.jws.WebService;
import javax.jws.soap.SOAPBinding;
import javax.jws.soap.SOAPBinding.Style;
 
//Service Endpoint Interface
@WebService
@SOAPBinding(style = Style.RPC)
public interface HelloWorld{
 
   @WebMethod String getHelloWorldAsString(String name);
 
}2. Create a Web Service Endpoint Implementation
File : HelloWorldImpl.java

package com.mkyong.ws;
 
import javax.jws.WebService;
 
//Service Implementation
@WebService(endpointInterface = "com.mkyong.ws.HelloWorld")
public class HelloWorldImpl implements HelloWorld{
 
   @Override
   public String getHelloWorldAsString(String name) {
     return "Hello World JAX-WS " + name;
   }
 
}3. Create a Endpoint Publisher
File : HelloWorldPublisher.java

package com.mkyong.endpoint;
 
import javax.xml.ws.Endpoint;
import com.mkyong.ws.HelloWorldImpl;
 
//Endpoint publisher
public class HelloWorldPublisher{
 
   public static void main(String[] args) {
    Endpoint.publish("http://localhost:9999/ws/hello", new HelloWorldImpl());
  }
 
}Run the endpoint publisher, and your “hello world web service” is deployed in URL “http://localhost:9999/ws/hello“.

4. Test It
You can test the deployed web service by accessing the generated WSDL (Web Service Definition Language) document via this URL “http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl” .

Web Service Clients
Ok, web service is deployed properly, now let’s see how to create web service client to access to the published service.

1. Java Web Service Client
Without tool, you can create a Java web service client like this :

package com.mkyong.client;
 
import java.net.URL;
import javax.xml.namespace.QName;
import javax.xml.ws.Service;
import com.mkyong.ws.HelloWorld;
 
public class HelloWorldClient{
 
   public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
 
   URL url = new URL("http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl");
 
  //1st argument service URI, refer to wsdl document above
   //2nd argument is service name, refer to wsdl document above
  QName qname = new QName("http://ws.mkyong.com/", "HelloWorldImplService");
 
  Service service = Service.create(url, qname);
 
  HelloWorld hello = service.getPort(HelloWorld.class);
 
  System.out.println(hello.getHelloWorldAsString("mkyong"));
 
  }
 
}Output

Hello World JAX-WS mkyong2. Java Web Service Client via wsimport tool
Alternative, you can use “wsimport” tool to parse the published wsdl file, and generate necessary client files (stub) to access the published web service.

Where is wsimport?
This wsimport tool is bundle with the JDK, you can find it at “JDK_PATH/bin” folder.
Issue “wsimport” command.

wsimport -keep http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdlIt will generate necessary client files, which is depends on the provided wsdl file. In this case, it will generate one interface and one service implementation file.

File : HelloWorld.java

package com.mkyong.ws;
 
import javax.jws.WebMethod;
import javax.jws.WebParam;
import javax.jws.WebResult;
import javax.jws.WebService;
import javax.jws.soap.SOAPBinding;
 
/**
 * This class was generated by the JAX-WS RI.
 * JAX-WS RI 2.1.1 in JDK 6
 * Generated source version: 2.1
 *
 */
@WebService(name = "HelloWorld", targetNamespace = "http://ws.mkyong.com/")
@SOAPBinding(style = SOAPBinding.Style.RPC)
public interface HelloWorld {
 
  /**
  *
  * @param arg0
  * @return
  *  returns java.lang.String
  */
  @WebMethod
  @WebResult(partName = "return")
  public String getHelloWorldAsString(
  @WebParam(name = "arg0", partName = "arg0")
  String arg0);
 
}File : HelloWorldImplService.java

package com.mkyong.ws;
 
import java.net.MalformedURLException;
import java.net.URL;
import javax.xml.namespace.QName;
import javax.xml.ws.Service;
import javax.xml.ws.WebEndpoint;
import javax.xml.ws.WebServiceClient;
import javax.xml.ws.WebServiceFeature;
 
/**
 * This class was generated by the JAX-WS RI.
 * JAX-WS RI 2.1.1 in JDK 6
 * Generated source version: 2.1
 *
 */
@WebServiceClient(name = "HelloWorldImplService",
   targetNamespace = "http://ws.mkyong.com/",
   wsdlLocation = "http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl")
public class HelloWorldImplService
  extends Service
{
 
  private final static URL HELLOWORLDIMPLSERVICE_WSDL_LOCATION;
 
  static {
  URL url = null;
  try {
  url = new URL("http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl");
  } catch (MalformedURLException e) {
  e.printStackTrace();
  }
  HELLOWORLDIMPLSERVICE_WSDL_LOCATION = url;
  }
 
  public HelloWorldImplService(URL wsdlLocation, QName serviceName) {
  super(wsdlLocation, serviceName);
  }
 
  public HelloWorldImplService() {
  super(HELLOWORLDIMPLSERVICE_WSDL_LOCATION,
       new QName("http://ws.mkyong.com/", "HelloWorldImplService"));
  }
 
  /**
  *
  * @return
  *  returns HelloWorld
  */
  @WebEndpoint(name = "HelloWorldImplPort")
  public HelloWorld getHelloWorldImplPort() {
  return (HelloWorld)super.getPort(
       new QName("http://ws.mkyong.com/", "HelloWorldImplPort"),
       HelloWorld.class);
  }
 
  /**
  *
  * @param features
  *  A list of {@link javax.xml.ws.WebServiceFeature} to configure on the proxy.  
  *  Supported features not in the features parameter will have their default values.
  * @return
  *  returns HelloWorld
  */
  @WebEndpoint(name = "HelloWorldImplPort")
  public HelloWorld getHelloWorldImplPort(WebServiceFeature... features) {
  return (HelloWorld)super.getPort(
       new QName("http://ws.mkyong.com/", "HelloWorldImplPort"),
       HelloWorld.class,
       features);
  }
 
}Now, create a Java web service client which depends on the above generated files.

package com.mkyong.client;
 
import com.mkyong.ws.HelloWorld;
import com.mkyong.ws.HelloWorldImplService;
 
public class HelloWorldClient{
 
   public static void main(String[] args) {
 
     HelloWorldImplService helloService = new HelloWorldImplService();
     HelloWorld hello = helloService.getHelloWorldImplPort();
 
     System.out.println(hello.getHelloWorldAsString("mkyong"));
 
  }
 
}Here’s the output

Hello World JAX-WS mkyong3. Ruby Web Service Client
Often time, web service development is mixed use with other programming language. So, here’s a Ruby web service client example, which is used to access the published JAX-WS service.

# package for SOAP-based services
require 'soap/wsdlDriver'
 
wsdl_url = 'http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl'
 
service = SOAP::WSDLDriverFactory.new(wsdl_url).create_rpc_driver
 
# Invoke service operations.
data1 = service.getHelloWorldAsString('mkyong')
 
# Output results.
puts "getHelloWorldAsString : #{data1}"Output

getHelloWorldAsString : Hello World JAX-WS mkyongTracing SOAP Traffic
From top to bottom, showing how SOAP envelope flows between client and server. See #1 web service client again :

  URL url = new URL("http://localhost:9999/ws/hello?wsdl");
  QName qname = new QName("http://ws.mkyong.com/", "HelloWorldImplService");
  Service service = Service.create(url, qname);
 
  HelloWorld hello = service.getPort(HelloWorld.class);
 
  System.out.println(hello.getHelloWorldAsString("mkyong"));Note
To monitor SOAP traffic is very easy, see this guide – “How to trace SOAP message in Eclipse IDE“.
1. Request a WSDL file
First, client send a wsdl request to service endpoint, see HTTP traffic below :

Client send request :

GET /ws/hello?wsdl HTTP/1.1
User-Agent: Java/1.6.0_13
Host: localhost:9999
Accept: text/html, image/gif, image/jpeg, *; q=.2, */*; q=.2
Connection: keep-aliveServer send response :

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Transfer-encoding: chunked
Content-type: text/xml;charset=utf-8
 

 
   xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/"
   xmlns:tns="http://ws.mkyong.com/"
   xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
   xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/"
   targetNamespace="http://ws.mkyong.com/"
   name="HelloWorldImplService">
 
   
 

   


   

 

   
     
     
   


 

 
   
   
     
     
       
     
     
       
     

   

 

 





2. hello.getHelloWorldAsString()
A second call, client put method invoke request in SOAP envelope and send it to service endpoint. At the service endpoint, call the requested method and put the result in a SOAP envelope and send it back to client.

Client send request :

POST /ws/hello HTTP/1.1
SOAPAction: ""
Accept: text/xml, multipart/related, text/html, image/gif, image/jpeg, *; q=.2, */*; q=.2
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
User-Agent: Java/1.6.0_13
Host: localhost:9999
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 224
 

   
     
       
         mkyong
       

     

   
Server send response :

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Transfer-encoding: chunked
Content-type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
 

   
     
       
         Hello World JAX-WS mkyong
       

     

   
Done, any comments are appreciated.