Oh, I forgot to mention that you need the latest version of JabberBeans to 
make this work.

- James Snell
     IBM Emerging Technologies
     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
     (559) 587-1233 (office)
     (700) 544-9035 (t/l)
     Programming Web Services With SOAP
         O'Reilly & Associates, ISBN 0596000952

     Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. 
     Do not be terrified, do not be discouraged, for the Lord your 
     God will be with you whereever you go.    - Joshua 1:9



James M Snell/Fresno/IBM@IBMUS
12/30/2002 06:37 PM
Please respond to axis-dev


To
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc

bcc

Subject
Re: cvs commit: xml-axis/proposals/jabber Axis1.0_JabberTransport.zip 
readme



FYI....  I just committed an experimental jabber transport for Axis 1.0 in
the proposals directory.  I'll continue to evolve this over time, but it
works at a basic level.  It is NOT interoperable with other SOAP over
Jabber implementations (e.g. SOAP::Lite)

Experimental Jabber Transport for Axis 1.0

1. How to create an Axis Jabber Server

//String jabberID = "[username]@[jabber server]/[service name]";
String jabberID = "[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1";
JabberServer server = new JabberServer(jabberID, password);

[username]      == Your Jabber username (e.g. JamesMSnell)
[jabber server] == The jabber server (e.g. jabber.org)
[service name]  == The name of the individual Axis service being
exposed

2. How to create an Axis Jabber Client

JabberTransport transport = new JabberTransport();
transport.setTo("[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1");
Service service = new Service(new XMLStringProvider(dep));
Call call = (Call)service.createCall();
call.setOperationName(new QName("urn:test", "echo"));
call.addParameter("arg", XMLType.XSD_STRING, ParameterMode.IN);
call.setReturnType(XMLType.XSD_STRING);
call.setTransport(transport);
call.setUsername("[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client");
call.setPassword(password);
String s = (String)call.invoke(new String[] {"test"});
System.out.println(s);


3. What's on the wire

<iq
type="set"
to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1"
from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client">
<!-- SOAP Envelope -->
</iq>

<iq
type="result"
to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client"
from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1">
<!-- SOAP Envelope -->
</iq>

This is different from the version of the Jabber SOAP binding that other

toolkits use in that it eliminates an unnecessary extra element that
adds
no value.

Will work on better documentation later.

- James Snell
IBM Emerging Technologies
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(559) 587-1233 (office)
(700) 544-9035 (t/l)
Programming Web Services With SOAP
O'Reilly & Associates, ISBN 0596000952

Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous.
Do not be terrified, do not be discouraged, for the Lord your
God will be with you whereever you go.    - Joshua 1:9



[EMAIL PROTECTED]
12/30/2002 06:34 PM
Please respond to axis-dev


To
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc

bcc

Subject
cvs commit: xml-axis/proposals/jabber Axis1.0_JabberTransport.zip readme



jmsnell     2002/12/30 18:34:51

Added:       proposals/jabber Axis1.0_JabberTransport.zip readme
Log:
Experimental Jabber Transport for Axis 1.0

Revision  Changes    Path
1.1                  xml-axis/proposals/jabber/Axis1.0_JabberTransport.zip

<<Binary file>>


1.1                  xml-axis/proposals/jabber/readme

Index: readme
===================================================================

Experimental Jabber Transport for Axis 1.0


1. How to create an Axis Jabber Server

//String jabberID = "[username]@[jabber server]/[service name]";
String jabberID = "[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1";
JabberServer server = new JabberServer(jabberID, password);

[username]      == Your Jabber username (e.g. JamesMSnell)
[jabber server] == The jabber server (e.g. jabber.org)
[service name]  == The name of the individual Axis service being exposed

2. How to create an Axis Jabber Client

JabberTransport transport = new JabberTransport();
transport.setTo("[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1");
Service service = new Service(new XMLStringProvider(dep));
Call call = (Call)service.createCall();
call.setOperationName(new QName("urn:test", "echo"));
call.addParameter("arg", XMLType.XSD_STRING, ParameterMode.IN);
call.setReturnType(XMLType.XSD_STRING);
call.setTransport(transport);
call.setUsername("[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client");
call.setPassword(password);
String s = (String)call.invoke(new String[] {"test"});
System.out.println(s);


3. What's on the wire

<iq
type="set"
to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1"
from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client">
<!-- SOAP Envelope -->
</iq>

<iq
type="result"
to="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/client"
from="[EMAIL PROTECTED]/service1">
<!-- SOAP Envelope -->
</iq>

This is different from the version of the Jabber SOAP binding that other
toolkits use in that it eliminates an unnecessary extra element that adds
no value.

Will work on better documentation later.




Reply via email to