Hi Cyrille/robert,
Thanks for your response!!
There is nothing called "MessageContext.getCurrentContext()" in websphere soap engine!!
Its only there in axis webservice engine.Dont know the reason.Thers something called
MessageContext.getCurrentThreadsContext() in one of the MessageContext classes[I say one because i found out 3 different MessageContext classes]
I too got stuck into the problem of statefull/stateless webservices and after analysing a lot decided to go with "stateless session bean with maintaining state in HTTPSession object".
If i go with POJO[simple stupid java beans],hows session maintainence being done there??How does it do session tracking??does it use cookies to do that??[jsessionID ??]
Many Thanks
Prashanth
On 2/14/06, Cyrille Le Clerc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
Hi Prashanth ,
It is strange to use stateless ejb for a stateful web service?
Can you go stateful ? Do you really need ejbs ? Otherwise, simple
stupid java beans will gracefully do the job. Syntax will look like a
simple "MessageContext.getProperty()" or something like this that will
rely on the HttpSession ; I couldn't find Websphere SOAP library
documentation to check.
Cyrille
--
Cyrille Le Clerc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 2/14/06, prashanth shivakumar < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi Cyrille,
> Thanks for your response.
> SInce iam using ejb endpoint[stateless session EJB] for webservice implementation using ibm websphere,how can i get hold of MessageContext on the server end inside stateless session bean??
>
> Many Thanks
>
>
>
>
> On 2/13/06, Cyrille Le Clerc <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:
> > Hello Prashanth,
> >
> > After your invocation, you have to play with
> > "binding._getCall().getMessageContext()" and then get properties
> > " HTTPConstants.HEADER_COOKIE" and " HTTPConstants.HEADER_COOKIE2".
> >
> > Here is a sample :
> > TestSessionBindingStub binding = (TestSessionBindingStub) new
> > testSessionServiceLocator().gettestSessionBinding();
> > binding.setMaintainSession(true);
> >
> > // invoke remote operation
> > String result = binding.aMethod();
> >
> > MessageContext messageContext = binding._getCall().getMessageContext();
> > String cookie1 = (String)
> > messageContext.getProperty(HTTPConstants.HEADER_COOKIE);
> > String cookie2 = (String)
> > messageContext.getProperty(HTTPConstants.HEADER_COOKIE2);
> > System.out.println("cookie1=" + cookie1);
> > System.out.println ("cookie2=" + cookie2);
> >
> > Hope this helps,
> >
> > Cyrille
> >
> > --
> > Cyrille Le Clerc
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > On 2/7/06, prashanth shivakumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:
> > >
> > > Hello All,
> > > Is there any way wherein i can extract cookies from MessageContext inside custom MessageHandler.
> > > I tried using msgContext.getProperty ("Cookie"); but it returns NULL
> > > Yes..I did set up sessions on both client/server and can see cookie passing between client/server and viceversa
> > >
> > > Many Thanks
