Thanks for your answer.
But, IMO, tools should work for us as much as possible. I don“t want to write WSDD files myself, I want some tool to make that for me. Axis can do that, but still there is some job to be done.
Regards
Daniel
On 4/5/06, Chris Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Daniel Destro wrote:
> Axis code generation process seems to be a little bit cumbersome,
> because, first of all, I have to create the WSDL, then the
> server-side classes are generated from the WSDL. It would be much
> easier if we could do it with only one single step and it could also
> use my original business class instead of make me add code to
> delegate the calls from the XXXImpl class to the business class.
If you already have both the WSDL and the implementation classes, then you
don't need to use WSDL2Java at all. Instead, you would just write a WSDD
file pointing to your existing WSDL and Java code. You would need to
include type mappings in that file, potentially using bean serializers or
even custom serializers if your data classes are not beans. This will not
be a trivial process, since you need to match your existing code to the
existing WSDL interface, and there may be problems on either side.
WSDL2Java is meant to generate Java code, if it doesn't already exist... for
example, if you've built the interface specification first as a WSDL file
and a set of related XSDs, and then you want to build an implementation from
there.
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