Hi Ali,
Thanks for the links. I had read through these links, and I still am not able
to get the
complete picture of the service-side processing.
For e.g.,suppose my service class will look like this:
public class A
{
public void asyncservice(String data)
{
//determine the replyTo address
//queue data in the server for further processing
}
}
1) And when I get back response after processing at the server, how will I
communicate
this to the client?
2) What must the client set in the replyTo address? It doesnot have any
webservice
running. It's a simple .Net client.
Any answers for this will be very helpful. I apologize if I have overlooked
something.
Thanks,
Dalys
--- Ali Sadik Kumlali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Dalys,
>
> If you mean axis2, you might start from:
> - "Do a Non-Blocking Invocation" title in user guide[1]
> - "Request-Response, Non-Blocking that uses two transport connections" title
> in this[2]
> page.
> - Similar e-mails in axis-user list[3]
>
> Regards,
>
> Ali Sadik Kumlali
>
> [1] http://ws.apache.org/axis2/1_1/userguide.html
> [2] http://ws.apache.org/axis2/1_1/dii.html
> [3]
>
http://www.mail-archive.com/search?q=axis2%20asynchronous&[EMAIL
PROTECTED]&start=10
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Dalys Sebastian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 11:14:09 PM
> Subject: Using asynchronous messaging
>
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to figure out how to configure the service side for solving the
> following
> problem:
>
> The server gets a request from a client which cannot be immediately
> processed. It has
> to
> go to an external program to fetch information which may take a delay. Only
> after a
> response is obtained from the external program, can a response be sent back
> to the
> client.
>
> How do I implement the service-side logic to solve this issue? Till now I
> have been
> using
> the RPCMessageReceiver and performing only synchronous calls.
>
> 1) What's the MessageReceiver that needs to be used in these situations?
> 2) What must the client set in their reply-To address field? Should the
> client be
> running
> a separate webservice to get back responses?
> 3) And when I need to return back the response to the client, how does the
> server
> invoke
> it? is it as a webservice call with the To address same as the received
> replyTo field?
> 4) How must the client-side code be to get back the response? Using
> sendReceiveNonBlocking?
> If there is an example somewhere which can demonstrate these configurations,
> it would
> help a lot.
>
> Thank you,
> Dalys
>
>
>
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