Robert - You description sounds correct.
See /samples/message or /samples/proxy for examples of how to perform XML document based messaging. Another way to pass an XML document over the wire would be to use an RPC call with a String argument whose value is encoded in XML. The string would then need to be serialized/deserialized by your service and/or client methods. It is a bit of a kludge to have the ser/desers inside the service/client stub, but you get to re-use the simple plumbing framework that is created automagically by Java2WSDL and WSDL2Java. In other words, the upside is that you don't see the under the hood MessageContext or Call objects. The downside is that you see a fair amount of XML DOM manipulation. Cheers, /Chris -----Original Message----- From: Robert Evans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, April 01, 2002 5:59 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Beginner trying to understand how to pass XML document instead of RPC calls Greetings, I have been trying to figure out how to pass an XML document to a web service instead of just making RPC calls. I think I found a way, based on the example in the AXIS documentation, but I want to see if I am correct, or if there is an easier/better way. It seems that once you have a Document, you can use XMLUtils to convert it to a String, convert the String to a StringBufferInputStream, and then use this InputStream to create a Message object, which in turn can be used by setRequestMessage(...). Finally invoke can be called. Now even though I think this works, it seems to be rather cumbersome. Have I missed something? I'm working from the AXIS release documentation and Building Web Services with Java (out of date based on the new Axis release). I'd appreciate any pointers in the right location..... Bob Evans JHU/APL