In the samples, look at:  samples\stock\GetQuote.wsdl
it has a java binding as well as a normal http one.
-Dug



Alex Dovlecel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>@ford.kbs.twi.tudelft.nl> on
12/04/2002 02:42:48 PM

Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:    Alex Dovlecel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


To:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject:    Re: Incorporate the AXIS into my web app.


On Wednesday 04 December 2002 20:26, you wrote:
> Axis supports a "java" binding natively so no http will be involved.
Can you detail a little on this. Or provide some links ;o)

Dog and Steve Tx alot
dovle

(I know where to find WSIF but not how to use the java binding ??? ) :)

> -Dug
>
>
> "Steve Parker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 12/04/2002 02:23:52 PM
>
> Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> To:    [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> cc:
> Subject:    Re: Incorporate the AXIS into my web app.
>
>
>
> Look at also using WSIF (Web Services Invocation Framework).  It will
allow
> a
> dynamic binding to occur - so your calls will go over SOAP (Axis) when
> needed, and locally when that is all that is needed.
>
> On Wed, 4 Dec 2002 19:19:14 +0100, Alex Dovlecel wrote
>
> > hello all,
> >
> > I know this subject was debated some days ago. I have tried to
> > follow the thread and was pretty interesting. But I haven't found
> > anything about this:
> >
> > My web app (that will incorporate the axis), when calling an axis
> > server, should not encode the call in an axis envelope and send it
> > to localhost but just to call the method. Or somehow to invoke the
> > chain that leads to the required method. How can I achieve this?
> >
> > REason: will be quite a performance drawback to marshall the params
> > in xml format, then unmarshall them on the same application!!! It is
> > senseless!!! Like calling a local method using RMI !!!
> >
> > So could I get any hints on this one?
> >
> > Tx
> > dovle



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