Hi all,

  How can I make sure that the name of my web service implementation class does not 
get into the WSDL?[1]  Consider the following case.

  I have a class named SampleBean[2] that I want to be the implementation class for my 
web service, named BeanMessage.[3]  Why do I see "SampleBean" in the WSDL?[4]  When I 
generate Java client proxies, they also expose the implementation class name to the 
user.[5]

  My desire is that only "BeanMessage" will be used for the naming of all the elements 
(WSDL, client proxies, etc.) that are currently named "SampleBean".  Not only is this 
simpler, but it hides an implementation detail (the name of the service class) from 
the client, allowing me the flexibility to change service classes later without 
regenerating client proxies.

  I imagine this is a common problem.  Any suggestions?

[1] custom WSDL generation is not preferred ;)
[2] 
public class SampleBean
{
  public SampleBean(){}
  
  public String getMessage() 
  {
      return "Hello World."; 
  }
}
[3]
<service name="BeanMessage" provider="java:RPC">
  <parameter name="className" 
    value="com.apelon.webservice.test.SampleBean" />
    <parameter name="allowedMethods" value="*" />    
</service>
[4]
<wsdl:portType name="SampleBean">
  <wsdl:operation name="getMessage">
    <wsdl:input message="impl:getMessageRequest" name="getMessageRequest"/>
    <wsdl:output message="impl:getMessageResponse" name="getMessageResponse"/>
  </wsdl:operation>
</wsdl:portType>
[5]
BeanMessage/
  BeanMessageSoapBindingStub.java
  SampleBean.java
  SampleBeanService.java
  SampleBeanServiceLocator.java

  - Matt

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