Andrew: BTW whats the java type of content in your java code. How does your NodeDocument class look like?
Praveen
----- Original Message ----- From: "BLIS Webmaster (Patrick Houbaux)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 6:13 PM
Subject: Re: Best way to send attachments
Andrew,
Does it mean that you send the attachment as a part of a java bean you sent in your a ws method parameter?
I did not think it was possible at all. Interesting I should try this out as well ;)
Cheers, Patrick.
ANDREW MICONE wrote:Sure, the here's a Java code snippet. Unfortunately, the .NET side is a black box to me, so I don't have any code to share. This will take the code generated by WSDL2Java and pull out the attachments from the "content" field which is typed as an xsd:anyType:
public static byte[] convertToBytes(NodeDocument doc)
{
Object content = null;
byte dataOUT[] = null;
content = doc.getContent();
if(content instanceof byte[])
dataOUT = (byte[])content;
else
if(content instanceof DataHandler)
{
DataHandler dhData = (DataHandler)content;
dataOUT = getBytesFromStream(dhData);
} else
if(content instanceof AttachmentPart)
{
AttachmentPart attch = (AttachmentPart)content;
dataOUT = getBytesFromStream(attch.getActivationDataHandler());
} else
{
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Could not convert to bytes from: " + content + " Argument type is unknown!");
}
return dataOUT;
}
private static byte[] getBytesFromStream(DataHandler data) { InputStream in = null; byte out[] = null; try { in = data.getInputStream(); if(in != null) { out = new byte[in.available()]; in.read(out); } else { out = new byte[0]; } } catch(IOException ex) { System.err.println("Could not get Bytes."); ex.printStackTrace(); } return out; }
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/07/05 03:30PM >>>
Does it mean that the following method should work fine if I change DataHandler to Object? Does it work w/o any changes in the method implementation?
public String createOrUpdateContentObjectWithAttachments(String sessionID,
String containerID, String xmlString, String customerID, String contentID, DataHandler source, String sourceFileName,
DataHandler thumb, String thumbFileName);
input argument DataHandler is sent stream. How would the client and server know that it has to send the stream for that specific argument. You are just sending xsd:AnyType.
Andy, do you mind sending your code. Or atleast the snippet of the method that takes attachment as input argument?. I would appreciate if could also send your .NET snippet.
Thannks Praveen
----- Original Message ----- From: "ANDREW MICONE" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 5:22 PM
Subject: RE: Best way to send attachments
Right, it's passed in either directly or by reference as xsd:anyType and then the receiver has to type the anyType to determine whether its base64encoded, SwA, or DIME. -- Andy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/07/05 03:10PM >>>
Nothing in that wsdl fragment indicates that there will be any MIME or DIME based attachments.
Cheers Simon-----Original Message-----
From: ANDREW MICONE [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 12:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Best way to send attachments
Here's an example of a WSDL snippet that is consumed by both .NET and Axis that handles attachments and interoperates between the two. This is from a service in production:
<complexType name="NodeDocument"> <sequence> <element name="name" nillable="true" type="xsd:string"/> <element name="type" nillable="true" type="xsd:string"/> <element name="content" nillable="true" type="xsd:anyType"/> </sequence> </complexType> <complexType name="ArrayofDoc"> <complexContent> <restriction base="soapenc:Array"> <attribute ref="soapenc:arrayType" wsdl:arrayType="tns1:NodeDocument[]"/> </restriction> </complexContent> </complexType>
BTW, I didn't write it, I just implemented it. -- Andy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/07/05 12:26PM >>>
I don't believe there is a way to define this in wsdl so that both .Net and Java(axis) can consume the wsdl. Someone please correct me if I am wrong. My clients just have to understand that certain methods have filles attached. I also allow them to set a request parameter do define whether the attachment should be set to Dime or Mime encoding (the service is Axis).
Raul
-----Original Message-----
From: BLIS Webmaster (Patrick Houbaux)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 1:12 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Best way to send attachments
I have no problem sending attachements to .NET client.
I have a RPC web service (I guess it works for other web service style), and here is the methodologie:
Let's assume you have a web service supposed to send some attachments, the idea is to add the attachment to the SOAP message before the web service method returns on the server side (please note the following is using AXIS 1.1, but it is almost the same with the latest version of AXIS, the AXIS API has changed a bit).
1- get the response message from the message context:
//... org.apache.axis.MessageContext msgContext= org.apache.axis.MessageContext.getCurrentContext();
org.apache.axis.Message rspMsg= msgContext.getResponseMessage();
2 - Set the attachment type to be sent as DIME
rspMsg.getAttachmentsImpl().setSendType(org.apache.axis.attach ments.Atta chments.SEND_TYPE_DIME);
3- Let's assume you want to send a file
java.io.File fileToAddAsAttachment = new java.io.File("<the path to your file>");
4- Add the file to attachment of the response message
javax.activation.DataHandler dh=new
javax.activation.DataHandler(new
javax.activation.FileDataSource(fileToAddAsAttachment));
org.apache.axis.attachments.AttachmentPart part = new org.apache.axis.attachments.AttachmentPart(dh);
rspMsg.addAttachmentPart(part);
5- Return your method
The drawback with that is I haven't figured out how to declare (with
java2wsdl) the attachment in the WSDL so you have to document your web service or inform your clients they have to expect some attachments when they call your method.
On the .NET client side, the method is the following:
1- Call the web service method
2- Just after the previous call returned, get the SOAP Response message context
SoapContext rspContext = service.ResponseSoapContext;
3- Get the DIME attachements, loop on them and write in a file what you find there:
DimeAttachmentCollection attachments = rspContext.Attachments;
for (int i=0; i<attachments.Count; i++)
{
Stream str = attachments[i].Stream;
FileStream fs = new FileStream("<the file name where you want to save the attachment>",FileMode.Create,FileAccess.Write);
((MemoryStream)str).WriteTo(fs);
str.Close();
fs.Close();
}
That's all, that works perfectly for me ... hope it helps.
Cheers, Patrick.
Vy Ho wrote:
All of the reples make no sense whatsover to me.
The original poster makes a very clear question that how to send attachments using soap way that works with many environments. For example, Axis and .Net.
To rephrase this, I would say how to create a Wsdl that works with both axis and .net. Currently, using the DataHandler in
the wsdl (orgenerating the wsdl from java code with DataHandler) would not work with other environment. I haven't tried this, but looking at the definition of DataHandler (package name), and its namespace in the wsdl, you can tell it comes from apache, not some Soap standard, unless Apache is the official standard used for attachment.
It's funny to read a bunch of replies that have little
answer value to
the original question.