I tried that and nothing changed. I tried moving that block to after the jetty
server is running and it doesn't make that much of a difference.
Should I be worried that I have to use a full url as the first parameter to
Endpoint.publish? In the example I saw, it only had the path.
On Thursday 25 October 2007, Willem2 wrote:
> Hi,
>
> You need to use the bus of the CXFServlet. You could use the CXF Servlet
> transport with this bus.
> Please add the below code just before Endpoint.publish(...)
>
> Bus bus = cxf.getBus();
> BusFactory.setDefaultBus(bus);
>
> Willem.
>
> Miguel De Anda-2 wrote:
> > i've got an application (my server) that launches its own jetty server
> > for sending files to external nodes. they currently talk to each other
> > using simple xml passed in as a post request and in the response. the
> > external nodes don't run a web server of any kind.
> >
> > i now need to add a soap interface on my server but can't figure out how.
> > this
> > is how my jetty server is started:
> >
> > ServletHolder servlet;
> > org.mortbay.jetty.Server jettyServer =
> > new org.mortbay.jetty.Server(PORT);
> > Context root = new Context(jettyServer, "/", Context.SESSIONS);
> > ....
> > servlet = new ServletHolder(someServlet);
> > root.addServlet(servlet, "/*");
> > ....
> > CXFServlet cxf = new CXFServlet();
> > servlet = new ServletHolder(cxf);
> > servlet.setName("soap");
> > servlet.setForcedPath("soap");
> > root.addServlet(servlet, "/soap/*");
> > HelloWorld hw = new HelloWorldImpl();
> > Endpoint.publish("/soap/HelloWorld", hw);
> > jettyServer.start();
> >
> > ----------------------------
> > package a.b.c;
> > import javax.jws.WebService;
> > @WebService
> > public interface HelloWorld {
> > String sayHi(String text);
> > }
> > ----------------------------
> > import javax.jws.WebService;
> > @WebService(endpointInterface = "a.b.c.HelloWorld")
> > public class HelloWorldImpl implements HelloWorld {
> > public String sayHi(String text) {
> > return "The interesting question becomes is what is soap?";
> > }
> > }
> > ----------------------------
> >
> > i got errors ranging from a null pointer exception when i went to
> > http://localhost:PORT/soap/ to "/soap/HelloWorld" not being a valid url
> > (in
> > the line Endpoint.publish). i had to set a full url there, when i
> > used "http://localhost:PORT/soap/HelloWorld" it told me that the port was
> > being used, so i figured its launching its own internal instance of jetty
> > (or
> > whatever it uses). i then replaced the port to some 8087 and it almost
> > works,
> > but i get a "<faultstring>No such operation: </faultstring>" message when
> > viewing http://localhost:8087/soap/HelloWorld
> >
> > i would really like to be able to use the same jetty server, and be able
> > to
> > give access to my existing objects in my application. i'm using spring to
> > load up an object that has all of my configuration settings but not in
> > the same way you would in a typical web app that runs on a webserver. the
> > customer currently has access to that spring config file and it would be
> > wrong to give them access (or force them to configure) the soap services.
> >
> > in other words, my app is launched this way:
> > public static void main(...) {
> > Resource resource = new FileSystemResource(config);
> > BeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(resource);
> > Config config = (Config)factory.getBean(bean);
> > configApp(config);
> > startServices();
> > }
> >
> >
> > Actual error messages:
> > (using /soap/... in publish line)
> > Caused by: java.net.MalformedURLException: no protocol: /soap/HelloWorld
> > at java.net.URL.<init>(URL.java:567)
> > at java.net.URL.<init>(URL.java:464)
> > at java.net.URL.<init>(URL.java:413)
> > at
> > org.apache.cxf.transport.http_jetty.JettyHTTPDestination.<init>(JettyHTTP
> >Destination.java:87) at
> > org.apache.cxf.transport.http_jetty.JettyHTTPTransportFactory.createDesti
> >nation(JettyHTTPTransportFactory.java:96) at
> > org.apache.cxf.transport.http_jetty.JettyHTTPTransportFactory.getDestinat
> >ion(JettyHTTPTransportFactory.java:83) at
> > org.apache.cxf.binding.soap.SoapTransportFactory.getDestination(SoapTrans
> >portFactory.java:74) at
> > org.apache.cxf.endpoint.ServerImpl.initDestination(ServerImpl.java:90)
> > at org.apache.cxf.endpoint.ServerImpl.<init>(ServerImpl.java:69)
> > at
> > org.apache.cxf.frontend.ServerFactoryBean.create(ServerFactoryBean.java:1
> >08) ... 8 more
> >
> > (using http://...:PORT/ in publish line)
> > Exception in thread "main" java.net.BindException: Address already in use
> > at java.net.PlainSocketImpl.socketBind(Native Method)
> > at java.net.PlainSocketImpl.bind(PlainSocketImpl.java:359)
> >
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