Ooopss. Missed a line in there:
QName portName = new QName("http://the.name.space",
"MyPort");
QName servName = new QName("http://the.name.space",
"MyService");
Service service = Service.create(servName);
service.addPort(portName,
SOAPBinding.SOAP11HTTP_BINDING,
address);
MyPortType port = service.getPort(portName, MyPortType.class);
Dan
On Friday 21 March 2008, Daniel Kulp wrote:
> On Friday 21 March 2008, Red Eagle wrote:
> > Thanks for your fast reply,
> >
> > I tried your solution but i'm always getting an null pointer
> > exception we because service.getPort returns it. I used wsdl2java to
> > generate all the jaxb classes.
> > Can you give me a hint how i can solve this null pointer problem
>
> The easiest way may be to just throw out the generated Service class
> (just use the interface and types) via:
>
>
>
>
> QName portName = new QName("http://the.name.space",
> "MyPort");
> QName servName = new QName("http://the.name.space",
> "MyService");
>
> Service service = Service.create(servName);
> MyPortType port = service.getPort(portName, MyPortType.class);
> ((BindingProvider)port).get.........
>
> Dan
>
> > regards
> >
> > Daniel Kulp schrieb:
> > > On Friday 21 March 2008, Red Eagle wrote:
> > >> I want to communicate with an web service which doesn't provide
> > >> an wsdl file. For generating the java classes I took an wsdl file
> > >> from my file system.
> > >> So far so good.
> > >>
> > >> I successfully implemented an client which talks to the server
> > >> but the client takes the wsdl file. So I tried to set the
> > >> Endpoint URL directly with the method addPort but always an
> > >> exception occurred that the wsdl file wasn't found.
> > >>
> > >> I looked into the generated service class and saw that he needs
> > >> an wsdl file, so my question is if it is possible to switch this
> > >> behaviour off.
> > >
> > > Yep. You can pass in null for the wsdl url and just rely on the
> > > annotations for formatting the message. That's perfectly fine.
> > > The issue is how to set the URL that the endpoint then hits.
> > > The spec does allow for this via the BindingProvider:
> > >
> > > MyThing port = service.getPort(....);
> > > ((BindingProvider)port).getRequestContext().put(
> > > BindingProvider.ENDPOINT_ADDRESS_PROPERTY, address);
--
J. Daniel Kulp
Principal Engineer, IONA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.dankulp.com/blog