Yes, and at least in my experience there's a lot of "generic" XML out there. XSLT looks like a good option for me, I'm only concerned with how much performance impact would have to run a transformation on each request.

Regards,
--
Alejandro Guerrieri
[email protected]



On 06/02/2009, at 7:44, Marius Huysamen wrote:



I like gSoap as well. I've played around with it to explore its use in other projects, but there is one thing to take note of. If you are going to use gSoap, then you are choosing not to have user- created XML templates. gSoap takes a WSDL and generates C code to handle the SOAP call described within. Thus adding other XML formats would require a recompile of the SOAP module. The other approach is to use it as a wrapper (transport manager) for generic XML documents created at runtime with XSLT, but you loose gSoap's strength of XML->C translation and type checking.

Stipe Tolj wrote:

Vincent CHAVANIS schrieb:

This could be used for XML in general, right? Not only SOAP, I mean.

yeah we can say that. But the code is really old and does not fit any
standard specs.
(no SAX or DOM parsing)
Also it's really buggy.
See the ML for some patch i've posted.

I strongly suggest if you guys are interested in the SOAP/XML stuff, to "bind" the gw/smsc/smsc_soap.c module to gSOAP, which is a C SOAP engine, able to
generate C headers and code required to implement WSDLs directly.

Have a view on:

  http://gsoap2.sourceforge.net/

I used this for various parts in my MMSC implementation (MM7 mainly), and also for having a "modular" Apache SOAP application container to hook in logic into it.

Stipe




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