add "/Ch4SOAP" to the end of the TargetObjectURI so you'll have
"http://localhost:8080/Ch4SOAP".
--
David B. Bitton
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.codenoevil.com
Code Made Fresh DailyT
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kim Falk Jorgensen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 14, 2002 11:06 AM
Subject: Apache SOAP HTTP header
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to make a Apache SOAP client to connect to a server which uses
> Scott Seely's SimpleSOAP library. This server needs the header like the
> following:
>
> POST /Ch4SOAP HTTP/1.0
> Content-type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
> Content-Length: 442
> SOAPAction: "Ch4SOAP#add"
>
> Now my problem is that the Apache library do not insert the "/Ch4SOAP"
into
> the header.
> My java code looks like:
>
> //Required due to user of URL class, required by Call class
> import java.net.*;
>
> //Required due to use of Vector class
> import java.util.*;
>
> //Apache SOAP classes used by client
> import org.apache.soap.util.xml.*;
> import org.apache.soap.*;
> import org.apache.soap.rpc.*;
>
> public class simpleSOAPClient
> {
> public static void main (String[] args) throws Exception
> {
> // create the transport and set parameters
>
>
> // the call object
> Call call= new Call();
>
>
> // the parameter vector
> Vector params= new Vector();
> // the parameters
> int a= 2;
> int b= 3;
> // set the call to use standard SOAP
> call.setEncodingStyleURI(Constants.NS_URI_SOAP_ENC);
> // the Target object URI
> call.setTargetObjectURI("http://localhost:8080");
>
> // set the Methodname
> call.setMethodName("add");
>
> // make the parameter vector
> params.addElement(new Parameter("a", Integer.class, new Integer(a),
null));
> params.addElement(new Parameter("b", Integer.class, new Integer(b),
null));
>
> call.setParams(params);
>
> //invokation
> URL url= new URL ("http://localhost:8080");
> Response resp= call.invoke(url, "Ch4SOAP#add");
>
> if (resp.generatedFault())
> {
> Fault fault= resp.getFault();
> System.out.println("Fault code" + fault.getFaultCode());
> System.out.println("Fault string" + fault.getFaultString());
> }
>
> System.out.println("it worked");
> }
> }
>
> what am I doing wrong
>
> /Kim Falk
>