The answer was to use QName in calling the OperationName like this :
call.setOperationName(new QName("Version","getVersion"));
The endpoint will then be just :
http://localhost:8888/samples/blocks/axis/rpcrouter
I am not sure how standard that is, or how a WSDL based client will
react to that. That I am going to find out.
I have also found this, another way of setting up webservices in cocoon
which is brilliant. But it seems too easy ?!!!
http://wiki.apache.org/cocoon/WebServiceServer
Regards,
Armaz
Armaz Mellati wrote:
Hello everybody
I am investigating how to use cocoon as a webservice-server. But I
can't find out how to use(call) the webservices in Axis block samples.
There is only one example there and that is using Perl !!!
Can someone PLEASE post a simple Axis client code that works with
those examples services ? The problem is how to spesify the
servicename. This is what I have, but doesn't work. It gives me : "The
AXIS engine could not find a target service to invoke! targetService
is null"
import org.apache.axis.client.Call;
import org.apache.axis.client.Service;
import javax.xml.namespace.QName;
public class TestClient {
public static void main(String [] args) {
try {
String endpoint =
"http://localhost:8888/samples/blocks/axis/rpcrouter/Version";
Service service = new Service();
Call call = (Call) service.createCall();
call.setTargetEndpointAddress( new java.net.URL(endpoint) );
call.setOperationName("getVersion");
String ret = (String) call.invoke( new Object[] { "Hello!" } );
System.out.println( ret );
} catch (Exception e) {
System.err.println(e.toString());
}
}
}
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