It's definitely something in the third party libs.   We're definitly not 
setting it as it obviously breaks things.  

All I can think of is to unzip all the jars and grep over the files for the 
string.   Might yeild something.

Dan


On Thursday 16 October 2008 4:25:30 pm Nepali, Sonam (GE Healthcare, 
consultant) wrote:
> I have replaced that with "jms://" for address and it does not work.  The
> HelloWorld.java service is not able to pick up the message.  Do I need to
> implement some sort of interface in the HelloWorld to listen for messages
> on the queue?  Or am I missing some implementation for picking up a message
> from the JMS queue and passing it to the HelloWorld service?
>
> thanks
>
> Sonam Nepali
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Daniel Kulp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2008 1:57 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Cc: Nepali, Sonam (GE Healthcare, consultant)
> Subject: Re: HELP on cxf with jms transport
>
>
> The "address" isn't a "jms://" address.   Thus, the http transport is used.
>
> Dan
>
>
> On Thursday 16 October 2008 12:52:34 pm Nepali, Sonam (GE Healthcare,
>
> consultant) wrote:
> > loClient" class="com.mycompany.app.cxf.HelloWorld"
> >
> > > factory-bean="clientFactory" factory-method="create"/>
> > >
> > >       <bean id="clientFactory"
> > > class="org.apache.cxf.jaxws.JaxWsProxyFactoryBean">
> > >               <property name="serviceClass"
> > > value="com.mycompany.app.cxf.HelloWorld" />
> > >               <property name="address"
> > > value="http://localhost:8080/maven2cxf_example_webapp/HelloWorld"; />
> > >
> > >       </bean>
> > >       
> > >       <cxf:bus>
>
> --
> Daniel Kulp
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://dankulp.com/blog



-- 
Daniel Kulp
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://dankulp.com/blog

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