On Sep 12, 2013, at 10:59 AM, Ron Wheeler <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> I don't think that CXF is likely to be your solution.
> 
> You might investigate using an open source proxy server like Squid and adding 
> some custom code that identifies the pages/messages produced by the web 
> services and plays with the headers.
> 
> Just a wild guess but I hope in stimulates some better ideas.

If this is just to modify a protocol header, a simple Camel route using the 
HTTP components would likely be a lot easier than using CXF.    


from("http://localhost:8080/blah";)
  .setHeader("Header", "Value"))
  .to("http://realservice";);


Dan



> 
> 
> Ron
> 
> On 12/09/2013 10:42 AM, mip wrote:
>> Hello,
>> 
>> I've a requirement which I think Apache CXF may be able to help me with but
>> I have not found an example which has convinced me it is possible.
>> 
>> I have a weblogic server which has some web services deployed to it. These
>> web services were written by our supplier so I have no access to the source
>> code. I would like to intercept the outgoing SOAP responses from these web
>> services and add to the HTTP headers.
>> 
>> Is this going to be possible with Apache CXF? How can I tie my interceptor
>> to the web service?
>> 
>> Thanks for any advice,
>> 
>> Matt.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> View this message in context: 
>> http://cxf.547215.n5.nabble.com/Intercepting-third-party-web-service-responses-tp5733943.html
>> Sent from the cxf-user mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Ron Wheeler
> President
> Artifact Software Inc
> email: [email protected]
> skype: ronaldmwheeler
> phone: 866-970-2435, ext 102
> 

-- 
Daniel Kulp
[email protected] - http://dankulp.com/blog
Talend Community Coder - http://coders.talend.com

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