users@jax-rpc.java.net

RE: Empty SOAPElement from .net WebService

From: Kevin Jones <kevinj_at_develop.com>
Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2005 09:48:41 -0000

To add two other options. Axis comes with a tool called tcpproxy that can
display the streams, and I've an equivalent that I call HttpProxy that is at
http://kevinj.develop.com/HttpProxy.jsp

Kevin Jones
http://public.xdi.org/=kevin.jones
skype (www.skype.com): kevinrjones

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alessio Cervellin [mailto:alessio.cervellin_at_sun-cs-italy.com]
> Sent: 17 January 2005 21:33
> To: users_at_jax-rpc.dev.java.net
> Subject: Re: Empty SOAPElement from .net WebService
>
> Chrisjan Matser wrote:
>
> > For those interested in my ProxyServer, I took the
> ProxyServer in the
> > Java In A Nutshell examples and modified it to print the
> client send
> > stream and the server reponse stream to standard out. Pretty cool
> > watching the SOAP conversation.
>
> It can be easily done by using "Handlers" too (see
> http://java.sun.com/webservices/docs/1.3/tutorial/doc/JAXRPC7.
> html#wp122942)
>
> > While I'm sending this email, I just thought I'd add,
> wouldn't it be
> > nice if JAX-RPC could provide a nice web service info page when
> > building a web service server? Oracle and .Net do this.
> If you go to
> > the root of your web service, you currently see a link to
> the WSDL and
> > the model. It'd nice to see the methods available, what
> params they
> > take, and also a way to test them right there from the
> browser. It'd
> > be a huge time saver for us developers.
>
> i agree!
>
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