NAME
SOAP::WSDL - SOAP with WSDL support
SYNOPSIS
my $soap = SOAP::WSDL->new(
wsdl => 'file://bla.wsdl',
readable => 1,
)->wsdlinit();
my $result = $soap->call('MyMethod', %data);
DESCRIPTION
SOAP::WSDL provides easy access to Web Services with WSDL descriptions.
The WSDL is parsed and stored in memory.
Your data is serialized according to the rules in the WSDL and sent via SOAP::Lite's transport mechanism.
METHODS
wsdlinit
Reads the WSDL file and initializes SOAP::WSDL for working with it.
Must be called after the wsdl URL has been set, and before calling one of
servicename
portname
call
You may set servicename and portname by passing them as attributes to wsdlinit:
$soap->wsdlinit(
servicename => 'MyService',
portname => 'MyPort'
);
call
Performs a SOAP call. The result is either an object tree (with outputtree), a hash reference (with outputhash), plain XML (with outputxml) or a SOAP::SOM object (with neither of the above set).
my $result = $soap->call('method', %data);
CONFIGURATION METHODS
outputtree
When outputtree is set, SOAP::WSDL will return an object tree instead of a SOAP::SOM object.
You have to specify a class_resolver for this to work. See <class_resolver|class_resolver>
class_resolver
Set the class resolver class (or object).
Class resolvers must implement the method get_class which has to return the name of the class name for deserializing a XML node at the current XPath location.
Class resolvers are typically generated by using the to_typemap method on a SOAP::WSDL::Definitions objects.
Example:
XML structure (SOAP body content):
<Person>
<Name>Smith</Name>
<FirstName>John</FirstName>
</Person>
Class resolver
package MyResolver;
my %typemap = (
'Person' => 'MyPersonClass',
'Person/Name' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Typelib::Builtin::string',
'Person/FirstName' => 'SOAP::WSDL::XSD::Typelib::Builtin::string',
);
sub get_class { return $typemap{ $_[1] } };
1;
You'll need a MyPersonClass module in your search path for this to work - see SOAP::WSDL::XSD::ComplexType on how to build / generate one.
servicename
$soap->servicename('Name');
Sets the service to operate on. If no service is set via servicename, the first service found is used.
Must be called after calling wsdlinit().
Returns the soap object, so you can chain calls like
$soap->servicename->('Name')->portname('Port');
portname
$soap->portname('Name');
Sets the port to operate on. If no port is set via portname, the first port found is used.
Must be called after calling wsdlinit().
Returns the soap object, so you can chain calls like
$soap->portname('Port')->call('MyMethod', %data);
no_dispatch
When set, call() returns the plain request XML instead of dispatching the SOAP call to the SOAP service. Handy for testing/debugging.
_wsdl_init_methods
Creates a lookup table containing the information required for all methods specified for the service/port selected.
The lookup table is used by call.
Differences to previous versions
WSDL handling
SOAP::WSDL 2 is a complete rewrite. While SOAP::WSDL 1.x attempted to process the WSDL file on the fly by using XPath queries, SOAP:WSDL 2 uses a SAX filter for parsing the WSDL and building up a object tree representing it's content.
The object tree has two main functions: It knows how to serialize data passed as hash ref, and how to render the WSDL elements found into perl classes.
Yup your're right, there's a builting code generation facility.
no_dispatch
call() with outputtxml set to true now returns the complete SOAP envelope, not only the body's content.
outputxml
call() with outputxml set to true now returns the complete SOAP envelope, not only the body's content.
servicename/portname
Both servicename and portname can only be called after calling wsdlinit().
You may pass the servicename and portname as attributes to wsdlinit, though.
Differences to SOAP::Lite
Auto-Dispatching
SOAP::WSDL does does not support auto-dispatching.
This is on purpose: You may easily create interface classes by using SOAP::WSDL and implementing something like
sub mySoapMethod {
my $self = shift;
$soap_wsdl_client->call( mySoapMethod, @_);
}
You may even do this in a class factory - SOAP::WSDL provides the methods for generating such interfaces.
SOAP::Lite's autodispatching mechanism is - though convenient - a constant source of errors: Every typo in a method name gets caught by AUTOLOAD and may lead to unpredictable results.
Bugs and Limitations
readable
readable() must be called before calling wsdlinit. This is a bug.
Unsupported XML Schema definitions
The following XML Schema definitions are not supported:
choice group union simpleContent complexContent
Serialization of hash refs dos not work for ambiguous values
If you have list elements with multiple occurences allowed, SOAP::WSDL has no means of finding out which variant you meant.
Passing in item => [1,2,3] could serialize to
<item>1 2</item><item>3</item> <item>1</item><item>2 3</item>
Ambiguos data can be avoided by passing an object tree as data.
XML Schema facets
Almost all XML schema facets are not yet implemented. The only facets currently implemented are:
fixed default
The following facets have no influence yet:
minLength maxLength minInclusive maxInclusive minExclusive maxExclusive pattern enumeration
LICENSE
Copyright 2004-2007 Martin Kutter.
This file is part of SOAP-WSDL. You may distribute/modify it under the same terms as perl itself
AUTHOR
Martin Kutter <martin.kutter fen-net.de>