Web Services
Definition
Web Service is a software system that allows the interoperability among machines on the same network. Through a Web Service it is possible to pubblish business services using a contract, called WSDL.
GreenVulcano® ESB provides a very simple method that helps developers to manage Web Services operations as:
- create
- invoke
- deploy
- publishing
- undeploy
Any service flow can be pubblished in GreenVulcano® ESB as a Web Services.VulCon® helps the user to pubblish an ESB service as a web service, leaving the user the only task to define the data structures in order to interact with the external world.
GreenVulcano® ESB provides a complete management of Web Services through Axis2 platform. It supports:
- Web Services stateful and asynchronous
- Processing SOAP Messages with XML parsing more efficient pull-based instead of DOM (Document Object Model)
- Increased Scalability
- Hot deploy and undeploy
Create new Web Services with VulCon
VulCon provides two wizards to create new Web Services. The first one starting from an GreenVulcano® ESB service and creating the WSDL and the AAR to deploy (bottom-up development method), the second one, starting from a WSDL, creating GreenVulcano® ESB services for each operation chosen (top-down development method).
bottom-up development method Right click on GVServices-->Services label and select "Wizard New WebService..."
Example
This example shows an XML document generated by a simple Excel sheet (without cols and rows grouping). Given an Excel sheet with the following structure:
ID1 | ID2 | ID3 | ID4 | ID5 | ID6 | ID7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
23 | 23232 | 23 | 23333 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
24 | 24444 | 23 | 23332 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
excelreader-call generates the following XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<workbook>
<sheet number="0">
<name><![CDATA[Foglio1]]></name>
<row number="0">
<col number="0">
<data><![CDATA[ID1]]></data>
</col>
<col number="1">
<data><![CDATA[ID2]]></data>
</col>
<col number="2">
<data><![CDATA[ID3]]></data>
</col>
<col number="3">
<data><![CDATA[ID4]]></data>
</col>
<col number="4">
<data><![CDATA[ID5]]></data>
</col>
<col number="5">
<data><![CDATA[ID6]]></data>
</col>
<col number="6">
<data><![CDATA[ID7]]></data>
</col>
</row>
<row number="1">
<col number="0">
<data><![CDATA[23]]></data>
</col>
<col number="1">
<data><![CDATA[23232]]></data>
</col>
<col number="2">
<data><![CDATA[23]]></data>
</col>
<col number="3">
<data><![CDATA[711]]></data>
</col>
<col number="4">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
<col number="5">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
<col number="6">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
</row>
<row number="2">
<col number="0">
<data><![CDATA[23]]></data>
</col>
<col number="1">
<data><![CDATA[711]]></data>
</col>
<col number="2">
<data><![CDATA[23]]></data>
</col>
<col number="3">
<data><![CDATA[23232]]></data>
</col>
<col number="4">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
<col number="5">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
<col number="6">
<data><![CDATA[1]]></data>
</col>
</row>
</sheet>
</workbook>
With a ChangeGvBufferNode is possible parsing XML and retrieve any tag and value.
--A.sicignano 16:30, 19 January 2012 (CET)