A Web Service Example: helloservice (original) (raw)

Document Information

Preface

Part I Introduction

1. Overview

2. Using the Tutorial Examples

Part II The Web Tier

3. Getting Started with Web Applications

4. Java Servlet Technology

5. JavaServer Pages Technology

6. JavaServer Pages Documents

7. JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library

8. Custom Tags in JSP Pages

9. Scripting in JSP Pages

10. JavaServer Faces Technology

11. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in JSP Pages

12. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology

13. Creating Custom UI Components

14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications

15. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications

Part III Web Services

16. Building Web Services with JAX-WS

17. Binding between XML Schema and Java Classes

18. Streaming API for XML

19. SOAP with Attachments API for Java

Part IV Enterprise Beans

20. Enterprise Beans

21. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans

22. Session Bean Examples

The cart Example

The Business Interface

Session Bean Class

Life-Cycle Callback Methods

Business Methods

The Remove Method

Helper Classes

Building, Packaging, Deploying, and Running the cart Example

Building, Packaging, and Deploying the cart Example Using NetBeans IDE

Running the cart Application Client Using NetBeans IDE

Building, Packaging, and Deploying the cart Example Using Ant

Running the cart Application Client Using Ant

The all Task

Undeploying the cart Example

Using the Timer Service

The Timeout Method

Creating Timers

Canceling and Saving Timers

Getting Timer Information

Transactions and Timers

The timersession Example

Building, Packaging, Deploying, and Running the timersession Example

Building, Packaging, Deploying, and Running the timersession Example Using NetBeans IDE

Building, Packaging, and Deploying the timersession Example Using Ant

Running the timersession Application Client Using Ant

Handling Exceptions

23. A Message-Driven Bean Example

Part V Persistence

24. Introduction to the Java Persistence API

25. Persistence in the Web Tier

26. Persistence in the EJB Tier

27. The Java Persistence Query Language

Part VI Services

28. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform

29. Securing Java EE Applications

30. Securing Web Applications

31. The Java Message Service API

32. Java EE Examples Using the JMS API

33. Transactions

34. Resource Connections

35. Connector Architecture

Part VII Case Studies

36. The Coffee Break Application

37. The Duke's Bank Application

Part VIII Appendixes

A. Java Encoding Schemes

B. About the Authors

Index

A Web Service Example: helloservice

This example demonstrates a simple web service that generates a response based on information received from the client. HelloServiceBean is a stateless session bean that implements a single method, sayHello. This method matches the sayHello method invoked by the client described in A Simple JAX-WS Client.

The Web Service Endpoint Implementation Class

HelloServiceBean is the endpoint implementation class. The endpoint implementation class is typically the primary programming artifact for enterprise bean web service endpoints. The web service endpoint implementation class has the following requirements:

Stateless Session Bean Implementation Class

The HelloServiceBean class implements the sayHello method, which is annotated @WebMethod. The source code for the HelloServiceBean class follows:

package com.sun.tutorial.javaee.ejb;

import javax.ejb.Stateless; import javax.jws.WebMethod; import javax.jws.WebService;

@Stateless @WebService public class HelloServiceBean { private String message = "Hello, ";

public void HelloServiceBean() {}

@WebMethod
public String sayHello(String name) {
    return message + name + ".";
}

}

Building, Packaging, Deploying, and Testing the helloservice Example

You can build, package, and deploy the helloservice example using either NetBeans IDE or Ant. You can then use the Admin Console to test the web service endpoint methods.

Building, Packaging, and Deploying the helloservice Example Using NetBeans IDE

Follow these instructions to build, package, and deploy the helloservice example to your Application Server instance using NetBeans IDE.

  1. In NetBeans IDE, select File→Open Project.
  2. In the Open Project dialog, navigate to tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/ejb/.
  3. Select the helloservice folder.
  4. Select the Open as Main Project and Open Required Projects check boxes.
  5. Click Open Project.
  6. In the Projects tab, right-click the helloservice project and select Undeploy and Deploy.

This builds and packages to application into helloservice.ear, located in tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/ejb/helloservice/dist, and deploys this ear file to your Application Server instance.

Building, Packaging, and Deploying the helloservice Example Using Ant

Follow these instructions to build, package, and deploy the helloservice example to your Application Server instance using Ant.

  1. In a terminal window, go to the tut-install/javaeetutorial5/examples/ejb/helloservice/ directory.
  2. To build helloservice, type the following command:
    ant
    This runs the default task, which compiles the source files and packages the application into a JAR file located at tut-install/examples/ejb/helloservice/dist/helloservice.jar.
  3. To deploy helloservice, type the following command:
    ant deploy
    Upon deployment, the Application Server generates additional artifacts required for web service invocation, including the WSDL file.
Testing the Service without a Client

The Application Server Admin Console allows you to test the methods of a web service endpoint. To test the sayHello method of HelloServiceBean, do the following:

  1. Open the Admin Console by opening the following URL in a web browser:
    http://localhost:4848/
  2. Enter the admin username and password to log in to the Admin Console.
  3. Click Web Services in the left pane of the Admin Console.
  4. Click helloservice.
  5. Click Test.
  6. Under Methods, enter a name as the parameter to the sayHello method.
  7. Click the sayHello button.
    This will take you to the sayHello Method invocation page.
  8. Under Method returned, you’ll see the response from the endpoint.

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