Available as of Camel 2.6
The spring-ws: component allows you to integrate with Spring Web Services. It offers both clientside support, for accessing web services, and serverside support for creating your own contract-first web services.
Maven users will need to add the following dependency to their pom.xml
for this component:
<dependency> <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId> <artifactId>camel-spring-ws</artifactId> <version>x.x.x</version> <!-- use the same version as your Camel core version --> </dependency>
![]() | Dependencies |
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This component offers support for Spring-WS 1.5.9 which is compatible with Spring 2.5.x and 3.0.x. In order to run camel-spring-ws on Spring 2.5.x you need to add the spring-webmvc module from Spring 2.5.x. In order to run Spring-WS 1.5.9 on Spring 3.0 you need to exclude the OXM module from Spring 3.0 as this module is also included in Spring-WS 1.5.9 (see this post) |
The URI scheme for this component is as follows
spring-ws:[mapping-type:]address[?options]
To expose a web service mapping-type needs to be set to any of the following:
Mapping type | Description |
---|---|
rootqname
|
Offers the option to map web service requests based on the qualified name of the root element contained in the message. |
soapaction
|
Used to map web service requests based on the SOAP action specified in the header of the message. |
uri
|
In order to map web service requests that target a specific URI. |
xpathresult
|
Used to map web service requests based on the evaluation of an XPath expression against the incoming message. The result of the evaluation should match the XPath result specified in the endpoint URI. |
beanname
|
Allows you to reference a org.apache.camel.component.spring.ws.bean.CamelEndpointDispatcher in order to integrate with existing (legacy) endpoint mappings like PayloadRootQNameEndpointMapping , SoapActionEndpointMapping , etc |
As a consumer the address should contain a value relevant to the specified mapping-type (e.g. a SOAP action, XPath expression). As a producer the address should be set to the URI of the web service your calling upon.
You can append query options to the URI in the following format, ?option=value&option=value&...
Name | Required? | Description |
---|---|---|
soapAction
|
No | SOAP action to include inside a SOAP request when accessing remote web services |
wsAddressingAction
|
No | WS-Addressing 1.0 action header to include when accessing web services. The To header is set to the address of the web service as specified in the endpoint URI (default Spring-WS behavior). |
expression
|
Only when mapping-type is xpathresult
|
XPath expression to use in the process of mapping web service requests, should match the result specified by xpathresult
|
The following options can be specified in the registry (most likely a Spring ApplicationContext) and referenced from the endpoint URI using the # notation.
Name | Required? | Description |
---|---|---|
webServiceTemplate
|
No | Option to provide a custom WebServiceTemplate. This allows for full control over client-side web services handling; like adding a custom interceptor or specifying a fault resolver, message sender or message factory. |
messageSender
|
No | Option to provide a custom WebServiceMessageSender. For example to perform authentication or use alternative transports |
messageFactory
|
No | Option to provide a custom WebServiceMessageFactory. For example when you want Apache Axiom to handle web service messages instead of SAAJ |
transformerFactory
|
No | Option to override default TransformerFactory. The provided transformer factory must be of type javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory
|
endpointMapping
|
Only when mapping-type is rootqname , soapaction , uri or xpathresult
|
Reference to org.apache.camel.component.spring.ws.bean.CamelEndpointMapping in the Registry/ApplicationContext. Only one bean is required in the registry to serve all Camel/Spring-WS endpoints. This bean is auto-discovered by the MessageDispatcher and used to map requests to Camel endpoints based on characteristics specified on the endpoint (like root QName, SOAP action, etc) |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CamelSpringWebserviceEndpointUri
|
String | URI of the web service your accessing as a client, overrides address part of the endpoint URI |
CamelSpringWebserviceSoapAction
|
String | Header to specify the SOAP action of the message, overrides soapAction option if present |
CamelSpringWebserviceAddressingAction
|
URI | Use this header to specify the WS-Addressing action of the message, overrides wsAddressingAction option if present |
To call a web service at
http://foo.com/bar
simply define a route:
from("direct:example").to("spring-ws:http://foo.com/bar")
And sent a message:
template.requestBody("direct:example", "<foobar xmlns=\"http://foo.com\"><msg>test message</msg></foobar>");
When a remote web service requires a SOAP action or use of the WS-Addressing standard you define your route as:
from("direct:example") .to("spring-ws:http://foo.com/bar?soapAction=http://foo.com&wsAddressingAction=http://bar.com")
Optionally you can override the endpoint options with header values:
template.requestBodyAndHeader("direct:example", "<foobar xmlns=\"http://foo.com\"><msg>test message</msg></foobar>", SpringWebserviceConstants.SPRING_WS_SOAP_ACTION, "http://baz.com");
A custom message sender or factory in the registry can be referenced like this:
from("direct:example") .to("spring-ws:http://foo.com/bar?messageFactory=#messageFactory&messageSender=#messageSender")
Spring configuration:
<!-- authenticate using HTTP Basic Authentication --> <bean id="messageSender" class="org.springframework.ws.transport.http.CommonsHttpMessageSender"> <property name="credentials"> <bean class="org.apache.commons.httpclient.UsernamePasswordCredentials"> <constructor-arg index="0" value="admin"/> <constructor-arg index="1" value="secret"/> </bean> </property> </bean> <!-- force use of Sun SAAJ implementation, http://static.springsource.org/spring-ws/sites/1.5/faq.html#saaj-jboss --> <bean id="messageFactory" class="org.springframework.ws.soap.saaj.SaajSoapMessageFactory"> <property name="messageFactory"> <bean class="com.sun.xml.messaging.saaj.soap.ver1_1.SOAPMessageFactory1_1Impl"></bean> </property> </bean>
In order to expose a web service using this component you first need to set-up a MessageDispatcher to look for endpoint mappings in a Spring XML file. If you plan on running inside a servlet container you probably want to use a MessageDispatcherServlet
configured in web.xml
.
By default the MessageDispatcherServlet
will look for a Spring XML named /WEB-INF/spring-ws-servlet.xml
. To use Camel with Spring-WS the only mandatory bean in that XML file is CamelEndpointMapping
. This bean allows the MessageDispatcher
to dispatch web service requests to your routes.
web.xml
<web-app> <servlet> <servlet-name>spring-ws</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.ws.transport.http.MessageDispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>spring-ws</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> </web-app>
spring-ws-servlet.xml
<bean id="endpointMapping" class="org.apache.camel.component.spring.ws.bean.CamelEndpointMapping" /> <bean id="wsdl" class="org.springframework.ws.wsdl.wsdl11.DefaultWsdl11Definition"> <property name="schema"> <bean class="org.springframework.xml.xsd.SimpleXsdSchema"> <property name="xsd" value="/WEB-INF/foobar.xsd"/> </bean> </property> <property name="portTypeName" value="FooBar"/> <property name="locationUri" value="/"/> <property name="targetNamespace" value="http://example.com/"/> </bean>
More information on setting up Spring-WS can be found in Writing Contract-First Web Services. Basically paragraph 3.6 "Implementing the Endpoint" is handled by this component (specifically paragraph 3.6.2 "Routing the Message to the Endpoint" is where CamelEndpointMapping
comes in).
With the XML configuration in-place you can now use Camel's DSL to define what web service requests are handled by your endpoint:
The following route will receive all web service requests that have a root element named "GetFoo" within the
http://example.com/
namespace.
from("spring-ws:rootqname:{http://example.com/}GetFoo?endpointMapping=#endpointMapping") .convertBodyTo(String.class).to(mock:example)
The following route will receive web service requests containing the
http://example.com/GetFoo
SOAP action.
from("spring-ws:soapaction:http://example.com/GetFoo?endpointMapping=#endpointMapping") .convertBodyTo(String.class).to(mock:example)
The following route will receive all requests sent to
http://example.com/foobar
.
from("spring-ws:uri:http://example.com/foobar?endpointMapping=#endpointMapping") .convertBodyTo(String.class).to(mock:example)
The route below will receive requests that contain the element <foobar>abc</foobar>
anywhere inside the message (and the default namespace).
from("spring-ws:xpathresult:abc?expression=//foobar&endpointMapping=#endpointMapping") .convertBodyTo(String.class).to(mock:example)
For every endpoint with mapping-type beanname
one bean of type CamelEndpointDispatcher
with a corresponding name is required in the Registry/ApplicationContext. This bean acts as a bridge between the Camel endpoint and an existing endpoint mapping like PayloadRootQNameEndpointMapping
.
![]() | Note |
---|---|
The use of the |
An example of a route using beanname
:
<camelContext xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"> <route> <from uri="spring-ws:beanname:QuoteEndpointDispatcher" /> <to uri="mock:example" /> </route> </camelContext> <bean id="legacyEndpointMapping" class="org.springframework.ws.server.endpoint.mapping.PayloadRootQNameEndpointMapping"> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="{http://example.com/}GetFuture">FutureEndpointDispatcher</prop> <prop key="{http://example.com/}GetQuote">QuoteEndpointDispatcher</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="QuoteEndpointDispatcher" class="org.apache.camel.component.spring.ws.bean.CamelEndpointDispatcher" /> <bean id="FutureEndpointDispatcher" class="org.apache.camel.component.spring.ws.bean.CamelEndpointDispatcher" />
Camel's pluggable data formats offer support for pojo/xml marshalling using libraries such as JAXB, XStream, Castor and XMLBeans. You can use these data formats in your route to sent and receive pojo's, to and from web services.
When accessing web services you can marshal the request and unmarshal the response message:
JaxbDataFormat jaxb = new JaxbDataFormat(false); jaxb.setContextPath("com.example.model"); from("direct:example").marshal(jaxb).to("spring-ws:http://foo.com/bar").unmarshal(jaxb);
Similarly when providing web services, you can unmarshal XML requests to POJO's and marshal the response message back to XML:
from("spring-ws:rootqname:{http://example.com/}GetFoo?endpointMapping=#endpointMapping").unmarshal(jaxb) .to("mock:example").marshal(jaxb);