JBoss.org Community Documentation
The JAX-WS tools provided by JBossWS can be used in a variety of ways. First we will look at server-side development strategies, and then proceed to the client. When developing a Web Service Endpoint (the server-side) you have the option of starting from Java (bottom-up development), or from the abstact contract (WSDL) that defines your service (top-down development). If this is a new service (no existing contract), the bottom-up approach is the fastest route; you only need to add a few annotations to your classes to get a service up and running. However, if you are developing a service with an already defined contract, it is far simpler to use the top-down approach, since the provided tool will generate the annotated code for you.
Bottom-up use cases:
Exposing an already existing EJB3 bean as a Web Service
Providing a new service, and you want the contract to be generated for you
Top-down use cases:
Replacing the implementation of an existing Web Service, and you can't break compatibility with older clients
Exposing a service that conforms to a contract specified by a third party (e.g. a vender that calls you back using an already defined protocol).
Creating a service that adheres to the XML Schema and WSDL you developed by hand up front
The following JAX-WS command line tools are included in JBossWS:
Command |
Description |
Generates JAX-WS portable artifacts, and provides the abstract contract. Used for bottom-up development. |
|
Consumes the abstract contract (WSDL and Schema files), and produces artifacts for both a server and client. Used for top-down and client development |
|
Executes a Java client (has a main method) using the JBossWS classpath. |