The docs for the 2.x branch can be found here. A lot of the previous documentation is somewhat applicable, but I will be creating new docs in the coming weeks.
The 3.x branch of the plugin is a grails plugin that contains simplified features to get simple soap endpoints exposed in grails 3 applications.
At the core, this plugin is a simple wrapper for geeting grails service classes wired up as direct soap endpoints. As many of the previous features from the 2.x branch as could be ported for the initial release were ported. There will be continued support added for the more complex CXF features going forward.
Exposing a service class is as simple as adding the GrailsCxfEndpoint
annotation and annotating the methods you wish to expose in the service with WebMethod
and WebResult
package com.gpc.demo
import grails.transaction.Transactional
import org.grails.cxf.utils.GrailsCxfEndpoint
import javax.jws.WebMethod
import javax.jws.WebResult
@Transactional
@GrailsCxfEndpoint
class DemoService {
@WebMethod
@WebResult
String demoMethod() {
return "demo"
}
}
If you wish to return domain classes you will need to make sure to add the xml annotations to the domain class.
package org.grails.cxf.test.example
import grails.transaction.Transactional
import org.grails.cxf.utils.GrailsCxfEndpoint
import javax.jws.WebMethod
import javax.jws.WebParam
import javax.jws.WebResult
@Transactional
@GrailsCxfEndpoint
class PersonService {
@WebMethod
@WebResult(name = "Person", targetNamespace = "")
Person createPerson(@WebParam(name = 'name') String name) {
Person.findOrSaveByName(name)
}
}
package org.grails.cxf.test.example
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAccessType
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAccessorType
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlElement
@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE)
class Person {
@XmlElement
Long id
@XmlElement
String name
static constraints = {
name nullable: false, blank: false
}
}
Do add a custom interceptor you should define an bean in your application or imported config class. The reference to the logging interceptor is the name of the defined bean.
package org.grails.cxf.test.soap.interceptor
import org.apache.cxf.common.injection.NoJSR250Annotations
import org.apache.cxf.common.logging.LogUtils
import org.apache.cxf.interceptor.AbstractLoggingInterceptor
import org.apache.cxf.interceptor.Fault
import org.apache.cxf.message.Message
import org.apache.cxf.phase.Phase
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired
import java.util.logging.Logger
/**
*/
@NoJSR250Annotations
class CustomLoggingInInterceptor extends AbstractLoggingInterceptor {
private static final Logger LOG = LogUtils.getLogger(CustomLoggingInInterceptor)
def name
CustomLoggingInInterceptor() {
super(Phase.RECEIVE)
log LOG, 'Creating the custom interceptor bean'
}
void handleMessage(Message message) throws Fault {
//get another web service bean here by name and call it
//Check to see if cxf annotations will inject the bean (looks like no!)
log LOG, injectedBean?.name ?: 'FAIL - NOT SET'
log LOG, "$name :: I AM IN CUSTOM IN LOGGER!!!!!!!"
}
@Override
protected Logger getLogger() {
LOG
}
}
package grails.cxf.demo
import grails.boot.GrailsApp
import grails.boot.config.GrailsAutoConfiguration
import org.grails.cxf.test.soap.interceptor.CustomLoggingInInterceptor
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean
import org.springframework.context.annotation.ImportResource
class Application extends GrailsAutoConfiguration {
static void main(String[] args) {
GrailsApp.run(Application, args)
}
@Bean
public CustomLoggingInInterceptor customLoggingInInterceptor(){
return new CustomLoggingInInterceptor(name: 'injected value')
}
}
package org.grails.cxf.test.example
import grails.transaction.Transactional
import org.grails.cxf.utils.GrailsCxfEndpoint
import javax.jws.WebMethod
import javax.jws.WebParam
import javax.jws.WebResult
@Transactional
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(inInterceptors = ['customLoggingInInterceptor'])
class PersonService {
@WebMethod
@WebResult(name = "Person", targetNamespace = "")
Person createPerson(@WebParam(name = 'name') String name) {
Person.findOrSaveByName(name)
}
}
The default behavior is to expose the CxfServlet at the /services/*
endpoint. If you with to override this behavior you can set the following config:
cxf:
servlet:
mapping: /webservices/*
When using the annotation, the property values will only be used if the corresponding annotation value is not provided or is set to the default value. The following are available to configure via the annotation:
/**
* Annotation to be use to expose a Service or Endpoint class as a CXF Service via Grails.
*/
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@interface GrailsCxfEndpoint {
String address() default ''
String name() default ''
EndpointType expose() default EndpointType.JAX_WS
boolean soap12() default false
String wsdl() default ''
//Interceptors
String[] inInterceptors() default []
String[] outInterceptors() default []
String[] inFaultInterceptors() default []
String[] outFaultInterceptors() default []
GrailsCxfEndpointProperty[] properties() default []
}
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@interface GrailsCxfEndpointProperty {
public String name() default ''
public String value() default ''
}
ADDRESS
The address property is used to adjust the endpoint address that the service will be deployed to. By default if not provided or is the value is empty (""), this will be the name of the Service or Endpoint with the first letter lowercase and the word Endpoint or Service removed from the end of the name. The default behavior would deploy the BoatService
as /services/boat
.
If you wish to override this and provide your own service name or address (for versioning support for example) you may set this value.
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(address='/v2/custom/path')
class CarService {
...
}
The above would be deployed to /services/v2/custom/path
.
EXPOSE
The expose
property will tell the plugin how you wish to expose. The default is EndpointType.JAX_WS
which is the same as the following:
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(expose=EndpointType.JAX_WS)
class CarService {
...
}
Simple and JaxRS types are currently not supported. TODO
NAME
The name
property will tell the plugin how you wish to name the service. This will change the wsdl name property from the default for the example below from CarService
to simply just Car
like this <wsdl:definitions name="Car" targetNamespace="http://demo.gpc.com">
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(name='Car')
class CarService {
...
}
PORT
The port
property will tell the plugin how you wish to name the service port binding. This will change the wsdl name property of the port from the default for the example below from CarServicePort
to simply just CarPort
like this <wsdl:port binding="tns:CarServiceSoapBinding" name="CarPort">
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(port='CarPort')
class CarService {
...
}
SOAP12
To tell a service to default to SOAP 1.2 instead of 1.1 simply set this to true
. The default value is false
which will use SOAP 1.1.
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(soap12=true)
class CarService {
...
}
WSDL
To expose as a wsdl first jax web service endpoint http://cxf.apache.org/docs/jax-ws-configuration.html add the wsdl property and classpath to the wsdl as well as setting the endpoint type to EndpointType.JAX_WS_WSDL
.
@WebService(name = 'CustomerServiceWsdlEndpoint',
targetNamespace = 'http://test.cxf.grails.org/',
serviceName = 'CustomerServiceWsdlEndpoint',
portName = 'CustomerServiceWsdlPort')
@GrailsCxfEndpoint(wsdl = 'org/grails/cxf/test/soap/CustomerService.wsdl', expose = EndpointType.JAX_WS_WSDL)
class AnnotatedCustomerServiceWsdlEndpoint {
CustomerServiceEndpoint customerServiceEndpoint
List<Customer> getCustomersByName(final String name) {
customerServiceEndpoint.getCustomersByName(name)
}
}
Example TODO
This is a list of bean names in List<String>
to inject to the cxf service endpoint. You will need to define your interceptor beans via normal spring dsl (in resources.groovy for example).
This is helpful when the default cxf annotation of @org.apache.cxf.interceptor.InInterceptors (interceptors = {"com.example.Test1Interceptor" })
does not satisfy your needs.
When chosing between the this property and the cxf provided one, if you require value injection, the cxf provided annotation will most likely NOT meet your needs and you should use this property instead.
Note: Make sure to set any beans you wish injected into your interceptors to bean.autowire = 'byName'
or use the @Autowire
annotation.
OUTINTERCEPTORS
If you wish to inject a custom in interceptor bean, use this property. This is helpful when the default cxf annotation of @org.apache.cxf.interceptor.OutInterceptors (interceptors = {"com.example.Test1Interceptor" })
does not satisfy your needs.
See above for examples of using inInterceptor which should be very similar.
INFAULTINTERCEPTORS
If you wish to inject a custom in interceptor bean, use this property. This is helpful when the default cxf annotation of @org.apache.cxf.interceptor.InFaultInterceptors (interceptors = {"com.example.Test1Interceptor" })
does not satisfy your needs.
See above for examples of using inInterceptor which should be very similar.
OUTFAULTINTERCEPTORS
If you wish to inject a custom in interceptor bean, use this property. This is helpful when the default cxf annotation of @org.apache.cxf.interceptor.OutFaultInterceptors (interceptors = {"com.example.Test1Interceptor" })
does not satisfy your needs.
See above for examples of using inInterceptor which should be very similar.
CONCLUSION
Using the annotation will help reduce the clutter of having many static properties in your class to configure cxf.
https://github.com/Grails-Plugin-Consortium/grails-cxf-demo
LICENSE ---------------Copyright 2013 Christian Oestreich
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.