NAME
XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP - exchange XML via HTTP
INHERITANCE
XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP
is a XML::Compile::Transport
SYNOPSIS
use XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP;
my $http = XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP->new(@options);
my $send = $transporter->compileClient(@options2);
my $call = $wsdl->compileClient
( operation => 'some-port-name'
, transport => $send
);
my ($xmlout, $trace) = $call->($xmlin);
DESCRIPTION
This module handles the exchange of (XML) messages, according to the rules of SOAP (any version). The module does not known how to parse or compose XML, but only worries about the HTTP aspects.
METHODS
Constructors
XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP->new(OPTIONS)
The keep_alive
and timeout
options are used when an LWP::UserAgent is created, and ignored when you provide such an object. In the latter case, the values for those are inquired such that you can see the setting directly from the passed object.
If you need to change UserAgent settings later, you can always directly access the LWP::UserAgent object via userAgent().
Option --Defined in --Default
address XML::Compile::Transport 'localhost'
charset XML::Compile::Transport 'utf-8'
keep_alive <true>
timeout 180
user_agent <created when needed>
. address => URI|ARRAY-of-URI
. charset => STRING
. keep_alive => BOOLEAN
When connection can be re-used.
. timeout => SECONDS
The maximum time for a single connection before the client will close it. The server may close it earlier. Do not set the timeout too long, because you want objects to be cleaned-up.
. user_agent => LWP::UserAgent object
If you pass your own user agent, you will be able to configure it. Otherwise, one will be created with all the defaults. Providing your own user agents -or at least have a look at the configuration- seems like a good idea.
Accessors
$obj->address
$obj->addresses
$obj->charset
$obj->userAgent([AGENT|(undef, OPTIONS)])
Returns the User Agent which will be used. You may change the configuration of the AGENT (the returned LWP::UserAgent object) or provide one yourself. See also new(user_agent).
Changes to the agent configuration can be made before or after the compilation, or even inbetween SOAP calls.
Handlers
$obj->compileClient(OPTIONS)
Compile an HTTP client handler. Returned is a subroutine which is called with a text represenation of the XML request, or an XML::LibXML tree. In SCALAR context, an XML::LibXML parsed tree of the answer message is returned. In LIST context, that answer is followed by a HASH which contains trace information.
Option --Defined in --Default
action ''
header <created>
hook XML::Compile::Transport <undef>
kind XML::Compile::Transport 'request-response'
method 'POST'
mime_type <depends on soap version>
mpost_id 42
soap 'SOAP11'
. action => URI
. header => HTTP::Headers object
Versions of XML::Compile, XML::Compile::SOAP, and LWP will be added to simplify bug reports.
. hook => CODE
. kind => STRING
. method => 'POST'|'M-POST'
With POST
, you get the standard HTTP exchange. The M-POST
is implements the (Microsoft) HTTP Extension Framework. Some servers accept both, other require a specific request.
. mime_type => STRING
. mpost_id => INTEGER
With method M-POST
, the header extension fields require (any) number to be grouped.
. soap => 'SOAP11'|'SOAP12'|OBJECT
example: create a client
my $trans = XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP->new
( address => 'http://www.stockquoteserver.com/StockQuote'
);
my $call = $trans->compileClient
( action => 'http://example.com/GetLastTradePrice'
);
# $request and $answer are XML::LibXML trees!
# see XML::Compile::SOAP::Client::compileClient() for wrapper which
# converts from and to Perl data structures.
my ($answer, $trace) = $call->($request);
my $answer = $call->($request); # drop $trace info immediately
$obj->headerAddVersions(HEADER)
XML::Compile::Transport::SOAPHTTP->headerAddVersions(HEADER)
Adds some lines about module versions, which may help debugging or error reports. This is called when a new client or server is being created.
DETAILS
SEE ALSO
This module is part of XML-Compile-SOAP distribution version 2.01, built on February 12, 2009. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/xml-compile/
All modules in this suite: XML::Compile, XML::Compile::SOAP, XML::Compile::SOAP12, XML::Compile::SOAP::Daemon, XML::Compile::Tester, XML::Compile::Cache, XML::Compile::Dumper, XML::Rewrite, and XML::LibXML::Simple.
Please post questions or ideas to the mailinglist at http://lists.scsys.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/xml-compile For life contact with other developers, visit the #xml-compile
channel on irc.perl.org
.
LICENSE
Copyrights 2007-2009 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html