public interface WsdlBinding
import of XML Schema
(contained in
WSDL, or external),
including translating XML Schema "restrictions" to ISC Validators
WSDL services can be contacted by using XMLTools.loadWSDL()
or the
<isc:loadWSDL> JSP tag
to load the service definition, then
invoking methods on the resulting WebService
object.
WebService.callOperation()
can be
used to manually invoke operations for
custom processing (example using public zipcode service,
examples using .NET at
/examples/databinding/dotNET/temperatureConvert.jsp).
Fetch-only DataSource binding
To bind a component to a web service operation, call
WebService.getFetchDS(operationName,elementName)
to obtain a DataSource which describes the structure of an XML element or XML Schema type
named elementName, which appears in the response message for the operation named
operationName. A component bound to this DataSource will show fields corresponding
to the structure of the chosen XML element or type, that is, one field per subelement or
attribute. fetchData()
called on
this DataSource (or on a
component bound to it) will invoke the specified web service operation, using the
Criteria
passed to fetchData() to fill out the input message
via
DataSource.xmlSerialize()
, and using
the specified XML element from the response
message as data.
Similarly, WebService.getInputDS(operationName)
returns
a DataSource suitable for binding to a form that a user will fill out to provide inputs to
the specified web service operation. Typical use is to let the user fill in the form, then
pass the results of form.getValues()
to
fetchData()
as criteria.
If the input message to the web service has extra nesting, consider using
the useFlatFields
property
to simplify the inputs
required for fetchData()
, and/or to simplify form databinding via
component.useFlatFields
.
Note that the WSDL tab in the Developer Console can provide a clean, simplified view of any
WSDL file, making it easier to pick out the appropriate operationName
and
elementName
parameters to pass to getFetchDS()
and other
WebService
methods.
Binding with Customized Presentation
Because XML Schema lacks key presentation metadata such as user-viewable titles, typically you cannot directly use the DataSources derived from XML Schema embedded in a WSDL file to drive visual component DataBinding in your final application.
You can create a DataSource that has custom fields and invokes a web
service operation by setting serviceNamespace
to match the targetNamespace
of the WebService
(found on the
<definitions>
element from the
WSDL file), and setting wsOperation
to the name of the
web service operation to invoke. fetchData()
called on such a DataSource will
invoke the web service operation named by wsOperation
,
just like a DataSource returned by WebService.getFetchDS()
.
In contrast to getFetchDS()
, creating a DataSource in this way gives you the
opportunity to:
operationBinding.recordXPath
and
field.valueXPath
, and transform
it with
transformResponse()
startRow
for paging, or a sessionId for
a service requiring authentication
XML Schema Reuse
Having loaded a WSDL file, all of the XML Schema definitions within the service definition
get translated to Smart GWT DataSources
and
SimpleTypes
via the rules described by XMLTools.loadXMLSchema()
,
and are available to you via WebService.getSchema()
and type
.
You can use the inheritsFrom
property to create DataSources that extend
from XML schema definitions, then add presentation metadata not found in XML schema.
Even if you choose to declare all fields manually, you can leverage XML Schema
<simpleType> definitions by setting field.type
to the name
of an XML Schema simple type embedded in the WSDL file.
Round Trip Binding [fetch -> edit -> save]
For full read-write integration with a service that supports the basic
DataSource operations
on persistent data,
OperationBindings
can be declared for each
DataSource operation, and
the wsOperation
property can
be used to to bind each
DataSource operation
(fetch, update, add,
remove) to a
corresponding web service operation.
For example, this code accomplishes part of the binding to the SalesForce partner web services (additional code is required to handle authentication and other details):
isc.DataSource.create({ serviceNamespace : "urn:partner.soap.sforce.com", operationBindings : [ { operationType:"fetch", wsOperation:"query", recordName: "sObject" }, { operationType:"update", wsOperation:"update", recordName: "SaveResult" }, { operationType:"add", wsOperation:"create", recordName: "SaveResult" }, { operationType:"remove", wsOperation:"delete", recordName: "DeleteResult" } ], ... });NOTE: additional code is required to handle authentication and other details, see the complete code in smartclientSDK/examples/databinding/SalesForce.
In this usage, any DSRequest performed on this DataSource invokes the web service operation
named by the wsOperation
property on the corresponding operationBinding, and
data
is serialized via DataSource.xmlSerialize()
to form the input
message to send to the web service. For example, if a DynamicForm.saveData()
is
invoked and triggers a DSRequest with operationType:"add", the DataSource above will invoke
the "create" operation, and form.values
will become
data
and be serialized to form the input
message of the "create" web
service operation.
Typical usage is:
inheritsFrom
.
operationBindings
to configure the
entity DataSource to
call the appropriate web service operations for each DataSource operation, and extract
results via
recordXPath
/recordName
grids
to the entity DataSource
SearchForms
to the input message
of the fetch operation
(obtained via webService.getInputDS("operationName")
. This is
done because search inputs are frequently unrelated to the structure of the objects being
searched for
transformRequest
/transformResponse
,
useFlatFields
and responseDataSchema
to
handle inconsistencies between the WSDL operations and the data you want in the presentation
layer.
This requires a SalesForce account. SalesForce currently offers free developer accounts. Please note: this application deals with live data and if you using inline editing it will save to SalesForce.
Deployment
For best performance, using the <isc:loadWSDL> JSP tag
is recommended, as it automatically caches a translated form of the WSDL file. If you are
not using the Smart GWT server, the WSDL tab in the Developer Console allows you
to save a .js file representing a WebService object, which can then be loaded and cached
like a normal JavaScript file.
Creating New WSDL Services
If you have no existing WSDL web service but would like to use web services for integration,
you can implement the "Smart GWTOperations" web service described by the
${isc.DocUtils.externalLink(isc.Page.getIsomorphicDir()+"system/schema/Smart
GWTOperations.wsdl","WSDL file")}
included in the SDK. This simple, 4 operation web service can support any number of
DataSources. In this case, you create your DataSources as client-side instances of
WSDataSource
(general client-side DataSource creation is
described under
Creating DataSources
). To change the
URL where ISC
expects to find the Smart GWTOperations web service, use WebService.setLocation()
like so:
var service = isc.WebService.get("urn:operations.smartclient.com"); service.setLocation("myURL");
To implement a web service starting from a WSDL file: