6. Using WSDL¶
WSDL (Web Service Definition Language) is an XML based document which described a set of Web Services either based on SOAP or XML/RPC. By using a WSDL document it is possible to describe, in a formal way, the interface to any Web Services. The WSDL document contains the end-point (URL to the server offering the service), the SOAPAction (needed to call the right routine), the procedure names and a description of the input and output parameters.
AWS provides two tools to work with WSDL documents:
ada2wsdl
which creates a WSDL document from an Ada package spec.
wsdl2aws
which create the interfaces to use a Web Service or to implement Web Services. With this tool the SOAP interface is completely abstracted out, users will deal only with Ada API. All the SOAP marshaling will be created automatically.
6.1. Creating WSDL documents¶
Note that this tool is based on ASIS.
6.1.1. Using ada2wsdl¶
ada2wsdl can be used on any Ada spec file to generated a WSDL document. The Ada spec is parsed using ASIS.
The simplest way to use it is:
$ ada2wsdl simple.ads
Given the following Ada spec file:
package Simple is
function Plus (Value : in Natural) return Natural;
end Simple;
It will generate the following WSDL document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<definitions name="Simple"
targetNamespace="urn:aws:Simple"
xmlns:tns="urn:aws:Simple"
xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/"
xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/"
xmlns:soap-enc="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
xmlns:wsdl="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/1999/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<message name="Plus_Request">
<part name="Value" type="xsd:int"/>
</message>
<message name="Plus_Response">
<part name="Result" type="xsd:int"/>
</message>
<portType name="Simple_PortType">
<operation name="Plus">
<input message="tns:Plus_Request"/>
<output message="tns:Plus_Response"/>
</operation>
</portType>
<binding name="Simple_Binding" type="tns:Simple_PortType">
<soap:binding style="rpc"
transport="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http"/>
<operation name="Plus">
<soap:operation soapAction="Plus"/>
<input>
<soap:body
encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
namespace="urn:aws:Simple"
use="encoded"/>
</input>
<output>
<soap:body
encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
namespace="urn:aws:Simple"
use="encoded"/>
</output>
</operation>
</binding>
<service name="Simple_Service">
<port name="Simple_Port" binding="tns:Simple_Binding">
<soap:address location="http://.../"/>
</port>
</service>
</definitions>
The value of the name attribute in the description node is
the name of the WSDL document (the name of the
Ada spec package). On the portType section we have the
description of the Ada Plus function. Something important to note
is that in Ada a function does not have a named return parameter,
ada2wsdl
use Result for the response. Both the input and
output parameter are mapped to SOAP xsd:int type.
Note that the SOAP address generated by default (http://.../)
must be edited manually or specified using ada2wsdl
‘s -a
option.
This is of course a very simple example. ada2wsdl does support lot more complex specs and will map Ada records, arrays, enumerations, derived types to a corresponding XML schema definition. See section below for a description of the mapping.
6.1.2. Ada mapping to WSDL¶
ada2wsdl parse Ada records, arrays, derived types, enumerations, procedures and functions and generate the corresponding WSDL document. In this section we describe the mapping between Ada and WSDL.
- Integer
- Mapped to xsd:int.
- Float
- Mapped to xsd:float.
- Long_Float
- Mapped to xsd:double
- Long_Long_Float
- Mapped to xsd:double, not supported by SOAP, mapped for convenience but precision cannot be guaranteed.
- Boolean
- Mapped to xsd:boolean
- String
- Mapped to xsd:string
- Unbounded_String
- Mapped to xsd:string, note that Unbounded_String should be used only inside a record for full interoperability. This is a current limitation.
- Character
Mapped to a Character schema definition:
<simpleType name="Character"> <restriction base="xsd:string"> <length value="1"/> </restriction> </simpleType>}
- SOAP.Utils.SOAP_Base64
- Mapped to xsd:base64Binary. SOAP.Utils.SOAP_Base64 is a subtype of string which is is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Byte
- Mapped to xsd:byte. SOAP.Types.Byte is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Short
- Mapped to xsd:short. SOAP.Types.Short is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Long
- Mapped to xsd:long. SOAP.Types.Long is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Byte
- Mapped to xsd:unsignedByte. SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Byte is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Short
- Mapped to xsd:unsignedShort. SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Short is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Int
- Mapped to xsd:unsignedInt. SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Int is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Long
- Mapped to xsd:unsignedLong. SOAP.Types.Unsigned_Long is a type which is recognized by ada2wsdl to generate the proper SOAP type.
- Derived types
Mapped to a type schema definition:
type Number is new Integer;
is defined as:
<simpleType name="Number" targetNamespace="http://soapaws/WSDL_C_pkg/"> <restriction base="xsd:int"/> </simpleType>
- User’s types
Mapped to a type schema definition:
type Small is range 1 .. 10;
is defined as:
<simpleType name="Small" targetNamespace="http://soapaws/WSDL_C_pkg/"> <restriction base="xsd:byte"/> </simpleType>}
- Enumerations
Mapped to an enumeration schema definition. For example:
type Color is (Red, Green, Blue);
is defined as:
<simpleType name="Color"> <restriction base="xsd:string"> <enumeration value="Red"/> <enumeration value="Green"/> <enumeration value="Blue"/> </restriction> </simpleType>
- Records
Mapped to a struct schema definition. For example:
type Rec is record A : Integer; B : Float; C : Long_Float; D : Character; E : Unbounded_String; F : Boolean; end record;
is defined as:
<complexType name="Rec"> <all> <element name="A" type="xsd:int"/> <element name="B" type="xsd:float"/> <element name="C" type="xsd:double"/> <element name="D" type="tns:Character"/> <element name="E" type="xsd:string"/> <element name="F" type="xsd:boolean"/> </all> </complexType>
- Arrays
Mapped to an array schema definition. For example:
type Set_Of_Rec is array (Positive range <>) of Rec;
is defined as:
<complexType name="Set_Of_Rec"> <complexContent> <restriction base="soap-enc:Array"> <attribute ref="soap-enc:arrayType" wsdl:arrayType="tns:Rec[]"/> </restriction> </complexContent> </complexType>
- Array inside a record
This part is a bit delicate. A record field must be constrained but a SOAP arrays is most of the time not constrained at all. To support this AWS use a safe access array component. Such a type is built using a generic runtime support package named SOAP.Utils.Safe_Pointers. This package implements a reference counter for the array access and will release automatically the memory when no more reference exists for a given object.
For example, let’s say that we have an array of integer that we want to put inside a record:
type Set_Of_Int is array (Positive range <>) of Integer;
The first step is to create the safe array access support:
type Set_Of_Int_Access is access Set_Of_Int; package Set_Of_Int_Safe_Pointer is new SOAP.Utils.Safe_Pointers (Set_Of_Int, Set_Of_Int_Access);
Note that the name Set_Of_Int_Safe_Pointer (<type>_Safe_Pointer) is mandatory (and checked by
ada2wsdl
) to achieve interoperability withwsdl2aws
. Working with WSDL documents.From there the safe array access can be placed into the record:
type Complex_Rec is record SI : Set_Of_Int_Safe_Pointer.Safe_Pointer; end record;
To create a Safe_Pointer given a Set_Of_Int one must use Set_Of_Int_Safe_Pointer.To_Safe_Pointer routine. Accessing individual items is done with SI.Item (K).
These Ada definitions are fully recognized by
ada2wsdl
and will generate standard array and record WSDL definitions as seen above:<complexType name="Set_Of_Int"> <complexContent> <restriction base="soap-enc:Array"> <attribute ref="soap-enc:arrayType" wsdl:arrayType="xsd:int[]"/> </restriction> </complexContent> </complexType> <complexType name="Complex_Rec"> <all> <element name="SI" type="tns:Set_Of_Int"/> </all> </complexType>
6.1.3. ada2wsdl¶
Usage: ada2wsdl [options] ada_spec
ada2wsdl options are:
- -a url
- Specify the URL for the Web Server address. Web Services will be available at this address. A port can be specified on the URL, http://server[:port]. The default value is http://.../.
- -f
- Force creation of the WSDL file. Overwrite exiting file with the same name.
- -I path
- Add path option for the ASIS compilation step. This option can appear any number of time on the command line.
- -noenum
- Do not generate WSDL representation for Ada enumerations, map them to standard string. Ada mapping to WSDL.
- -o file
- Generate the WSDL document into file.
- -q
- Quiet mode (no output)
- -s name
- Specify the Web Service name for the WSDL document, by default the spec package’s name is used.
- -v
- Verbose mode, display the parsed spec.
6.1.4. ada2wsdl limitations¶
- Do not handle constraint arrays into a records.
- Unbounded_String are supported with full interoperability only inside a record.
- Only unconstraint arrays are supported
- Arrays with multiple dimentions not supported
6.2. Working with WSDL documents¶
6.2.1. Client side (stub)¶
This section describe how to use a Web Service. Let’s say that we want to use the Barnes & Noble Price Quote service. The WSDL document for this service can be found at http://www.xmethods.net/sd/2001/BNQuoteService.wsdl. In summary this document says that there is a service named getPrice taking as input a string representing the ISBN number and returning the price as floating point.
The first step is to generate the client interface (stub):
$ wsdl2aws -noskel http://www.xmethods.net/sd/2001/BNQuoteService.wsdl
This will create many files, the interesting one at this point is
bnquoteservice-client.ads
, inside we have:
function getPrice (isbn : in String) return Float;
-- Raises SOAP.SOAP_Error if the procedure fails
Let’s call this service to find out the price for The Sword of Shannara Trilogy book:
with Ada.Text_IO;
with BNQuoteService.Client;
procedure Price is
use Ada;
ISBN : constant String := "0345453751";
-- The Sword of Shannara Trilogy ISBN
package LFIO is new Text_IO.Float_IO (Float);
begin
Text_IO.Put_Line ("B&N Price for The Sword of Shannara Trilogy");
LFIO.Put (BNQuoteService.Client.getPrice (ISBN), Aft => 2, Exp => 0);
end Price;
That’s all is needed to use this Web Service. This program is fully functional, It is possible to build it and to run it to get the answer.
6.2.2. Server side (skeleton)¶
Building a Web Service can also be done from a WSDL document. Let’s say that you are Barnes & Noble and that you want to build Web Service getPrice as described in the previous section.
You have created the WSDL document to specify the service spec. From there you can create the skeleton:
$ wsdl2aws -nostub http://www.xmethods.net/sd/2001/BNQuoteService.wsdl
This will create many files, the interesting one here is
bnquoteservice-server.ads
, inside we have:
Port : constant := 80;
generic
with function getPrice (isbn : in String) return Float;
function getPrice_CB
(SOAPAction : in String;
Payload : in SOAP.Message.Payload.Object;
Request : in AWS.Status.Data) return AWS.Response.Data;
This is a SOAP AWS‘s callback routine that can be instantiated with the right routine to retrieve the price of a book given its ISBN number. A possible implementation of such routine could be:
function getPrice (isbn : in String) return Float is
begin
if isbn = "0987654321" then
return 45.0;
elsif ...
end getPrice;
function SOAP_getPrice is new BNQuoteService.Server.getPrice_CB (getPrice);
SOAP_getPrice is a SOAP AWS‘s callback routine (i.e. it is not a standard callback). To use it there is different solutions:
- Using SOAP.Utils.SOAP_Wrapper
This generic function can be used to translate a standard callback based on AWS.Status.Data into a SOAP callback routine:
function getPrice_Wrapper is new SOAP.Utils.SOAP_Wrapper (SOAP_getPrice);
The routine getPrice_Wrapper can be used as any other AWS’s callback routines. Note that inside this wrapper the XML payload is parsed to check the routine name and to retrieve the SOAP parameters. To call this routine the payload needs to be parsed (we need to know which routine has be invoked). In this case we have parsed the XML payload twice, this is not efficient.
- Building the wrapper yourself
This solution is more efficient if there is many SOAP procedures as the payload is parsed only once:
function CB (Request : in Status.Data) return Response.Data is SOAPAction : constant String := Status.SOAPAction (Request); Payload : constant SOAP.Message.Payload.Object := SOAP.Message.XML.Load_Payload (AWS.Status.Payload (Request)); Proc : constant String := SOAP.Message.Payload.Procedure_Name (Payload); begin if SOAPAction = "..." then if Proc = "getPrice" then return SOAP_getPrice (SOAPAction, Payload, Request); elsif ... ... end if; else ... end if;
Note that the port to be used by the AWS server is described into the server spec.
6.2.3. wsdl2aws¶
Usage: wsdl2aws [options] <file|URL>
It is possible to pass a WSDL file or direct wsdl2aws
to
a WSDL document on the Web by passing it’s URL.
wsdl2aws options are:
- -q
- Quiet mode (no output)
- -d
- Generate debug code. Will output some information about the payload to help debug a Web Service.
- -a
- Generate using Ada style names. For example getPrice will be converted to Get_Price. This formatting is done for packages, routines and formal parameters.
- -f
- Force creation of the file. Overwrite any exiting files with the same name.
- -e
- Specify the default endpoint to use instead of the one found in the WSDL document.
- -s
- Skip non supported SOAP routines. If -s is not used, wsdl2aws will exit with an error when a problem is found while parsing the WSDL document. This option is useful to skip routines using non supported types and still be able to compile the generated files.
- -o name
- Specify the name of the local WSDL document. This option can be used only when using a Web WSDL document (i.e. passing an URL to wsdl2aws).
- -doc
- Handle document style binding as RPC ones. This is sometimes needed because some WSDL document specify a document style binding even though it is really an RPC one.
- -v
- Verbose mode, display the parsed spec.
- -v -v
- Verbose mode, display the parsed spec and lot of information while parsing the WSDL document tree.
- -wsdl
- Add WSDL document as comment into the generated root unit.
- -cvs
- Add CVS Id tag in every generated file.
- -nostub
- Do not generated stubs, only skeletons are generated.
- -noskel
- Do not generated skeletons, only stubs are generated.
- -cb
- Generate a SOAP dispatcher callback routine for the server. This dispatcher routine contains the code to handle all the operations as described in the WSDL document. You need also to specify the -spec and/or -types options, see below.
- -x operation
- Add operation to the list of SOAP operations to skip during the code generation. It is possible to specify multiple -x options on the command line.
- -spec spec
- Specify the name of the spec containing the Ada implementation of the SOAP routines. This is used for example by the -cb option above to instantiate all the server side SOAP callbacks used by the main SOAP dispatcher routine. If -types is not specified, the type definitions are also used from this spec.
- -types spec
- Specify the name of the spec containing the Ada types (record, array) used by SOAP routines specified with option -spec. If -spec is not specified, the spec definitions are also used from this spec.
- -main filename
Specify the name of the server’s procedure main to generate. If file
<filename>.amt
(Ada Main Template) is present, it uses this template file to generate the main procedure. The template can reference the following variable tags:- SOAP_SERVICE
The name of the service as described into the WSDL document. This tag can be used to include the right units:
with @_SOAP_SERVICE_@.Client; with @_SOAP_SERVICE_@.CB;
- SOAP_VERSION
- The AWS’s SOAP version.
- AWS_VERSION
- The AWS’s version.
- UNIT_NAME
The name of the generated unit. This is the name of the procedure that will be created:
procedure @_UNIT_NAME_@ is begin ...
- -proxy name|IP
- Use this proxy to access the WSDL document and generate code to access to these Web Services via this proxy. The proxy can be specified by its DNS name or IP address.
- -pu name
- User name for the proxy if proxy authentication required.
- -pp password
- User password for the proxy if proxy authentication required.
- -timeouts [timeouts | connect_timeout,send_timeout,receive_timeout ]
- Set the timeouts for the SOAP connection. The timeouts is either a single value used for the connect, send and receive timeouts or three values separated by a colon to set each timeout independently.
6.2.4. wsdl2aws behind the scene¶
The wsdl2aws tool read a WSDL document and creates a root package and a set of child packages as described below:
- <root>
- This is the main package, it contains eventually the full WSDL in comment and the description of the services as read from the WSDL document.
- <root>.Types
- This package contains the definitions of the types which are not SOAP base types. We find here the definitions of the SOAP structs and arrays with routines to convert them between the Ada and SOAP type model. A subtype definition is also created for every routine’s returned type. In fact, all definitions here are only alias or renaming of types and/or routines generated in other packages. The real definitions for structs, arrays, enumerations and derived types are generated into a package whose name depends on the name space used for these entities. This package act as a container for all definitions and it is the only one used in the other generated packages.
- <root>.Client
- All spec to call Web Services.
- <root>.Server
- All spec to build Web Services. These specs are all generic and must be instantiated with the right routine to create the web services.
- <root>.CB
- The SOAP dispatcher callback routine.
6.2.5. wsdl2aws limitations¶
It is hard to know all current limitations as the WSDL and SOAP world is quite complex. We list there all known limitations:
- Some SOAP base types are not supported : date, time, xsd:hexBinary, decimal. All these are easy to add (except decimal), it is just not supported with the current version.
- Multi-dimension arrays are not supported.
- abstract types are not supported.
- SOAP MIME attachments are not supported.
- WSDL type inheritance not supported.
- Only the RPC/Encoded SOAP messages’ style is supported (the Document/Literal is not)
6.3. Using ada2wsdl and wsdl2aws together¶
Using both tools together is an effective way to build rapidely a SOAP server. It can be said that doing so is quite trivial in fact. Let’s take the following spec:
package Graphics is
type Point is record
X, Y : Float;
end record;
function Distance (P1, P2 : in Point) return Float;
-- Returns the distance between points P1 and P2
end Graphics;
We do not show the body here but we suppose it is implemented. To build a server for this service it is as easy as:
$ ada2wsdl -a http://localhost:8787 -o graphics.wsdl graphics.ads
The server will be available on localhost at port 8787:
$ wsdl2aws -cb -main server -types graphics graphics.wsdl
$ gnatmake server -largs ...}
Options
- -cb
- is to create the SOAP dispatcher callback routine,
- -main server
- to generate the main server procedure in
server.adb
, - -types graphics
- to use
graphics.ads
to get references from user’s spec (reference to Graphics.Point for example).