Example XML client package project; import java.io.IOException; import java.net.URL; import org.w3c.dom.Element; import com.sun.xml.tree.XmlDocument; import com.sun.xml.parser.Resolver; /** * This class is a sample XML messaging client, supporting simple "echo" and * "uppercase" messages that accept pure text messages to show mechanics * of sending and receiving valid XML documents as messages over HTTP(S). * *

Normally, XML documents would be designed to reflect the workflow of * some process that's being automated. The vocabulary (element tags, their * attributes, and the allowed contents) would be defined to reflect the * requirements of that particular proces, and would be described in one or * more "Document Type Declaration" (DTD) files, as done in this example. * DTDs also have documentation defining the semantics of their elements; * for simple DTDs this can be embedded in comments, but DTDs supporting * more complex procedures require external documentation. * *

The definitions of such vocabulary definitions need to be agreed * on only by the organizations participating in the process. They might * be parts of one organization developing an Intranet application, some * companies working on a private Extranet system, or an industry group * working on vertical supply chain integration. Open Standards processes * apply to the development of larger systems, such as those involved in * Internet Business frameworks. * * @version 1.3 */ public class ExampleClient { // can't instantiate private ExampleClient () { } private final static String exampleDtdFPI = "+//Example DTD//foo//EN"; /** * Driver for client, needs three parameters: URL of server, * method name, text message. */ public static void main (String argv []) { XmlRpcClient client; XmlDocument doc; Element root; if (argv.length != 3) { System.err.println ("usage: project.ExampleClient " + "URL (echo|uppercase) Message"); System.exit (1); } try { // prepare to call ... client = createClient (new URL (argv [0])); // create document that _should_ be valid (server validates!) doc = new XmlDocument (); doc.setDoctype (exampleDtdFPI, "http://www.example.com/xml", null); root = doc.createElement (argv [1]); doc.appendChild (root); root.appendChild (doc.createTextNode (argv [2])); // make call, print result doc = client.call (doc); doc.write (System.out); } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace (System.err); } } // // Create a simple proxy for the object on the server side, which // understands the DTD used to define this (trivial) workflow // protocol. // private static XmlRpcClient createClient (URL uri) { XmlRpcClient retval = new XmlRpcClient (uri); Resolver r = new Resolver (); // In this example, the client doesn't need to customize // request or response documents with specialized DOM elements r.registerCatalogEntry (exampleDtdFPI, "project/example.dtd", ExampleClient.class.getClassLoader ()); retval.customizeResolver (r); return retval; } }