How do i integrate with API´s? - jboss

I have read documentation and studied various examples on JBoss but still havent figuerd out how to make API calls and play with the data. I think i would like to use apache Camel, but is there any other tool that might be better at this?
UserCase:
1: Make a call to https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1 and print the body in the console.
2: Consume a wsdl file and get access to a SOAP API, make calls and print the data in the console.
What example or tutorial should i look on, or could you explain to me the best way to achieve this in JBoss?
Edit: Do i just do this in pure java perhaps?
Edit2: Fuse Online looks like something i might use to achieve my user cases. Could anyone confirm?
It seems weird with 50 views and no responses, Is something unclear with the question?

This is how i made rest/soap requests and managed to integrate with APIs.
Soap:
<to id="_to2" uri="cxf:https://thisSoapAPIExampleURL.cgi?dataFormat=MESSAGE&wsdlURL=C:\Users\Softy\workspace\restTest\src\main\resources\wsdl\MyAPI.wsdl"/>
Rest:
<to id="_to1" uri="http4://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts"/>
or
<to id="_to1" uri="cxfrs:https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts"/>

Related

SOAP Request: How to make multiple request messages in sequence

I have a SOAP endpoint and will be having more than 1000 request messages which have different values for the request parameters but same operation of SOAP Message. I want to execute them in a sequence if the previous request that got triggered was 200 OK?
Is there any way to do this without JAVA program? Is there any client that will help me?
I assume you already have some sort of loop in your test case that reads your variable properties from a file or perhaps Excel and feeds them into your SOAP request. Ready API/soapUI Pro gives you this functionality, but for open source soapUI you'll have to write your own Groovy test steps.
Then, you can use a soapUI Compliance, Status and Standards assertion to check you've received a valid or invalid HTTP status code and react accordingly.
Is there any way to do this without JAVA program? Is there any client
that will help me?
After re-reading the question, it seems to me you're not yet using SoapUI, though it has been tagged as a SoapUI question. It happens quite a lot on here where people are askign general SOAP questions, but tag SoapUI. BTW, Craig's answer should be accepted if you are using SoapUI.
In terms of options, you have lots....
Code. You can use Python, C#, Java, Javascript, etc. etc. to create a program that will call your endpoint. Any programming language will have the libraries to call web services. So, if you do know a language, you could use that.
SoapUI. There is a free version, which will allow you to call web services. In your question, you want to call the same service over and over with different parameters. In testing speak, this is a data-driven test. These can be achieved in the free SoapUI, but it is a fiddle. However, the full-licensed version offers data-driven tests out of the box. I use these all the time. Very easy to set-up. If you use SoapUI, then Craig's answer about using Assertions would stop the test if you got a status code other than a 200.
Postman. this is another free tool, which I have used a little. I haven't tried data-driven tests, but I'm sure the docs will tell you if they're supported. If you try Postman, then you ought to look at Danny Dainton's excellent tutorial on GitHub
JMeter. Another free tool. This is primarily used for performance and load testing, but would still meet your needs.

How to start with writing a RESTful service?

I am trying to create a RESTful web service that accepts JSON arguments and gives out a JSON response.
What I want is to accept HTTP requests made to my URL endpoint.
Something like,
POST /the/endpoint HTTP/1.1
Host: mywebsite.com
{"name":"yourname", "department":"your_department"}
Do a DB read at the backend and give relevant parameters like, say Manager name, salary etc as a JSON object, as the response.
What's the best way to go about it? I was thinking of using Java servlets for this? Is there a better way?
PS - I am just getting started so detailed answers or links to tutorials as to how to implement it would be much appreciated.
Thanks.
Yes you can easily do this with Servlets and some Json Libs for Marshalling /unmarshalling the Json Object to Java Object.
You can make use of Json libs like
Jackson ,
Gson etc
But you must know that REST application doesnt end with just handling the request and response , but it needs to take care of other non-functional requirements like
Authentication
Authorization
Security etc
Building this from a scratch from a Servlet is overkill and waste of time when there are ready made frameworks that these things for you
My favorite is Spring MVC 3.0
Check their project site for more details
Just to show you how easy to set up one in Spring MVC , check this below tutorial
Spring 3 REST Tutorial
Pls rate the post if it helps , Cheers.
If you want to go with Java, I suggest that you take a look at JAX-RS... And since REST is a complex topic, here is a url with tons of informations on it. http://code.google.com/p/implementing-rest/
As a complete beginner, I believe the best way to implement a (nearly) RESTful API without having to read a lot is simply to implement the API just using HTML pages and HTML forms with the back-end processing to handle them.
The rules are:
Use <a> tags to provide links to related resources. (navigation)
Use <form> tags to initiate any kind of processing operation on the server. (actions)
You can then make it properly RESTful by using progressive enhancement to add Javascript AJAX requests that perform PUT, PATCH, and DELETE instead of using POST for those three (of course, keeping POST for creating resources where the client doesn't know the resultant URI).
You can then click around and test the API in a web browser! Tools like Selenium can automate this.
If you need to provide JSON, this can be added after the API has been designed and tested, although libraries exist to process HTML or XHTML responses too, so JSON isn't necessarily required for machine readability.
if you are using php with symfony try:https://github.com/FriendsOfSymfony/FOSRestBundle this lets you create a real REST full servicer very quick.
Vogella made my day very easy when i started Web services with an super example here with eclipse screen shots ..Have a look here.

How to consume ASPX webservices in iOS?

Could anybody clarify the process of consuming aspx webservices in iOS? I have already tried JSON framework but now, need to create an app that consumes .net webservices in XML format. I need both to post some data to, and get data from the server. I already read about existing XML parsers for iOS that I found (here)
The question is do I need to do additional setup, like wrapping my query strings in SOAP or smth, in order to communicate with webserver? Would it be sufficient to use only one of mentioned libraries in the link or do I need additional stuff?
UPDATE: I found one tutorial on web (here) that demonstrates how to consume web services using Json-framework. Also, I found another one that demonstrates it using NSXMLParser (here). I'm not not very familiar with WSDL and SOAP, so any detailed explanation on how to implement would be desirable :). In both of these examples you just have to construct a request string in xml format and execute it, and that's it. Both examples actually bypasses the heavyness of SOAP and WSDL, so I was wondering do I have to know and do more that just construct a request string, execute it and get response?
While wsdl2objc is out there (as noted by #Girish Kolari), the truth is that there's no easy answer. I've never successfully gotten wsdl2objc working well for something that I couldn't have done more easily by hand. You will need to learn SOAP and WSDL. That's just a fact of life if you can't get access to a REST interface. In my experience, your best bet for simple SOAP access is to do it by hand, and your best bet for somewhat complicated SOAP access is gSOAP. Your best bet for very complicated access is to redesign something so it's not so complicated, ideally in REST. SOAP is a giant pain that some languages (C#) shield you from. ObjC does not shield you from it, so it continues to be a giant pain.
Yes, SOAP leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

How to consume a SOAP (WCF) service in Plone?

Im very new to Plone, having only really scratched the surface of the product.
My client uses it, and would like an application built using it.
Can anyone give me some pointers on how to consume a SOAP service in Plone?
Any links to tutorials, articles, screencasts etc would be apprciated.
thanks
For a good Python SOAP client to use with Plone, we usually recommend Suds: https://fedorahosted.org/suds/

How can I create a SOAP server in Perl?

I'm working with a third-party vendor who unfortunately requires that we set up a SOAP server to handle requests from them. I'm having some trouble finding the best way to go about this. One limitation I'm imposing is that it runs as a mod_perl2 handler. After some searching I've found that the best way may be to use XML::Compile and its SOAP classes but I'm having a tough time wrapping my head around it. Part of the problem is my limited understanding of SOAP and the documentation for most modules seems a bit cryptic to me.
So, can anyone give me some pointers, sample code, anything?
EDIT: we were also given a WSDL file to use, and this was not compatible with SOAP::WSDL ("unsupported global type found in ...
Looks like a rpc/literal WSDL, which is not supported by SOAP::WSDL)
EDIT: XML::Compile::SOAP complains "RPC encoded not supported by this version" when using the WSDL with XML::Compile::WSDL11. Can/should I not worry about the WSDL file?
If you have a limited understanding of SOAP, starting reading about SOAP before you worry about implementing it. There are lots of SOAP tutorials out there. Most of the documentation probably seems cryptic to you because you don't already know SOAP.
It's not that tricky of a process. It's not that different than any other web programming when it comes to the big steps:
You get a SOAP request, which is some XML.
You pull apart the XML to figure out what to do.
You put together some XML to send as a response.
You return the response.
XML::Compile will take care of most of the details for you.
Before you start writing your own server, you might consider writing a client for an existing SOAP server just to give yourself some practice.
I found two modules that can help you make soap server, but I never use its
https://metacpan.org/pod/XML::Compile::SOAP::Daemon
https://metacpan.org/pod/SOAP::WSDL::Server