I am currently working on REST project using the SoapUI v5.0.0 Tool. The intention is to make the project's WADL (web application description languag) available on web. I would like to know if Soap UI provides facilities to generate .wadl for the REST projects.
Right-click on the endpoint, and select "Export WADL".
Related
I have one Eclipse RCP3 project.Now I need to call a rest api|(java) and Post some information using that API. Need Help.
Being a Java application, an Eclipse RCP app can use most existing Java REST client libraries. My opinion is that the easiest way is to use the ECF JAX-RS Jersey Client. I recently wrote an article about how to incorporate this into an Eclipse RCP application:
https://www.modumind.com/2020/05/19/eclipse-rcp-and-rest-an-introduction/
In short, the JAX-RS Jersey Client is an OSGi Remote Services client created as part of the Eclipse Communications Framework (ECF) project. It embeds a Jersey/Jackson JAX-RS implementation that allows you to create REST clients as annotated interfaces that are made available as OSGi services locally. Jackson is used to data bind the REST responses to Java POJOs which require little or no annotation.
This solution allows you to skip most of the scaffolding code that usually has to be written to make REST calls in a Java application. But of course, you can also use Jersey and Jackson directly, those plugins are made available via Eclipse Orbit project.
http://www.eclipse.org/orbit
The GitHub repository for the ECF JAX-RS Jersey Client can be found here:
https://github.com/ECF/JaxRSProviders
I'm new in Alfresco I have download and installed "alfresco-community-4.2.f-installer-win-x64.exe" and I'm looking if I can import it as an eclipse project
The Alfresco Installer provides everything you need to run Alfresco. Install it, start it, away you go
However, if you want to either write your own Java code to run on Alfresco, or to extend/change Alfresco, it isn't what you need.
To build your own code on top of Alfresco, you'll most likely want the Alfresco SDK. That contains everything you need to:
Develop Alfresco Repository plug-ins such as:
Custom Actions / Conditions
Custom Aspects
Custom Transformers
Develop Applications against a standalone Alfresco server via Alfresco's Web Service API. In this case, the SDK works as a wrapper for the Alfresco API.
Embed Alfresco into existing Applications via Alfresco's Java Foundation API or standards-compliant JCR API
Alternately, if you want to make changes to Alfresco itself, then you'll need to grab the source code for it. The Source Code Wiki Page has the details of how to do that, and the 4.2f code is here
if you are using Maven you can try with Maven Alfresco SDK
I have created a BPEL project in eclipse using BPEL visual designer. After deployment, i can right click on .wsdl file and choose Web services >> Test with web services explorer.
This opens up a window in eclipse itself.
Is there a way to do this in browser (chrome etc..) ?
Also, i know this is pretty basic, but how to use the generated wsdl and Bpel(like how to deploy in server(in my localhost) for instance ). Any links on basics would be of great help.
I don't know a good web-based Web service testing tool. You may give the try-it functionality of WSO2's products a try. In any case, I recommend using SoapUI, which is absolutely awesome for testing Web services.
would like to know if there is any web service testing tool eclipse plugin.
I looked at soap ui eclipse plugin , but its to big to get it installed in my environment.
Is there a simple eclipse plugin that is free and let me fire soap requests and see soap responses in Eclipse?.
Thanks.
Eclipse has a built-in tool (the Web Services Explorer, part of the WTP?) allowing to test a web service and inspect the response. See 3.1 Using the Web Services Explorer to test a Web service.
I've setup a project in Netbeans 6.5 with some web services that I've created myself and some web services that I've imported from WSDL files. I've setup a couple of desktop application through Netbeans in order to consume these web services. I'm not too sure where to go from here.
I have the GUI setup but not sure how to reference the web services so they can be consumed. I was wondering would anybody be able to guide me through this process or point me in the direction of a relevant tutorial. I'd also like to learn how to consume a web service through a JSP (also created in Netbeans) if possible.
Thanks.
You may find this tutorial useful:
http://netbeans.org/kb/docs/websvc/client.html, but since you are using Netbean 6.5 this may be the correct version:
http://netbeans.org/kb/61/websvc/client.html. As the steps show, it isn't difficult to build a jax-ws client using Netbeans.
But, it depends on what version of Java you are using also, most likely. You may want to download the latest version of jax-ws, if you get errors with your wsdl.
For a JSP, just create a custom tag to call the client.