I was playing with Netbeans today and wanted to see how I would be able to deploy a Webservice. I started by importing all the required Jar file. I used a wizard(Library Manager) so all the required Jars were already placed on my behalf. If you want to add them manually, here is the list of jars that...
The usual way of making a webservice client in Java is by feeding Axis's WSDL2JAR tool or Using the Eclipse/Netbeans IDE with a URL that looks something like http://someurl.com/webservice.aspx?wsdl . Alternatively, you could use a WSDL file. I thought WSDLs were always manually-generated until my...
I have to admit... I can write a webservice(server) in .Net(with attributes) but not in Java. Why? Because writing one seems so hard... Ah ah ah! That was before! Because of this anxiety I tried to key in google for "webservice annotation" and my expectation for Java didn't fail me. My...
Hmmm... Where is the code selector Keith? Anyway, I'm here to show how a .Net webservice and a Java client(in this case, a method in my JSF project) can inter-operate. Ok, I'm no C# coder. So the code I will be posting here will be a code made for me by a friend. Before we start, I'd like...
I've been doing an internal project for my company. I had this idea of just connecting to our existing HR system to retrieve some employee records instead of creating another database table. Well, far so good. Thanks for Cruizer and Keithrull's advices on how I should implement this system as...