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SAAJ enables developers to produce and consume messages conforming to the SOAP 1.1 and 1.2 specifications and SOAP with Attachments note. It can be used as an alternative to JAX-RPC or JAX-WS. SOAP or Simple Object Access Protocol was created by Mohsen Al-Ghosein, Dave Winer, Bob Atkinson, and Don Box in 1998 with help from Microsoft. [1]
SOAP with Attachments API for Java (SAAJ) Specification 1.3; javax.xml.messaging - this package is specified in the JAXM 1.1 specification; javax.xml.soap - this package is specified in the SAAJ 1.3 specification; Overview of JAXM Archived 2017-05-10 at the Wayback Machine; Hello World Example for JAXM
SoapUI is an open-source web service testing application for Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) and representational state transfers (REST). Its functionality covers web service inspection, invoking, development, simulation and mocking, functional testing, load and compliance testing.
This mapping also determines how the method’s return value gets mapped to the SOAP response. JAX-WS uses annotations, introduced in Java SE 5, to simplify the development and deployment of web service clients and endpoints. It is part of the Java Web Services Development Pack. JAX-WS can be used in Java SE starting with version 6. [1]
SOA is related to the idea of an API (application programming interface), an interface or communication protocol between different parts of a computer program intended to simplify the implementation and maintenance of software. An API can be thought of as the service, and the SOA the architecture that allows the service to operate.
It can be seen as Java RMIs over web services. JAX-RPC 2.0 was renamed JAX-WS 2.0 (Java API for XML Web Services). JAX-RPC 1 is deprecated with Java EE 6. [1] The JAX-RPC service utilizes W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) standards like WSDL (Web Service Description Language). [2] The core API classes are located in the Java package javax.xml.rpc.
In 2000, Jason Hunter, author of "Java Servlet Programming" described a number of "problems" with JavaServer Pages. [21] Nevertheless, he wrote that while JSP may not be the "best solution for the Java Platform" it was the "Java solution that is most like the non-Java solution," by which he meant Microsoft's Active Server Pages.
Apache Axis2 supports SOAP 1.1 and SOAP 1.2, and it has integrated support for the REST [2]: §14-9, [638] style of Web services. The same business-logic implementation can offer both a WS-* style interface as well as a REST/POX style interface simultaneously. Axis2/Java has support for Spring Framework. [2]: §14-9, [638]