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billon-soap
Advanced tools
A SOAP client and server for node.js.
This module lets you connect to web services using SOAP. It also provides a server that allows you to run your own SOAP services.
Install with npm:
npm install soap
var soap = require('soap');
var url = 'http://example.com/wsdl?wsdl';
var args = {name: 'value'};
soap.createClient(url, function(err, client) {
client.MyFunction(args, function(err, result) {
console.log(result);
});
});
Within the options object you may provide an endpoint
property in case you want to override the SOAP service's host specified in the .wsdl
file.
wsdl is an xml string that defines the service.
var myService = {
MyService: {
MyPort: {
MyFunction: function(args) {
return {
name: args.name
};
},
// This is how to define an asynchronous function.
MyAsyncFunction: function(args, callback) {
// do some work
callback({
name: args.name
})
},
// This is how to receive incoming headers
HeadersAwareFunction: function(args, cb, headers) {
return {
name: headers.Token
};
}
}
}
}
var xml = require('fs').readFileSync('myservice.wsdl', 'utf8'),
server = http.createServer(function(request,response) {
response.end("404: Not Found: "+request.url)
});
server.listen(8000);
soap.listen(server, '/wsdl', myService, xml);
If the log method is defined it will be called with 'received' and 'replied' along with data.
server = soap.listen(...)
server.log = function(type, data) {
// type is 'received' or 'replied'
};
A service method can reply with a SOAP Fault to a client by throw
ing an
object with a Fault
property.
throw {
Fault: {
Code: {
Value: "soap:Sender",
Subcode: { value: "rpc:BadArguments" }
},
Reason: { Text: "Processing Error" }
}
};
A service method can look at the SOAP headers by providing a 3rd arguments.
{
HeadersAwareFunction: function(args, cb, headers) {
return {
name: headers.Token
};
}
}
It is also possible to subscribe to the 'headers' event. The event is triggered before the service method is called, and only when the SOAP Headers are not empty.
server = soap.listen(...)
server.on('headers', function(headers, methodName) {
// It is possible to change the value of the headers
// before they are handed to the service method.
// It is also possible to throw a SOAP Fault
});
First parameter is the Headers object; second parameter is the name of the SOAP method that will called (in case you need to handle the headers differently based on the method).
If server.authenticate is not defined no authentation will take place.
server = soap.listen(...)
server.authenticate = function(security) {
var created, nonce, password, user, token;
token = security.UsernameToken, user = token.Username,
password = token.Password, nonce = token.Nonce, created = token.Created;
return user === 'user' && password === soap.passwordDigest(nonce, created, 'password');
};
This is called prior to soap service method If the method is defined and returns false the incoming connection is terminated.
server = soap.listen(...)
server.authorizeConnection = function(req) {
return true; // or false
};
An instance of Client is passed to the soap.createClient callback. It is used to execute methods on the soap service.
client.describe() // returns
{
MyService: {
MyPort: {
MyFunction: {
input: {
name: 'string'
}
}
}
}
}
node-soap
has several default security protocols. You can easily add your own
as well. The interface is quite simple. Each protocol defines 2 methods:
request
By default there are 3 protocols:
####BasicAuthSecurity
client.setSecurity(new soap.BasicAuthSecurity('username', 'password'));
####ClientSSLSecurity Note: If you run into issues using this protocol, consider passing these options as default request options to the constructor:
client.setSecurity(new soap.ClientSSLSecurity(
'/path/to/key'
, '/path/to/cert'
, {/*default request options*/}
));
####WSSecurity
client.setSecurity(new soap.WSSecurity('username', 'password'))
####BearerSecurity
client.setSecurity(new soap.BearerSecurity('token'));
client.MyFunction({name: 'value'}, function(err, result, raw, soapHeader) {
// result is a javascript object
// raw is the raw response
// soapHeader is the response soap header as a javascript object
})
client.MyService.MyPort.MyFunction({name: 'value'}, function(err, result) {
// result is a javascript object
})
client.MyService.MyPort.MyFunction({name: 'value'}, function(err, result) {
// result is a javascript object
}, {timeout: 5000})
soapHeader
Object({rootName: {name: "value"}}) or strict xml-stringname
Unknown parameter (it could just a empty string)namespace
prefix of xml namespacexmlns
URIClient instances emit the following events:
WSSecurity implements WS-Security. UsernameToken and PasswordText/PasswordDigest is supported. An instance of WSSecurity is passed to Client.setSecurity.
new WSSecurity(username, password, passwordType)
//'PasswordDigest' or 'PasswordText' default is PasswordText
Sometimes it is necessary to override the default behaviour of node-soap
in order to deal with the special requirements
of your code base or a third library you use. Therefore you can use the wsdlOptions
Object, which is passed in the
#createClient()
method and could have any (or all) of the following contents:
var wsdlOptions = {
attributesKey: 'theAttrs',
valueKey: 'theVal',
xmlKey: 'theXml'
}
If nothing (or an empty Object {}
) is passed to the #createClient()
method, the node-soap
defaults (attributesKey: 'attributes'
, valueKey: '$value'
and xmlKey: '$xml'
) are used.
###Overriding the value
key
By default, node-soap
uses $value
as key for any parsed XML value which may interfere with your other code as it
could be some reserved word, or the $
in general cannot be used for a key to start with.
You can define your own valueKey
by passing it in the wsdl_options
to the createClient call like so:
var wsdlOptions = {
valueKey: 'theVal'
};
soap.createClient(__dirname + '/wsdl/default_namespace.wsdl', wsdlOptions, function (err, client) {
// your code
});
###Overriding the xml
key
As valueKey
, node-soap
uses $xml
as key. The xml key is used to pass XML Object without adding namespace or parsing the string.
Example :
dom = {
$xml: '<parentnode type="type"><childnode></childnode></parentnode>'
};
<tns:dom>
<parentnode type="type">
<childnode></childnode>
</parentnode>
</tns:dom>
You can define your own xmlKey
by passing it in the wsdl_options
to the createClient call like so:
var wsdlOptions = {
xmlKey: 'theXml'
};
soap.createClient(__dirname + '/wsdl/default_namespace.wsdl', wsdlOptions, function (err, client) {
// your code
});
###Overriding the attributes
key
You can achieve attributes like:
<parentnode>
<childnode name="childsname">
</childnode>
</parentnode>
By attaching an attributes object to a node.
{
parentnode: {
childnode: {
attributes: {
name: 'childsname'
}
}
}
}
However, "attributes" may be a reserved key for some systems that actually want a node
<attributes>
</attributes>
In this case you can configure the attributes key in the wsdlOptions
like so.
var wsdlOptions = {
attributesKey: '$attributes'
};
soap.createClient(__dirname + '/wsdl/default_namespace.wsdl', wsdlOptions, function (err, client) {
client.*method*({
parentnode: {
childnode: {
$attributes: {
name: 'childsname'
}
}
}
});
});
If an Element in a schema
definition depends on an Element which is present in the same namespace, normally the tns:
namespace prefix is used to identify this Element. This is not much of a problem as long as you have just one schema
defined
(inline or in a separate file). If there are more schema
files, the tns:
in the generated soap
file resolved mostly to the parent wsdl
file,
which was obviously wrong.
node-soap
now handles namespace prefixes which shouldn't be resolved (because it's not necessary) as so called ignoredNamespaces
which default to an Array of 3 Strings (['tns', 'targetNamespace', 'typedNamespace']
).
If this is not sufficient for your purpose you can easily add more namespace prefixes to this Array, or override it in its entirety
by passing an ignoredNamespaces
object within the options
you pass in soap.createClient()
method.
A simple ignoredNamespaces
object, which only adds certain namespaces could look like this:
var options = {
ignoredNamespaces: {
namespaces: ['namespaceToIgnore', 'someOtherNamespace']
}
}
This would extend the ignoredNamespaces
of the WSDL
processor to ['tns', 'targetNamespace', 'typedNamespace', 'namespaceToIgnore', 'someOtherNamespace']
.
If you want to override the default ignored namespaces you would simply pass the following ignoredNamespaces
object within the options
:
var options = {
ignoredNamespaces: {
namespaces: ['namespaceToIgnore', 'someOtherNamespace'],
override: true
}
}
This would override the default ignoredNamespaces
of the WSDL
processor to ['namespaceToIgnore', 'someOtherNamespace']
. (This shouldn't be necessary, anyways).
FAQs
A minimal node SOAP client
We found that billon-soap demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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