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1132

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3

I'm trying to access a SOAP service i don't control. One of the actions is called ProcessMessage. I follow example and generate a SOAP request, but I get an error back saying that the action doesn't exist. I traced the problem to the way the body of the envelope is generated.

<env:Envelope ... ">
    <env:Header>
        <wsse:Security ... ">
            <wsse:UsernameToken ...">
                <wsse:Username>USER</wsse:Username>
                    <wsse:Nonce>658e702d5feff1777a6c741847239eb5d6d86e48</wsse:Nonce>
                    <wsu:Created>2010-02-18T02:05:25Z</wsu:Created>
                    <wsse:Password ... >password</wsse:Password>
            </wsse:UsernameToken>
        </wsse:Security>
    </env:Header>
    <env:Body>
        <wsdl:ProcessMessage>
            <payload>
                ......
            </payload>
        </wsdl:ProcessMessage>
    </env:Body>
</env:Envelope>     

That ProcessMessage tag should be :

    <ProcessMessage xmlns="http://www.starstandards.org/webservices/2005/10/transport"&gt;

That's what it is when it is generated by the sample java app, and it works. That tag is the only difference between what my ruby app generates and the sample java app. Is there any way to get rid of the "wsdl:" namesaplce in front of that one tag and add an attribute like that. Barring that, is there a way to make force the action to be not to be generated by just passed as a string like the rest of the body?

Here is my code.

require 'rubygems'
require 'savon'
client = Savon::Client.new "https://gmservices.pp.gm.com/ProcessMessage?wsdl"

response = client.process_message! do | soap, wsse |
wsse.username = "USER"
wsse.password = "password"
soap.namespace = "http://www.starstandards.org/webservices/2005/10/transport" #makes no difference
soap.action = "ProcessMessage" #makes no difference
soap.input = "ProcessMessage" #makes no difference

#my body at this point is jsut one big xml string

soap.body = "<payload>...</payload>" 
# putting <ProccessMessage> tag here doesn't help as it just creates a duplicate tag in the body, since Savon keeps interjecting  <wsdl:ProcessMessage> tag.

  end

Thank you

P.S.: I tried handsoap but it doesn't support httpS and is confusing, and I tried soap4r but but it'even more confusing than handsoap.

+5  A: 

You need to pass an array to soap.input the second element of which is a hash containing the namespace details.

soap.input = [ 
  "ProcessMessage", 
  {"xmlns" => "http://www.starstandards.org/webservices/2005/10/transport"}
]

This should ensure you end up with the name space declaration as an attribute to the main element.

You will probably also end up with a namespace declaration before the element like so

<env:Body>
    <wsdl:ProcessMessage xmlns="........." >
        <payload>
            ......
        </payload>
    </wsdl:ProcessMessage>
</env:Body>

but this was not an issue for me, it was the lack of the namespace attribute that was the issue, not the presence of the namespace before the element.

Steve Weet
Steve. Thank you for your message - it's not my solution but it got me to thinking and looking at the logs more carefullly. See my own answer. There is not enough space here in comments. :-)
Nick Gorbikoff
Thanks your solution worked a charm just now when I was having the exact same problem.
bjeanes
+2  A: 

Steve, you see that wsdl: in front of ProcessMessage tag? - I thought that was the only thing that was throwing me off but its not ( by the way it's hard set in soap.rb in Savon lib on line 160). That even if I don't spacify it in soap.namespaces - it's hard generated and attached in final xml. Which is not allowed by my service.

While the xml that is generated is a valid xml - it's not complete by the requirments of the service I'm trying to talk to. I.e.: in generated xml,

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

tag is missing, also, I need PayloadManifest in the header,plus I need wsu:created and wsu:expires in my wsse: tag, but they are not implemented, etc., etc. a bunch of other little quirks that are too specific to my case. However soap has a private method = xml_body. Also soap lib in to_xml method is checking whether @xml_body was already set, before generating it's own xml. So I ended up slighly modifying behavior of soap. by making soap.xml_body = publicly accessable. So I was able to do:

response = client.process_message! do |soap| 
soap.action = "http://www.starstandards.org/webservices/2005/10/transport/operations/ProcessMessage"
soap.xml_body = "MY XML STRING GENERATED ELSEWHERE GOES HERE"
end

Which finally works!!!!

I'll suggest this to rubii - if this option becomes available that will solve a lot rare cases - where people can generate their custom xml and use the rest of savon lib.

Nick Gorbikoff
That would be a good solution I think. I found that IIS/.net was complaining about the lack of a namespace but didn't care whether there was an <xml> directive at the top of the file. Good luck, it was pretty painful getting to that point.
Steve Weet
+1  A: 

Nick, How did you modify soap.rb? xml_body is a method, so xml_soap = "xml" doesn't work for me when I make the method public.

Ah, never mind. I am using version 0.7.9, and found that the soap.xml variable is publicly accessible. So, by adding this line: soap.xml = "entire xml you want to send", it worked! Rich

richrose
Yep Rich, you right, that fix was added after I submitted the bug report, so you don't need to do this anymore, you can just override it directly from you code.
Nick Gorbikoff