I have Spring Soap web service endpoint and want to write Spock test method for this endpoint. I surfed in google but couldn't find any resources about this topic. Could anyone help to solve this problem?
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I have recently encountered a problem statement ,there is a legacy code using soap based web service and ant as build tool.
My task is to convert the soap based web service to rest endpoint using spring boot and then end goal is to convert to microservice.
I have seen lot of articles where spring starter project is created with spring webservice dependency and they are also generating the classes through xsd's and using annotations like payload and SOAP configuration and checking the wsdl after running the application.
Is this the right approach to convert soap to rest but in my understanding it is simply creating soap web services using spring boot.
If we expose Rest Controllers with Pojos generated and generating the response type as xml or json ,do we need to do something apart from this to achieve the goal of converting soap to rest?
Any suggestions?
I am still exploring the working solution.
So far I have created the config client and server and I am thinking how to code inside the client code to expose soap as rest service.
I am just starting with Spring Integration with Spring Boot 2.
I am working on a application which uses Spring Integration's HTTP outbound gateway to consume a Spring boot Service.
I am consuming the spring boot service from Spring Integration application using Gateway.
When I call the Gateway method which in turn will use the outbound gateway to call the spring boot service, the request does not seem to be completed. It is just going on when I make the HTTP GET request via the browser.
The request is also not received by the Spring Boot service.
I am not able to identify what is wrong in my Integration application when using gateway to consume a Spring Boot 2 service.
I have shared my Spring Boot 2 Application and also the Integration application which I am using to consume it in the below github folder. it contains 2 folders, one for the spring Integration application and the other for the spring boot application.
https://github.com/gsamartian/spring-int-demos
I have exposed a REST interface for the Integration application using RestController.
I access the boot application from integration application via the url, http://localhost:8763/callExternalServiceViaGateway
I am able to access the spring boot application directly from its port.
If anyone can help me identify the cause it would be great.
Thanks,
Your problem that the gateway method is without any args:
#Gateway(requestChannel = "get.request.channel", replyChannel = "reply.channel")
String getCustomMessage();
In this case the gateway works as receiving. No any requests is send because nothing to wrap to the payload. See more info on the matter in the Reference Manual.
Right now I see several bugs with the payloadExpression and no arg, so I suggest you to add some String payload arg to the getCustomMessage() gateway method and perform it with an empty string.
Will take a look into the bugs and will fix them soon.
Thank you for a good sample how to catch and reproduce!
https://jira.spring.io/browse/INT-4448
https://jira.spring.io/browse/INT-4449
I have to invoke a couple of rest web service from my spring boot application. I am planning to use the Camel to configure the flow and other EIP use cases. Some of the endpoints are using oAuth2 authentication. I am planning to use the Spring oAuthResttempalte. All the examples on the internet are either using restlet, CXF or camel-http.
Camel Rest Consmer
I am not able to find a single example with just spring resttemplate. Did anyone implement Camel Rest consumer using Spring Resttemplate?
Some of the Examples on the internet use a jetty server to consume a rest endpoint. Why do you need a jetty server for simple rest consumer?
Did anyone implement Camel Rest consumer using Spring Resttemplate?
I'm not aware of that and it's unlikely to found something in that direction because Camel already have bult-in components to consume rest endpoints.
Some of the Examples on the internet use a jetty server to consume a rest endpoint. Why do you need a jetty server for simple rest consumer?
I believe that jetty was used as a consumer not a producer endpoint. So you won't need the "server". Or maybe you saw an example using jetty acting as a server to serve an OAuth endpoint?
If you excuse my approach, I'd suggest to remain with Camel HTTP/Rest capabilities to consume REST APIs using OAuth. I've found this example on Gist:
from("direct:authService").tracing()
.setHeader(Exchange.HTTP_PATH)
.simple("<auth service context>/oauth2/token")
.setHeader("CamelHttpMethod")
.simple("POST")
.setHeader("Content-Type")
.simple("application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
.setHeader("Accept")
.simple("application/json")
.setBody()
.constant("grant_type=client_credentials&client_id=<client id>&client_secret=<client sec>")
.to("https4://<remote auth service url>")
.convertBodyTo(String.class)
.log("response from API: " + body())
.choice()
.when().simple("${header.CamelHttpResponseCode} == 200")
.unmarshal().json(JsonLibrary.Jackson, AccessResponseToken.class)
.setHeader("jwt").simple("${body.access_token}")
.to("direct:<some direct route>")
.otherwise()
.log("Not Authenticated!!!");
If you want to stick into OAuthRestTemplate you may implement a Processor or a bean to wrap those calls and return to your route the authorization token.
I Have a Spring Boot application with RestController, service, and domain. So my application publishes a REST API. How would I go about to have my application publish both a REST and a SOAP API at the same time? Thanks!
I have successfully integrated Spring and Jersey via Spring Boot' starter POMs, and I have a couple Jersey endpoints. Now I'd like to unit test the resources. I can't seem to get MockMvc working. I get a 404 error when attempting to GET a resource endpoint.
I know there is a Jersey test framework out there, but it appears to launch a server. I'm hoping to avoid "integration" type tests and keep this as simple as possible. Can I do this with MockMvc?
Unfortunately doesn't seem to be possible as MockMvc doesn't actually start servlet container.
You can use
RestTemplate to fire requests against server started on localhost. Here are examples from Spring Boot repo: Example 1 and Example 2.
Rest Assured library