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365 lines
9.9 KiB
365 lines
9.9 KiB
17 years ago
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= Action Web Service -- Serving APIs on rails
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Action Web Service provides a way to publish interoperable web service APIs with
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Rails without spending a lot of time delving into protocol details.
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== Features
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* SOAP RPC protocol support
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* Dynamic WSDL generation for APIs
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* XML-RPC protocol support
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* Clients that use the same API definitions as the server for
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easy interoperability with other Action Web Service based applications
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* Type signature hints to improve interoperability with static languages
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* Active Record model class support in signatures
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== Defining your APIs
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You specify the methods you want to make available as API methods in an
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ActionWebService::API::Base derivative, and then specify this API
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definition class wherever you want to use that API.
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The implementation of the methods is done separately from the API
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specification.
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==== Method name inflection
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Action Web Service will camelcase the method names according to Rails Inflector
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rules for the API visible to public callers. What this means, for example,
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is that the method names in generated WSDL will be camelcased, and callers will
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have to supply the camelcased name in their requests for the request to
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succeed.
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If you do not desire this behaviour, you can turn it off with the
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ActionWebService::API::Base +inflect_names+ option.
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==== Inflection examples
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:add => Add
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:find_all => FindAll
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==== Disabling inflection
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class PersonAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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inflect_names false
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end
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==== API definition example
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class PersonAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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api_method :add, :expects => [:string, :string, :bool], :returns => [:int]
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api_method :remove, :expects => [:int], :returns => [:bool]
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end
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==== API usage example
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class PersonController < ActionController::Base
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web_service_api PersonAPI
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def add
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end
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def remove
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end
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end
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== Publishing your APIs
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Action Web Service uses Action Pack to process protocol requests. There are two
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modes of dispatching protocol requests, _Direct_, and _Delegated_.
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=== Direct dispatching
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This is the default mode. In this mode, public controller instance methods
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implement the API methods, and parameters are passed through to the methods in
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accordance with the API specification.
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The return value of the method is sent back as the return value to the
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caller.
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In this mode, a special <tt>api</tt> action is generated in the target
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controller to unwrap the protocol request, forward it on to the relevant method
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and send back the wrapped return value. <em>This action must not be
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overridden.</em>
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==== Direct dispatching example
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class PersonController < ApplicationController
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web_service_api PersonAPI
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def add
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end
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def remove
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end
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end
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class PersonAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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...
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end
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For this example, protocol requests for +Add+ and +Remove+ methods sent to
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<tt>/person/api</tt> will be routed to the controller methods +add+ and +remove+.
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=== Delegated dispatching
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This mode can be turned on by setting the +web_service_dispatching_mode+ option
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in a controller to <tt>:delegated</tt>.
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In this mode, the controller contains one or more web service objects (objects
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that implement an ActionWebService::API::Base definition). These web service
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objects are each mapped onto one controller action only.
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==== Delegated dispatching example
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class ApiController < ApplicationController
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web_service_dispatching_mode :delegated
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web_service :person, PersonService.new
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end
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class PersonService < ActionWebService::Base
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web_service_api PersonAPI
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def add
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end
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def remove
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end
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end
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class PersonAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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...
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end
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For this example, all protocol requests for +PersonService+ are
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sent to the <tt>/api/person</tt> action.
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The <tt>/api/person</tt> action is generated when the +web_service+
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method is called. <em>This action must not be overridden.</em>
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Other controller actions (actions that aren't the target of a +web_service+ call)
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are ignored for ActionWebService purposes, and can do normal action tasks.
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=== Layered dispatching
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This mode can be turned on by setting the +web_service_dispatching_mode+ option
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in a controller to <tt>:layered</tt>.
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This mode is similar to _delegated_ mode, in that multiple web service objects
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can be attached to one controller, however, all protocol requests are sent to a
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single endpoint.
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Use this mode when you want to share code between XML-RPC and SOAP clients,
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for APIs where the XML-RPC method names have prefixes. An example of such
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a method name would be <tt>blogger.newPost</tt>.
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==== Layered dispatching example
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class ApiController < ApplicationController
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web_service_dispatching_mode :layered
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web_service :mt, MovableTypeService.new
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web_service :blogger, BloggerService.new
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web_service :metaWeblog, MetaWeblogService.new
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end
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class MovableTypeService < ActionWebService::Base
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...
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end
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class BloggerService < ActionWebService::Base
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...
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end
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class MetaWeblogService < ActionWebService::API::Base
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...
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end
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For this example, an XML-RPC call for a method with a name like
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<tt>mt.getCategories</tt> will be sent to the <tt>getCategories</tt>
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method on the <tt>:mt</tt> service.
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== Customizing WSDL generation
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You can customize the names used for the SOAP bindings in the generated
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WSDL by using the wsdl_service_name option in a controller:
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class WsController < ApplicationController
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wsdl_service_name 'MyApp'
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end
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You can also customize the namespace used in the generated WSDL for
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custom types and message definition types:
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class WsController < ApplicationController
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wsdl_namespace 'http://my.company.com/app/wsapi'
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end
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The default namespace used is 'urn:ActionWebService', if you don't supply
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one.
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== ActionWebService and UTF-8
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If you're going to be sending back strings containing non-ASCII UTF-8
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characters using the <tt>:string</tt> data type, you need to make sure that
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Ruby is using UTF-8 as the default encoding for its strings.
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The default in Ruby is to use US-ASCII encoding for strings, which causes a string
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validation check in the Ruby SOAP library to fail and your string to be sent
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back as a Base-64 value, which may confuse clients that expected strings
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because of the WSDL.
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Two ways of setting the default string encoding are:
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* Start Ruby using the <tt>-Ku</tt> command-line option to the Ruby executable
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* Set the <tt>$KCODE</tt> flag in <tt>config/environment.rb</tt> to the
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string <tt>'UTF8'</tt>
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== Testing your APIs
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=== Functional testing
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You can perform testing of your APIs by creating a functional test for the
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controller dispatching the API, and calling #invoke in the test case to
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perform the invocation.
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Example:
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class PersonApiControllerTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
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def setup
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@controller = PersonController.new
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@request = ActionController::TestRequest.new
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@response = ActionController::TestResponse.new
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end
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def test_add
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result = invoke :remove, 1
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assert_equal true, result
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end
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end
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This example invokes the API method <tt>test</tt>, defined on
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the PersonController, and returns the result.
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=== Scaffolding
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You can also test your APIs with a web browser by attaching scaffolding
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to the controller.
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Example:
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class PersonController
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web_service_scaffold :invocation
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end
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This creates an action named <tt>invocation</tt> on the PersonController.
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Navigating to this action lets you select the method to invoke, supply the parameters,
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and view the result of the invocation.
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== Using the client support
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Action Web Service includes client classes that can use the same API
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definition as the server. The advantage of this approach is that your client
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will have the same support for Active Record and structured types as the
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server, and can just use them directly, and rely on the marshaling to Do The
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Right Thing.
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*Note*: The client support is intended for communication between Ruby on Rails
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applications that both use Action Web Service. It may work with other servers, but
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that is not its intended use, and interoperability can't be guaranteed, especially
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not for .NET web services.
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Web services protocol specifications are complex, and Action Web Service client
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support can only be guaranteed to work with a subset.
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==== Factory created client example
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class BlogManagerController < ApplicationController
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web_client_api :blogger, :xmlrpc, 'http://url/to/blog/api/RPC2', :handler_name => 'blogger'
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end
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class SearchingController < ApplicationController
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web_client_api :google, :soap, 'http://url/to/blog/api/beta', :service_name => 'GoogleSearch'
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end
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See ActionWebService::API::ActionController::ClassMethods for more details.
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==== Manually created client example
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class PersonAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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api_method :find_all, :returns => [[Person]]
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end
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soap_client = ActionWebService::Client::Soap.new(PersonAPI, "http://...")
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persons = soap_client.find_all
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class BloggerAPI < ActionWebService::API::Base
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inflect_names false
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api_method :getRecentPosts, :returns => [[Blog::Post]]
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end
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blog = ActionWebService::Client::XmlRpc.new(BloggerAPI, "http://.../xmlrpc", :handler_name => "blogger")
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posts = blog.getRecentPosts
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See ActionWebService::Client::Soap and ActionWebService::Client::XmlRpc for more details.
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== Dependencies
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Action Web Service requires that the Action Pack and Active Record are either
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available to be required immediately or are accessible as GEMs.
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It also requires a version of Ruby that includes SOAP support in the standard
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library. At least version 1.8.2 final (2004-12-25) of Ruby is recommended; this
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is the version tested against.
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== Download
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The latest Action Web Service version can be downloaded from
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http://rubyforge.org/projects/actionservice
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== Installation
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You can install Action Web Service with the following command.
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% [sudo] ruby setup.rb
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== License
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Action Web Service is released under the MIT license.
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== Support
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The Ruby on Rails mailing list
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Or, to contact the author, send mail to bitserf@gmail.com
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