SOAP::EnvelopeMaker - Creates SOAP envelopes
use SOAP::EnvelopeMaker;
my $soap_request = ''; my $output_fcn = sub { $soap_request .= shift; }; my $em = SOAP::EnvelopeMaker->new($output_fcn);
my $body = { origin => { x => 10, y => 20 }, corner => { x => 100, y => 200 }, };
$em->set_body("urn:com-develop-geometry", "calculateArea", 0, $body);
my $endpoint = "http://soapl.develop.com/soap?class=Geometry"; my $method_uri = "urn:com-develop-geometry"; my $method_name = "calculateArea";
use SOAP::Transport::HTTP::Client;
my $soap_on_http = SOAP::Transport::HTTP::Client->new();
my $soap_response = $soap_on_http->send_receive($endpoint, $method_uri, $method_name, $soap_request); use SOAP::Parser; my $soap_parser = SOAP::Parser->new(); $soap_parser->parsestring($soap_response);
my $area = $soap_parser->get_body()->{area};
print "The area is: $area\n";
The overall usage pattern of SOAP::EnvelopeMaker is as follows:
1) Determine what you want to do with the resulting SOAP packet and create an output function that implements this policy.
2) Create an instance of SOAP::EnvelopeMaker, passing a reference to your output function.
(note that somebody may already have done these first two steps on your behalf and simply passed you a reference to a pre-initialized EnvelopeMaker - see SOAP::Transport::HTTP::Server for an example)
3) (optional) Call add_header one or more times to specify headers.
4) (required) Call set_body to specify the body.
5) Throw away the EnvelopeMaker and do something with the envelope that you've collected via your output function (assuming you've not simply been piping the output somewhere as it's given to you).
EnvelopeMaker expects that you'll add *all* your headers *before* setting the body - if you mess this up, the results are undefined.
By the time set_body returns, a complete SOAP envelope will have been sent to your output function (in one or more chunks). You can
OutputFcn should accept a single scalar parameter, and will be called multiple times with chunks of the SOAP envelope as it is constructed. You can either append these chunks into a big string, waiting until the entire envelope is constructed before you do something with it (like calculate the content-length, for instance), or you can simply pipe each chunk directly to somebody else.
The first two parameters allow you to specify a QName (qualified name) for your header. Note that in SOAP, all headers MUST be namespace qualified. MustUnderstand and IsPackage turn on SOAP features that are explained in the SOAP spec; if you haven't yet grok'd SOAP packages, just pass 0 for IsPackage. Finally, Object is whatever you'd like to serialize into the header (see set_body for notes on what can go here; headers can contain the same stuff as the body).
The first two parameters allow you to specify a QName (qualified name) for the body. The name of the accessor is the name of the SOAP method call you're making. IsPackage says that the body will be a SOAP package; just pass 0 if you're not sure what this means. Object is whatever you'd like to serialize. This can be one of the following things:
1) a scalar - the body will contain the scalar content.
2) a hash reference - the body will contain a SOAP serialized version of the contents of the hash.
Note that the SOAP/Perl serialization architecture deals with references very carefully, so it is possible to pass arbitrary object graphs (although each "object reference" must currently be a non-blessed scalar or hash reference).
In the future, expect to see support for passing blessed object references (if you want to do this today, see the experimental SOAP::TypeMapper).
One interesting thing SOAP (and SOAP/Perl) support is that the headers and body can share references. They can point to the same stuff. Also, cycle detection is a natural part of SOAP/Perl's serialization architecture, so you can pass linked lists, circular queues, etc. and they will be rehydrated correctly.
SOAP::Envelope
Keith Brown
SOAP::Envelope