UDDI::Lite - Library for UDDI clients in Perl
use UDDI::Lite; print UDDI::Lite -> proxy('http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire') -> find_business(name => 'old') -> result -> businessInfos->businessInfo->serviceInfos->serviceInfo->name;
The same code with autodispatch:
use UDDI::Lite +autodispatch => proxy => 'http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire' ; print find_business(name => 'old') -> businessInfos->businessInfo->serviceInfos->serviceInfo->name;
Or with importing:
use UDDI::Lite 'UDDI::Lite' => [':inquiry'], proxy => 'http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire' ; print find_business(name => 'old') -> businessInfos->businessInfo->serviceInfos->serviceInfo->name;
Publishing API:
use UDDI::Lite import => ['UDDI::Data'], import => ['UDDI::Lite'], proxy => "https://some.server.com/endpoint_fot_publishing_API"; my $auth = get_authToken({userID => 'USERID', cred => 'CRED'})->authInfo; my $busent = with businessEntity => name("Contoso Manufacturing"), description("We make components for business"), businessKey(''), businessServices with businessService => name("Buy components"), description("Bindings for buying our components"), serviceKey(''), bindingTemplates with bindingTemplate => description("BASDA invoices over HTTP post"), accessPoint('http://www.contoso.com/buy.asp'), bindingKey(''), tModelInstanceDetails with tModelInstanceInfo => description('some tModel'), tModelKey('UUID:C1ACF26D-9672-4404-9D70-39B756E62AB4') ; print save_business($auth, $busent)->businessEntity->businessKey;
UDDI::Lite for Perl is a collection of Perl modules which provides a simple and lightweight interface to the Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI) server.
To learn more about UDDI, visit http://www.uddi.org/.
The main features of the library are:
This table should give you a quick overview of the classes provided by the library.
UDDI::Lite.pm -- UDDI::Lite -- Main class provides all logic -- UDDI::Data -- Provides extensions for serialization architecture -- UDDI::Serializer -- Serializes data structures to UDDI/SOAP package -- UDDI::Deserializer -- Deserializes result into objects -- UDDI::SOM -- Provides access to deserialized object tree
All methods that UDDI::Lite gives you access to can be used for both setting and retrieving values. If you provide no parameters, you'll get current value, and if you'll provide parameter(s), new value will be assigned and method will return object (if not stated something else). This is suitable for stacking these calls like:
$uddi = UDDI::Lite -> on_debug(sub{print@_}) -> proxy('http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire') ;
Order is insignificant and you may call new() method first. If you don't do it, UDDI::Lite will do it for you. However, new() method gives you additional syntax:
$uddi = new UDDI::Lite on_debug => sub {print@_}, proxy => 'http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire' ;
new() accepts hash with method names and values, and will call appropriate method with passed value.
Since new() is optional it won't be mentioned anymore.
Other available methods inherited from SOAP::Lite and most usable are:
transport->proxy()
. This lets you specify an endpoint and
also loads the required module at the same time. It is required for dispatching SOAP
calls. The name of the module will be defined depending on the protocol
specific for the endpoint. SOAP::Lite will do the rest work.
To change to UDDI Version 2, use the following pragma:
use UDDI::Lite uddiversion => 2;
You can use this class if you want to specify value and name for UDDI
elements.
For example, UDDI::Data->name('businessInfo')->value(123)
will
be serialized to <businessInfo>123</businessInfo>
, as
well as UDDI::Data-
name(businessInfo => 123)>.
If you want to provide names for your parameters you can either specify
find_business(name => 'old')
or do it with UDDI::Data:
find_business(UDDI::Data->name(name => 'old'))
Later has some advantages: it'll work on any level, so you can do:
find_business(UDDI::Data->name(name => UDDI::Data->name(subname => 'old')))
and also you can create arrays with this syntax:
find_business(UDDI::Data->name(name => [UDDI::Data->name(subname1 => 'name1'), UDDI::Data->name(subname2 => 'name2')]))
will be serialized into:
<find_business xmlns="urn:uddi-org:api" generic="1.0"> <name> <subname1>name1</subname1> <subname2>name2</subname2> </name> </find_business>
For standard elements more convinient syntax is available:
find_business( findQualifiers(findQualifier('sortByNameAsc', 'caseSensitiveMatch')), name('M') )
and
find_business( findQualifiers([findQualifier('sortByNameAsc'), findQualifier('caseSensitiveMatch')]), name('M') )
both will generate:
<SOAP-ENV:Envelope xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"> <SOAP-ENV:Body> <find_business xmlns="urn:uddi-org:api" generic="1.0"> <findQualifiers> <findQualifier>sortByNameAsc</findQualifier> <findQualifier>caseSensitiveMatch</findQualifier> </findQualifiers> <name>M</name> </find_business> </SOAP-ENV:Body> </SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
You can use ANY valid combinations (according to "UDDI Programmer's
API Specification"). If you try to generate something unusual, like
name(name('myname'))
, you'll get:
Don't know what to do with 'name' and 'name' elements ....
If you REALLY need to do it, use UDDI::Data
syntax described above.
As special case you can pass hash as the first parameter of method call and values of this hash will be added as attributes to top element:
find_business({maxRows => 10}, UDDI::Data->name(name => old))
gives you
<find_business xmlns="urn:uddi-org:api" generic="1.0" maxRows="10"> .... </find_business>
You can also pass back parameters exactly as you get it from method call (like you probably want to do with authInfo).
You can get access to attributes and elements through the same interface:
my $list = find_business(name => old); my $bis = $list->businessInfos; for ($bis->businessInfo) { my $s = $_->serviceInfos->serviceInfo; print $s->name, # element $s->businessKey, # attribute "\n"; }
To match advantages provided by with
operator available in other
languages (like VB) we provide similar functionality that adds you
flexibility:
with findQualifiers => findQualifier => 'sortByNameAsc', findQualifier => 'caseSensitiveMatch'
is the same as:
with(findQualifiers => findQualifier('sortByNameAsc'), findQualifier('caseSensitiveMatch'), )
and:
findQualifiers->with( findQualifier('sortByNameAsc'), findQualifier('caseSensitiveMatch'), )
will all generate the same code as mentioned above:
findQualifiers(findQualifier('sortByNameAsc', 'caseSensitiveMatch')),
Advantage of with
syntax is the you can specify both attributes and
elements through the same interface. First argument is element where all
other elements and attributes will be attached. Provided examples and
tests cover different syntaxes.
UDDI::Lite provides autodispatching feature that lets you create code that looks similar for local and remote access.
For example:
use UDDI::Lite +autodispatch => proxy => 'http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire';
tells autodispatch all UDDI calls to 'http://uddi.microsoft.com/inquire'. All subsequent calls can look like:
find_business(name => 'old'); find_business(UDDI::Data->name(name => 'old')); find_business(name('old'));
proxy
or endpoint
) for publishing API calls.
For now UDDI::Lite is distributed as part of SOAP::Lite package. You can download it from ( http://soaplite.com/ ) or from CPAN ( http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=SOAP-Lite ).
SOAP::Lite ( http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=SOAP-Lite ) UDDI ( http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=UDDI )
Copyright (C) 2000-2004 Paul Kulchenko. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Paul Kulchenko (paulclinger@yahoo.com)