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Chapter 8. Sending Binary Data Using SOAP with Attachments
Abstract
SOAP attachments provide a mechanism for sending binary data as part of a SOAP message. Using SOAP with attachments requires that you define your SOAP messages as MIME multipart messages.
Overview
SOAP messages generally do not carry binary data. However, the W3C SOAP 1.1 specification allows for using MIME multipart/related messages to send binary data in SOAP messages. This technique is called using SOAP with attachments. SOAP attachments are defined in the W3C’s SOAP Messages with Attachments Note.
Namespace
The WSDL extensions used to define the MIME multipart/related messages are defined in the namespace http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/mime/.
In the discussion that follows, it is assumed that this namespace is prefixed with mime
. The entry in the WSDL definitions
element to set this up is shown in Example 8.1, “MIME Namespace Specification in a Contract”.
Example 8.1. MIME Namespace Specification in a Contract
xmlns:mime="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/mime/"
Changing the message binding
In a default SOAP binding, the first child element of the input
, output
, and fault
elements is a soap:body
element describing the body of the SOAP message representing the data. When using SOAP with attachments, the soap:body
element is replaced with a mime:multipartRelated
element.
WSDL does not support using mime:multipartRelated
for fault
messages.
The mime:multipartRelated
element tells Apache CXF that the message body is a multipart message that potentially contains binary data. The contents of the element define the parts of the message and their contents. mime:multipartRelated
elements contain one or more mime:part
elements that describe the individual parts of the message.
The first mime:part
element must contain the soap:body
element that would normally appear in a default SOAP binding. The remaining mime:part
elements define the attachments that are being sent in the message.
Describing a MIME multipart message
MIME multipart messages are described using a mime:multipartRelated
element that contains a number of mime:part
elements. To fully describe a MIME multipart message you must do the following:
-
Inside the
input
oroutput
message you are sending as a MIME multipart message, add amime:mulipartRelated
element as the first child element of the enclosing message. -
Add a
mime:part
child element to themime:multipartRelated
element and set itsname
attribute to a unique string. Add a
soap:body
element as the child of themime:part
element and set its attributes appropriately.NoteIf the contract had a default SOAP binding, you can copy the
soap:body
element from the corresponding message from the default binding into the MIME multipart message.-
Add another
mime:part
child element to themime:multipartReleated
element and set itsname
attribute to a unique string. Add a
mime:content
child element to themime:part
element to describe the contents of this part of the message.To fully describe the contents of a MIME message part the
mime:content
element has the following attributes:Table 8.1. mime:content Attributes Attribute Description + Specifies the name of the WSDL message
part
, from the parent message definition, that is used as the content of this part of the MIME multipart message being placed on the wire.+
The MIME type of the data in this message part. MIME types are defined as a type and a subtype using the syntax type
/
subtype.+
There are a number of predefined MIME types such as
image/jpeg
andtext/plain
. The MIME types are maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) and described in detail in Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies and Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types.+
- For each additional MIME part, repeat steps [i303819] and [i303821].
Example
Example 8.2, “Contract using SOAP with Attachments” shows a WSDL fragment defining a service that stores X-rays in JPEG format. The image data, xRay
, is stored as an xsd:base64binary
and is packed into the MIME multipart message’s second part, imageData
. The remaining two parts of the input message, patientName
and patientNumber
, are sent in the first part of the MIME multipart image as part of the SOAP body.
Example 8.2. Contract using SOAP with Attachments
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <definitions name="XrayStorage" targetNamespace="http://mediStor.org/x-rays" xmlns="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/" xmlns:tns="http://mediStor.org/x-rays" xmlns:mime="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/mime/" xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"> <message name="storRequest"> <part name="patientName" type="xsd:string"/> <part name="patientNumber" type="xsd:int"/> <part name="xRay" type="xsd:base64Binary"/> </message> <message name="storResponse"> <part name="success" type="xsd:boolean"/> </message> <portType name="xRayStorage"> <operation name="store"> <input message="tns:storRequest" name="storRequest"/> <output message="tns:storResponse" name="storResponse"/> </operation> </portType> <binding name="xRayStorageBinding" type="tns:xRayStorage"> <soap:binding style="document" transport="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http"/> <operation name="store"> <soap:operation soapAction="" style="document"/> <input name="storRequest"> <mime:multipartRelated> <mime:part name="bodyPart"> <soap:body use="literal"/> </mime:part> <mime:part name="imageData"> <mime:content part="xRay" type="image/jpeg"/> </mime:part> </mime:multipartRelated> </input> <output name="storResponse"> <soap:body use="literal"/> </output> </operation> </binding> <service name="xRayStorageService"> <port binding="tns:xRayStorageBinding" name="xRayStoragePort"> <soap:address location="http://localhost:9000"/> </port> </service> </definitions>