127.6. XML Serialization for RFC


Overview

SAP request and response objects support an XML serialization format which enable these objects to be serialized to and from an XML document.

XML namespace

Each RFC in a repository defines a specific XML name space for the elements which compose the serialized forms of its Request and Response objects. The form of this namespace URL is as follows:
http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/<Repository Name>/<RFC Name>
RFC namespace URLs have a common http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc prefix followed by the name of the repository in which the RFC’s metadata is defined. The final component in the URL is the name of the RFC itself.

Request and response XML documents

An SAP request object will be serialized into an XML document with the root element of that document named Request and scoped by the namespace of the request’s RFC.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ASCII"?>
<BOOK_FLIGHT:Request
     xmlns:BOOK_FLIGHT="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
    ... 
</BOOK_FLIGHT:Request>
An SAP response object will be serialized into an XML document with the root element of that document named Response and scoped by the namespace of the response’s RFC.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ASCII"?>
<BOOK_FLIGHT:Response
     xmlns:BOOK_FLIGHT="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
    ... 
</BOOK_FLIGHT:Response>

Structure fields

Structure fields in parameter lists or nested structures are serialized as elements. The element name of the serialized structure corresponds to the field name of the structure within the enclosing parameter list, structure or table row entry it resides.
<BOOK_FLIGHT:FLTINFO
     xmlns:BOOK_FLIGHT="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
    ... 
</BOOK_FLIGHT:FLTINFO>
Note that the type name of the structure element in the RFC namespace will correspond to the name of the record meta data object which defines the structure, as in the following example:
<xs:schema
     targetNamespace="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
     xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
    ... 
    <xs:complexType name="FLTINFO_STRUCTURE”>
    ...
    </xs:complexType>
    ... 
</xs:schema>
This distinction will be important when specifying a JAXB bean to marshal and unmarshal the structure as will be seen in Section 127.10, “Example 3: Handling Requests from SAP”.

Table fields

Table fields in parameter lists or nested structures are serialized as elements. The element name of the serialized structure will correspond to the field name of the table within the enclosing parameter list, structure, or table row entry it resides. The table element will contain a series of row elements to hold the serialized values of the table's row entries.
<BOOK_FLIGHT:CONNINFO
     xmlns:BOOK_FLIGHT="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
    <row ... > ... </row>
    ... 
    <row ... > ... </row>
</BOOK_FLIGHT:CONNINFO>
Note that the type name of the table element in the RFC namespace will correspond to the name of the record meta data object which defines the row structure of the table suffixed by _TABLE. The type name of the table row element in the RFC name corresponds to the name of the record meta data object which defines the row structure of the table, as in the following example:
<xs:schema
     targetNamespace="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT">
     xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
    ... 
    <xs:complextType name="CONNECTION_INFO_STRUCTURE_TABLE”>
        <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element 
                name="row”
                minOccures="0” 
                maxOccurs="unbounded” 
                type="CONNECTION_INFO_STRUCTURE”/>
            ...
            <xs:sequence>
        </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>

    <xs:complextType name="CONNECTION_INFO_STRUCTURE”>
            ...
    </xs:complexType>
    ... 
</xs:schema>
This distinction will be important when specifying a JAXB bean to marshal and unmarshal the structure as will be seen in Section 127.10, “Example 3: Handling Requests from SAP”.

Elementary fields

Elementary fields in parameter lists or nested structures are serialized as attributes on the element of the enclosing parameter list or structure. The attribute name of the serialized field corresponds to the field name of the field within the enclosing parameter list, structure, or table row entry it resides, as in the following example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ASCII"?>
<BOOK_FLIGHT:Request
     xmlns:BOOK_FLIGHT="http://sap.fusesource.org/rfc/nplServer/BOOK_FLIGHT"
     CUSTNAME="James Legrand" 
    PASSFORM="Mr" 
    PASSNAME="Travelin Joe" 
    PASSBIRTH="1990-03-17T00:00:00.000-0500" 
    FLIGHTDATE="2014-03-19T00:00:00.000-0400" 
    TRAVELAGENCYNUMBER="00000110" 
    DESTINATION_FROM="SFO" 
    DESTINATION_TO="FRA"/>

Date and time formats

Date and Time fields are serialized into attribute values using the following format:
yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ
Date fields will be serialized with only the year, month, day and timezone components set:
DEPDATE="2014-03-19T00:00:00.000-0400"
Time fields will be serialized with only the hour, minute, second, millisecond and timezone components set:
DEPTIME="1970-01-01T16:00:00.000-0500"
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.