Publishing WS endpoints through AS7 services
By JBossWS Team | July 28, 2011
JBoss AS 7.0.0 Final has been released and is available to the community, so we're currently working on the 7.1.0 version of the application server, which is coming with many webservices functionalities additions. While most of them will be aim at covering JCP specification requirements (mainly JSR-109 and JSR-101 ), some management and general use new features are also coming soon.
Recently it's been the turn of JBoss XTS for being integrated in JBoss AS 7 .
XTS provides transaction support for web services, implementing WS-AtomicTransaction and WS-BusinessActivity specifications. In order for providing such functionalities, XTS needs to start a given number of WS endpoints to take part into the transactions management. According to the JBoss AS 7 design, this is to be achieved using JBoss AS 7
services .
Publishing a WS endpoints on JBoss AS7 was previously directly bound to the processing of a given deployment unit having webservices endpoint implementation classes in it. So the required steps for achieving our goal were:
- abstracting the endpoint publish process away from the deployment processing; that was possible thanks to the already existing convenient split of JBossWS endpoint publish logic into deployment aspect blocks, completely hidden behind the JBossWS SPI (iow the JBossWS internals do not directly rely on JBoss AS classes)
- defining a simple API for publishing POJO endpoints given the endpoint class names, classloader and publish address
- providing a JBoss AS7 implementation for such an API
- serving that through an AS7
service
We ended up with a solution that might appear pretty much equivalent to the JAX-WS Endpoint.publish(..) API at first sight, except it
- allows for publishing an endpoint to the HTTP server of the currently running JBoss AS 7 instance
- is embedded into a JBoss AS 7 service, allowing efficient , concurrent and perhaps even lazy/on-demand start/stop of endpoints as part of AS7 operations (for instance, the boot)
The XTS integration easily leveraged the new JBossWS feature, installing and setting up dependencies on multiple WS endpoint publisher services.
You can have a look at this by checking out the latest
JBoss AS 7
master from github and starting the
standalone-xts.xml
profile. During the boot,
XTS
subsystem and its
14
required WS endpoints are concurrently started in something like 2.5s on a my mid-level laptop ;-)
If you're writing your own AS7 component and need publishing a WS POJO endpoints as part of that, consider giving this new feature a try.