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SOAP CXF example

This example demonstrates how use a SOAP webservice-client generated using CXF in a Spring application.

The process engine relies on camunda spin for working with JAXB-annotated classes.

Example Process

The example BPMN 2.0 process looks up a list of account numbers using a customer number at a remote SOAP service. This is done using a single service task and two chained Spring service classes.

All marshall/unmarshalling is handled transparently by the engine.

Overview

How it works

The webservice bindings are generated using the maven plugin cxf-codegen-plugin. The Camunda engine is configured via Spring.

The webservice context is loaded from beans.xml, including two services:

  • BankCustomerService - camunda-specific wrapper
  • BankCustomerClientService - webservice client wrapper

The BPMN 2.0 process is started with two variables:

  • secret - String value, and
  • customerNumber - the customer number to look up.

As the service task executes, it invokes getAccounts(..) on the BankCustomerService Spring service. The Spring service constructs two objects - the SOAP GetAccountsRequest body and BankRequestHeader header.

The call is then forwarded to getAccounts(..) on the BankCustomerClientService service, which holds the actual webservice client port. In our first unit test, the mock webservice responds with a GetAccountsResponse, which is returned to the service task as a JAXB object and stored as accounts in the process.

Error handling (SOAP Faults)

The BankCustomerService service translates webservice faults business errors, i.e..

// exception caught
throw new BpmnError("serviceException");

In our second unit test, the mock webservice responds with a Fault, triggering the above code. The process proceeds to the 'end unsuccessful' end node - never storing any GetAccountsResponse object.

Tweaking the example

Webservice clients

In this example, the domain objects are the same as the webservice objects. This reduces the BankCustomerClientService to a simple wrapper. These webservice clients should however be written as reusable, user-friendly modules, and so it is natural to put domain-to-webservice object converters, security-related functionality, guards and so on into such a service.

Fault vs business errors vs retry

In a proper implementation, you would like to make the distinction between different kinds of faults, some from which you can recover, and others from which you cannot. The built-in retry-mechanism should be allowed to kick in for certain problems like transient loss of connection and so. Whether or not running out of retries is a business error, is up to the nature of the process.

JAXB objects

The example implementation relies on having the default serialization type set to XML when storing the GetAccountsResponse object. If not so, the JAXB object must be wrapped so that it still is stored as XML in the database. Camunda will automagically marshall/unmarshall your generated JAXB objects.

An alternative implementation could be to call the BankCustomerClientService directly - for example by constructing the GetAccountsRequest JAXB object using a groovy script in the service task input/output mappings.

How to use it?

  1. Checkout the project with Git
  2. Read and run the JUnit tests