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  1. Apache CXF Development Guide
  2. I. Writing WSDL Contracts
    1. 1. Introducing WSDL Contracts
      1. 1.1. Structure of a WSDL document
      2. 1.2. WSDL elements
      3. 1.3. Designing a contract
    2. 2. Defining Logical Data Units
      1. 2.1. Introduction to Logical Data Units
      2. 2.2. Mapping data into logical data units
      3. 2.3. Adding data units to a contract
      4. 2.4. XML Schema simple types
      5. 2.5. Defining complex data types
        1. 2.5.1. Defining data structures
        2. 2.5.2. Defining arrays
        3. 2.5.3. Defining types by extension
        4. 2.5.4. Defining types by restriction
        5. 2.5.5. Defining enumerated types
      6. 2.6. Defining elements
    3. 3. Defining Logical Messages Used by a Service
    4. 4. Defining Your Logical Interfaces
  3. II. Web Services Bindings
    1. 5. Understanding Bindings in WSDL
    2. 6. Using SOAP 1.1 Messages
      1. 6.1. Adding a SOAP 1.1 Binding
      2. 6.2. Adding SOAP Headers to a SOAP 1.1 Binding
    3. 7. Using SOAP 1.2 Messages
      1. 7.1. Adding a SOAP 1.2 Binding to a WSDL Document
      2. 7.2. Adding Headers to a SOAP 1.2 Message
    4. 8. Sending Binary Data Using SOAP with Attachments
    5. 9. Sending Binary Data with SOAP MTOM
      1. 9.1. Overview of MTOM
      2. 9.2. Annotating Data Types to use MTOM
      3. 9.3. Enabling MTOM
        1. 9.3.1. Using JAX-WS APIs
        2. 9.3.2. Using configuration
    6. 10. Using XML Documents
  4. III. Web Services Transports
    1. 11. Understanding How Endpoints are Defined in WSDL
    2. 12. Using HTTP
      1. 12.1. Adding a Basic HTTP Endpoint
      2. 12.2. Configuring a Consumer
        1. 12.2.1. Mechanisms for HTTP Consumer Endpoints
        2. 12.2.2. Using Configuration
        3. 12.2.3. Using WSDL
        4. 12.2.4. Consumer Cache Control Directives
      3. 12.3. Configuring a Service Provider
        1. 12.3.1. Mechanisms for a HTTP Service Provider
        2. 12.3.2. Using Configuration
        3. 12.3.3. Using WSDL
        4. 12.3.4. Service Provider Cache Control Directives
      4. 12.4. Configuring the Undertow Runtime
      5. 12.5. Configuring the Netty Runtime
      6. 12.6. Using the HTTP Transport in Decoupled Mode
    3. 13. Using SOAP Over JMS
      1. 13.1. Basic configuration
      2. 13.2. JMS URIs
      3. 13.3. WSDL extensions
    4. 14. Using Generic JMS
      1. 14.1. Approaches to Configuring JMS
      2. 14.2. Using the JMS configuration bean
      3. 14.3. Optimizing Client-Side JMS Performance
      4. 14.4. Configuring JMS Transactions
      5. 14.5. Using WSDL to configure JMS
        1. 14.5.1. JMS WSDL Extension Namespance
        2. 14.5.2. Basic JMS configuration
        3. 14.5.3. JMS client configuration
        4. 14.5.4. JMS provider configuration
      6. 14.6. Using a Named Reply Destination
    5. 15. Integrating with Apache ActiveMQ
    6. 16. Conduits
  5. IV. Configuring Web Service Endpoints
    1. 17. Configuring JAX-WS Endpoints
      1. 17.1. Configuring Service Providers
        1. 17.1.1. Elements for Configuring Service Providers
        2. 17.1.2. Using the jaxws:endpoint Element
        3. 17.1.3. Using the jaxws:server Element
        4. 17.1.4. Adding Functionality to Service Providers
        5. 17.1.5. Enable Schema Validation on a JAX-WS Endpoint
      2. 17.2. Configuring Consumer Endpoints
    2. 18. Configuring JAX-RS Endpoints
      1. 18.1. Configuring JAX-RS Server Endpoints
        1. 18.1.1. Defining a JAX-RS Server Endpoint
        2. 18.1.2. jaxrs:server Attributes
        3. 18.1.3. jaxrs:server Child Elements
      2. 18.2. Configuring JAX-RS Client Endpoints
        1. 18.2.1. Defining a JAX-RS Client Endpoint
        2. 18.2.2. jaxrs:client Attributes
        3. 18.2.3. jaxrs:client Child Elements
      3. 18.3. Defining REST Services with the Model Schema
    3. 19. Apache CXF Logging
      1. 19.1. Overview of Apache CXF Logging
      2. 19.2. Simple Example of Using Logging
      3. 19.3. Default logging configuration file
        1. 19.3.1. Overview of Logging Configuration
        2. 19.3.2. Configuring Logging Output
        3. 19.3.3. Configuring Logging Levels
      4. 19.4. Enabling Logging at the Command Line
      5. 19.5. Logging for Subsystems and Services
      6. 19.6. Logging Message Content
    4. 20. Deploying WS-Addressing
      1. 20.1. Introduction to WS-Addressing
      2. 20.2. WS-Addressing Interceptors
      3. 20.3. Enabling WS-Addressing
      4. 20.4. Configuring WS-Addressing Attributes
    5. 21. Enabling Reliable Messaging
      1. 21.1. Introduction to WS-RM
      2. 21.2. WS-RM Interceptors
      3. 21.3. Enabling WS-RM
      4. 21.4. Runtime Control
      5. 21.5. Configuring WS-RM
        1. 21.5.1. Configuring Apache CXF-Specific WS-RM Attributes
        2. 21.5.2. Configuring Standard WS-RM Policy Attributes
        3. 21.5.3. WS-RM Configuration Use Cases
      6. 21.6. Configuring WS-RM Persistence
    6. 22. Enabling High Availability
      1. 22.1. Introduction to High Availability
      2. 22.2. Enabling HA with Static Failover
      3. 22.3. Configuring HA with Static Failover
    7. 23. Enabling High Availability in Fuse Fabric
      1. 23.1. Load Balancing Cluster
        1. 23.1.1. Introduction to Load Balancing
        2. 23.1.2. Configure the Server
        3. 23.1.3. Configure the Client
      2. 23.2. Failover Cluster
    8. 24. Apache CXF Binding IDs
    9. A. Using the Maven OSGi Tooling
      1. A.1. The Maven Bundle Plug-In
      2. A.2. Setting up a Red Hat JBoss Fuse OSGi project
      3. A.3. Configuring the Bundle Plug-In
  6. V. Developing Applications Using JAX-WS
    1. 25. Bottom-Up Service Development
      1. 25.1. Introduction to JAX-WS Service Development
      2. 25.2. Creating the SEI
      3. 25.3. Annotating the Code
        1. 25.3.1. Overview of JAX-WS Annotations
        2. 25.3.2. Required Annotations
        3. 25.3.3. Optional Annotations
        4. 25.3.4. Apache CXF Annotations
      4. 25.4. Generating WSDL
    2. 26. Developing a Consumer Without a WSDL Contract
      1. 26.1. Java-First Consumer Development
      2. 26.2. Creating a Service Object
      3. 26.3. Adding a Port to a Service
      4. 26.4. Getting a Proxy for an Endpoint
      5. 26.5. Implementing the Consumer’s Business Logic
    3. 27. A Starting Point WSDL Contract
      1. 27.1. Sample WSDL Contract
    4. 28. Top-Down Service Development
      1. 28.1. Overview of JAX-WS Service Provider Development
      2. 28.2. Generating the Starting Point Code
      3. 28.3. Implementing the Service Provider
    5. 29. Developing a Consumer From a WSDL Contract
      1. 29.1. Generating the Stub Code
      2. 29.2. Implementing a Consumer
    6. 30. Finding WSDL at Runtime
      1. 30.1. Mechanisms for Locating the WSDL Document
      2. 30.2. Instantiating a Proxy by Injection
      3. 30.3. Using a JAX-WS Catalog
      4. 30.4. Using a contract resolver
    7. 31. Generic Fault Handling
      1. 31.1. Runtime Faults
      2. 31.2. Protocol Faults
    8. 32. Publishing a Service
      1. 32.1. When to Publish a Service
      2. 32.2. APIs Used to Publish a Service
      3. 32.3. Publishing a Service in a Plain Java Application
      4. 32.4. Publishing a Service in an OSGi Container
    9. 33. Basic Data Binding Concepts
      1. 33.1. Including and Importing Schema Definitions
      2. 33.2. XML Namespace Mapping
      3. 33.3. The Object Factory
      4. 33.4. Adding Classes to the Runtime Marshaller
    10. 34. Using XML Elements
    11. 35. Using Simple Types
      1. 35.1. Primitive Types
      2. 35.2. Simple Types Defined by Restriction
      3. 35.3. Enumerations
      4. 35.4. Lists
      5. 35.5. Unions
      6. 35.6. Simple Type Substitution
    12. 36. Using Complex Types
      1. 36.1. Basic Complex Type Mapping
      2. 36.2. Attributes
      3. 36.3. Deriving Complex Types from Simple Types
      4. 36.4. Deriving Complex Types from Complex Types
      5. 36.5. Occurrence Constraints
        1. 36.5.1. Schema Elements Supporting Occurrence Constraints
        2. 36.5.2. Occurrence Constraints on the All Element
        3. 36.5.3. Occurrence Constraints on the Choice Element
        4. 36.5.4. Occurrence Constraints on Elements
        5. 36.5.5. Occurrence Constraints on Sequences
      6. 36.6. Using Model Groups
    13. 37. Using Wild Card Types
      1. 37.1. Using Any Elements
      2. 37.2. Using the XML Schema anyType Type
      3. 37.3. Using Unbound Attributes
    14. 38. Element Substitution
      1. 38.1. Substitution Groups in XML Schema
      2. 38.2. Substitution Groups in Java
      3. 38.3. Widget Vendor Example
        1. 38.3.1. Widget Ordering Interface
        2. 38.3.2. The checkWidgets Operation
        3. 38.3.3. The placeWidgetOrder Operation
    15. 39. Customizing How Types are Generated
      1. 39.1. Basics of Customizing Type Mappings
      2. 39.2. Specifying the Java Class of an XML Schema Primitive
      3. 39.3. Generating Java Classes for Simple Types
      4. 39.4. Customizing Enumeration Mapping
      5. 39.5. Customizing Fixed Value Attribute Mapping
      6. 39.6. Specifying the Base Type of an Element or an Attribute
    16. 40. Using A JAXBContext Object
    17. 41. Developing Asynchronous Applications
      1. 41.1. Types of Asynchronous Invocation
      2. 41.2. WSDL for Asynchronous Examples
      3. 41.3. Generating the Stub Code
      4. 41.4. Implementing an Asynchronous Client with the Polling Approach
      5. 41.5. Implementing an Asynchronous Client with the Callback Approach
      6. 41.6. Catching Exceptions Returned from a Remote Service
    18. 42. Using Raw XML Messages
      1. 42.1. Using XML in a Consumer
        1. 42.1.1. Usage Modes
        2. 42.1.2. Data Types
        3. 42.1.3. Working with Dispatch Objects
      2. 42.2. Using XML in a Service Provider
        1. 42.2.1. Messaging Modes
        2. 42.2.2. Data Types
        3. 42.2.3. Implementing a Provider Object
    19. 43. Working with Contexts
      1. 43.1. Understanding Contexts
      2. 43.2. Working with Contexts in a Service Implementation
      3. 43.3. Working with Contexts in a Consumer Implementation
      4. 43.4. Working with JMS Message Properties
        1. 43.4.1. Inspecting JMS Message Headers
        2. 43.4.2. Inspecting the Message Header Properties
        3. 43.4.3. Setting JMS Properties
    20. 44. Writing Handlers
      1. 44.1. Handlers: An Introduction
      2. 44.2. Implementing a Logical Handler
      3. 44.3. Handling Messages in a Logical Handler
      4. 44.4. Implementing a Protocol Handler
      5. 44.5. Handling Messages in a SOAP Handler
      6. 44.6. Initializing a Handler
      7. 44.7. Handling Fault Messages
      8. 44.8. Closing a Handler
      9. 44.9. Releasing a Handler
      10. 44.10. Configuring Endpoints to Use Handlers
        1. 44.10.1. Programmatic Configuration
        2. 44.10.2. Spring Configuration
    21. 45. Maven Tooling Reference
      1. 45.1. Plug-in Setup
      2. 45.2. cxf-codegen-plugin
      3. 45.3. java2ws
  7. VI. Developing RESTful Web Services
    1. 46. Introduction to RESTful Web Services
    2. 47. Creating Resources
      1. 47.1. Introduction
      2. 47.2. Basic JAX-RS annotations
      3. 47.3. Root resource classes
      4. 47.4. Working with resource methods
      5. 47.5. Working with sub-resources
      6. 47.6. Resource selection method
    3. 48. Passing Information into Resource Classes and Methods
      1. 48.1. Basics of injecting data
      2. 48.2. Using JAX-RS APIs
        1. 48.2.1. JAX-RS Annotation Types
        2. 48.2.2. Injecting data from a request URI
        3. 48.2.3. Injecting data from the HTTP message header
        4. 48.2.4. Injecting data from HTML forms
        5. 48.2.5. Specifying a default value to inject
        6. 48.2.6. Injecting Parameters into a Java Bean
      3. 48.3. Parameter Converters
      4. 48.4. Using Apache CXF extensions
    4. 49. Returning Information to the Consumer
      1. 49.1. Return Types
      2. 49.2. Returning plain Java constructs
      3. 49.3. Fine tuning an application’s responses
        1. 49.3.1. Basics of building responses
        2. 49.3.2. Creating responses for common use cases
        3. 49.3.3. Handling more advanced responses
      4. 49.4. Returning entities with generic type information
      5. 49.5. Asynchronous Response
        1. 49.5.1. Asynchronous Processing on the Server
        2. 49.5.2. Timeouts and Timeout Handlers
        3. 49.5.3. Handling Dropped Connections
        4. 49.5.4. Registering Callbacks
    5. 50. JAX-RS 2.0 Client API
      1. 50.1. Introduction to the JAX-RS 2.0 Client API
      2. 50.2. Building the Client Target
      3. 50.3. Building the Client Invocation
      4. 50.4. Parsing Requests and Responses
      5. 50.5. Configuring the Client Endpoint
      6. 50.6. Asynchronous Processing on the Client
    6. 51. Handling Exceptions
      1. 51.1. Overview of JAX-RS Exception Classes
      2. 51.2. Using WebApplicationException exceptions to report
      3. 51.3. JAX-RS 2.0 Exception Types
      4. 51.4. Mapping Exceptions to Responses
    7. 52. Entity Support
    8. 53. Getting and Using Context Information
      1. 53.1. Introduction to contexts
      2. 53.2. Working with the full request URI
        1. 53.2.1. Injecting the URI information
        2. 53.2.2. Working with the URI
        3. 53.2.3. Getting the value of URI template variables
    9. 54. Annotation Inheritance
    10. 55. Extending JAX-RS Endpoints with Swagger Support
      1. 55.1. Standalone CXF Implementations
      2. 55.2. JBoss Fuse CXF Implementations
  8. VII. Developing Apache CXF Interceptors
    1. 56. Interceptors in the Apache CXF Runtime
    2. 57. The Interceptor APIs
    3. 58. Determining When the Interceptor is Invoked
      1. 58.1. Specifying the Interceptor Location
      2. 58.2. Specifying an interceptor’s phase
      3. 58.3. Constraining an interceptors placement in a phase
    4. 59. Implementing the Interceptors Processing Logic
      1. 59.1. Interceptor Flow
      2. 59.2. Processing messages
      3. 59.3. Unwinding after an error
    5. 60. Configuring Endpoints to Use Interceptors
      1. 60.1. Deciding where to attach interceptors
      2. 60.2. Adding interceptors using configuration
      3. 60.3. Adding interceptors programmatically
        1. 60.3.1. Approaches to Adding Interceptors
        2. 60.3.2. Using the interceptor provider API
        3. 60.3.3. Using Java annotations
    6. 61. Manipulating Interceptor Chains on the Fly
    7. 62. JAX-RS 2.0 Filters and Interceptors
      1. 62.1. Introduction to JAX-RS Filters and Interceptors
      2. 62.2. Container Request Filter
      3. 62.3. Container Response Filter
      4. 62.4. Client Request Filter
      5. 62.5. Client Response Filter
      6. 62.6. Entity Reader Interceptor
      7. 62.7. Entity Writer Interceptor
      8. 62.8. Dynamic Binding
    8. 63. Apache CXF Message Processing Phases
    9. 64. Apache CXF Provided Interceptors
      1. 64.1. Core Apache CXF Interceptors
      2. 64.2. Front-Ends
      3. 64.3. Message bindings
      4. 64.4. Other features
    10. 65. Interceptor Providers
  9. VIII. Apache CXF Features
    1. 66. Bean Validation
      1. 66.1. Introduction
      2. 66.2. Developing Services with Bean Validation
        1. 66.2.1. Annotating a Service Bean
        2. 66.2.2. Standard Annotations
        3. 66.2.3. Custom Annotations
      3. 66.3. Configuring Bean Validation
        1. 66.3.1. JAX-WS Configuration
        2. 66.3.2. JAX-RS Configuration
        3. 66.3.3. JAX-RS 2.0 Configuration
  10. Legal Notice

Chapter 24. Apache CXF Binding IDs

Table of Binding IDs

Table 24.1. Binding IDs for Message Bindings

BindingID

CORBA

http://cxf.apache.org/bindings/corba

HTTP/REST

http://apache.org/cxf/binding/http

SOAP 1.1

http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/http

SOAP 1.1 w/ MTOM

http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/wsdl/soap/http?mtom=true

SOAP 1.2

http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap/bindings/HTTP/

SOAP 1.2 w/ MTOM

http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap/bindings/HTTP/?mtom=true

XML

http://cxf.apache.org/bindings/xformat

  • 23.2. Failover Cluster
  • A. Using the Maven OSGi Tooling

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