try { HelloService service = new HelloService ( new ( " ), new QName ( " "HelloService " ) ); } catch ( e ) { log. fatal (e ); } HelloPort proxy = service. getHelloPort ( ); proxy. sayHello ( "Hello World!" );
You can also use BindingProvider.ENDPOINT_ADDRESS_PROPERTY to override endpoint address. One caveat is the original endpoint used to generated the client proxy need to be up, otherwise you'll get a nasty "java.net.ConnectException: Connection refused" exception when instantiating the Service at the first place.
//Create service and proxy from the generated Service class. HelloService service = new HelloService ( ); HelloPort proxy = service. getHelloPort ( ); Map<String, Object> ctxt = ( (BindingProvider )proxy ). getRequestContext ( ); ctxt. put (JAXWSProperties. HTTP_CLIENT_STREAMING_CHUNK_SIZE, 8192 ); ctxt. put (BindingProvider. ENDPOINT_ADDRESS_PROPERTY, " ); proxy. sayHello ( "Hello World!" );
Use a local wsdl placed in classpath to create service and port, then set new end point address. This solves the issue that the original wsdl can NOT be be obtained from a live server and the live wsdl has a different service name, for example as a result of service virtualization.
HelloService service = new HelloService ( this. getClass ( ). getResource ( "originalHello.wsdl" ), new QName ( " "HelloService " ) ); HelloPort proxy = service. getHelloPort ( ); Map<String, Object> ctxt = ( (BindingProvider )proxy ). getRequestContext ( ); ctxt. put (JAXWSProperties. HTTP_CLIENT_STREAMING_CHUNK_SIZE, 8192 ); ctxt. put (BindingProvider. ENDPOINT_ADDRESS_PROPERTY, " ); proxy. sayHello ( "Hello World!" );