WAS v8.5 > Develop applications > Develop web services - Notification (WS-Notification) > Develop applications that use WS-Notification

Example: Creating a WS-Notification pull point

Use this task to write the code for a JAX-RPC subscriber client. This client creates a pull point for use by consumer applications that use pull style notifications. This example is based on using the Java API for XML-based remote procedure calls (JAX-RPC) APIs with code generated using the WSDL2Java tool (run against the Notification Broker WSDL generated as a result of creating your WS-Notification service point) and WebSphere Application Server APIs and SPIs.

In WAS there are two implementations of the WS-Notification service: v6.1 and v7.0. This JAX-RPC example can interact successfully with v6.1 or v7.0 WS-Notification service points. However to use WS-Notification with policy sets, for example to enable composition with WS-ReliableMessaging, then your WS-Notification applications must be encoded to use the Java API for XML-based Web Services (JAX-WS) programming model and must interact with v7.0 WS-Notification service points. If we are new to programming JAX-WS client applications, see the following topics:

To write the code for a JAX-RPC client acting in the subscriber role, creating a pull point for use by a consumer application that is to use pull style notifications... referring to the example code extract for further information.

  1. Look up the JAX-RPC service. The JNDI name is specific to the web services client implementation.
  2. Get a stub for the port on which to invoke operations.

  3. Create the request information.
  4. Invoke the CreatePullPoint operation by calling the associated method on the stub.
  5. Retrieve the reference to the pull point from the response.
  6. Retrieve any additional information from the response.


Example

The following example code describes a JAX-RPC client acting in the subscriber role, creating a pull point for use by a consumer application that is to use pull style notifications:

// Look up the JAX-RPC service. The JNDI name is specific to the web services client implementation InitialContext context = new InitialContext();
javax.xml.rpc.Service service = (javax.xml.rpc.Service) context.lookup(
    "java:comp/env/services/NotificationBroker");

// Get a stub for the port on which to invoke operations NotificationBroker stub = (NotificationBroker) service.getPort(NotificationBroker.class);

// Create the request information. 
SOAPElement[] optionalInformation = null;
CreatePullPoint cpp = new CreatePullPoint(optionalInformation);

// Invoke the CreatePullPoint operation by calling the associated method on the stub
CreatePullPointResponse response = stub.createPullPoint(cpp);

// Retrieve the reference to the pull point from the response EndpointReference pullPointEPR = response.getPullPoint();

// Retrieve any additional information from the response SOAPElement[] additionalInformation = response.getElements();


Related concepts:

JAX-RPC
WS-Notification


Related


Writing a WS-Notification application that exposes a web service endpoint
Writing a WS-Notification application that does not expose a web service endpoint
Filtering the message content of publications
Example: Subscribing a WS-Notification consumer
Example: Pausing a WS-Notification subscription
Example: Publishing a WS-Notification message
Example: Getting messages from a WS-Notification pull point
Example: Registering a WS-Notification publisher
Example: Creating a Notification consumer web service skeleton
Use WS-Notification for publish and subscribe messaging for web services
Secure WS-Notification


Reference:

WSDL2Java command for JAX-RPC applications
WS-Notification troubleshooting tips


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