| Version 7 (modified by lauer, 19 years ago) (diff) | 
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Using XmlRpcBeans in you API
What are XmlRpcBeans??
Sometimes parameter conversion is a straight-forward task which can be handed over to the XML-RPC runtime system.
When a java class fulfills certain conditions (roughly, being a java bean with compatible types) it can be turned into a XmlRpcBean
by annotating it with the @XmlRpcBean annotation. It then can be used in every XML-RPC call without restriction.
A XmlRpcBean must have
- a public constructor taking no arguments
 
- like a java bean: for each property which is supposed to be transported over XML-RPC there has to exist a public getter and setter method
 
- each property type has to be a XML-RPC compliant type, that is, it has to have one of the following properties:
- it is a standard XML-RPC type
 - it is annotated with a @XmlRpc annotation and defines proper conversion methods
 - a conversion mapping for that type is put at the XmlRpcBean (which then acts as an API itself)
 - it is an XmlRpcBean (that is, XmlRpcBeans can be nested)
 - it is a Collection, Map or array containing a type which is XML-RPC compliant
 
 
Technically, an XmlRpcBean is converted into a XML-RPC STRUCT. The field names of the transfered map are the property names derived from the bean class.
Lets look at an example XmlRpcBean (note that this bean also defines a converter mapping for type URL):
@XmlRpcBean
@ConverterMappings( @Mapping(type=URL.class,converter=URLConverter.class) )
public class CoffeeBean
{
    public URL getOrigin() { return mOrigin; }
    public void setOrigin( URL origin ) { mOrigin = origin; }
    public String getType() { return mType; }
    public void setType( String type ) { mType = type; }
    
    public String toString()
    {
        return( "CoffeeBean(" + getType() + ") comming from '" + getOrigin() + "'" );
    }
    private String mType;
    private URL mOrigin;
}
Client side
Again, the client has no restrictions using the bean class:
public interface Api
{
    Collection<CoffeeBean> getAllBeans();
}
----
Api remote_api = XmlRpc.createClient( Api.class, "handlerId", host, port );
Collection<CoffeeBean> beans = remote_api.getAllBeans();
for( CoffeeBeans b: beans )
{
    System.out.println( "Bean of type " + b.getType() + " comes from " + b.getOrigin() );
}
...
See also How to use own types in Collections an Maps.
Examples in source code: http://delight.opendfki.de/repos/trunk/XmlRpcDelight/src/examples/de/dfki/util/xmlrpc/examples/xmlrpc_beans/
