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@Target({TYPE,METHOD,FIELD}) @Retention(RUNTIME) @Documented @Repeatable(WebServiceRefs.class) public @interface WebServiceRef
TheWebServiceRef
annotation is used to define a reference to a web service and (optionally) an injection target for it. It can be used to inject both service and proxy instances. These injected references are not thread safe. If the references are accessed by multiple threads, usual synchronization techinques can be used to support multiple threads.Web service references are resources in the Java EE 5 sense. The annotations (for example,
Addressing
) annotated with meta-annotationWebServiceFeatureAnnotation
can be used in conjunction withWebServiceRef
. The created reference MUST be configured with annotation's web service feature.For example, in the code below, the injected
StockQuoteProvider
proxy MUST have WS-Addressing enabled as specifed by theAddressing
annotation.public class MyClient { @Addressing @WebServiceRef(StockQuoteService.class) private StockQuoteProvider stockQuoteProvider; ... }
If a JAX-WS implementation encounters an unsupported or unrecognized annotation annotated with the
WebServiceFeatureAnnotation
that is specified withWebServiceRef
, an ERROR MUST be given.- Since:
- 1.6, JAX-WS 2.0
- See Also:
Resource
,WebServiceFeatureAnnotation
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Optional Element Summary
Optional Elements Modifier and Type Optional Element Description String
lookup
A portable JNDI lookup name that resolves to the target web service reference.String
mappedName
A product specific name that this resource should be mapped to.String
name
The JNDI name of the resource.Class<?>
type
The Java type of the resource.Class<? extends Service>
value
The service class, always a type extendingjavax.xml.ws.Service
.String
wsdlLocation
A URL pointing to the WSDL document for the web service.
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Element Detail
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name
String name
The JNDI name of the resource. For field annotations, the default is the field name. For method annotations, the default is the JavaBeans property name corresponding to the method. For class annotations, there is no default and this MUST be specified. The JNDI name can be absolute(with any logical namespace) or relative to JNDIjava:comp/env
namespace.- Returns:
- absolute or relative JNDI name
- Default:
- ""
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type
Class<?> type
The Java type of the resource. For field annotations, the default is the type of the field. For method annotations, the default is the type of the JavaBeans property. For class annotations, there is no default and this MUST be specified.- Returns:
- type of the resource
- Default:
- java.lang.Object.class
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mappedName
String mappedName
A product specific name that this resource should be mapped to. The name of this resource, as defined by thename
element or defaulted, is a name that is local to the application component using the resource. (When a relative JNDI name is specified, then it's a name in the JNDIjava:comp/env
namespace.) Many application servers provide a way to map these local names to names of resources known to the application server. This mapped name is often a global JNDI name, but may be a name of any form.Application servers are not required to support any particular form or type of mapped name, nor the ability to use mapped names. The mapped name is product-dependent and often installation-dependent. No use of a mapped name is portable.
- Returns:
- product specific resource name
- Default:
- ""
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wsdlLocation
String wsdlLocation
A URL pointing to the WSDL document for the web service. If not specified, the WSDL location specified by annotations on the resource type is used instead.- Returns:
- a URL pointing to the WSDL document
- Default:
- ""
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lookup
String lookup
A portable JNDI lookup name that resolves to the target web service reference.- Returns:
- portable JNDI lookup name
- Since:
- 1.7, JAX-WS 2.2
- Default:
- ""
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