Book Image

WS-BPEL 2.0 Beginner's Guide

By : Matjaz B Juric
Book Image

WS-BPEL 2.0 Beginner's Guide

By: Matjaz B Juric

Overview of this book

If you are a software architect, a designer, a software developer, an SOA and BPM architect, a project manager, or a business process analyst who is responsible for the design and development of business processes, composite applications, and BPM/SOA solutions, then this book is for you. You should have a clear grasp of general SOA concepts including business processes and web services, but no prior knowledge of the BPEL language is required.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
13
Index

Time for action – modifying WSDL

WSDL specifies the web service interface, which is used to invoke the BPEL process. When creating the BPEL process, the corresponding WSDL has been generated in the WSDLs folder of the project tree. It is named BookstoreABPEL.wsdl.

By default, WSDL contains a single operation named process. We will modify the default WSDL and rename the operation name from process to getBookData. This name denotes the purposed of the operation more precisely. We will also modify WSDL to include the XSD elements, which we created in the previous section.

To achieve this, let's perform the following steps:

  1. Double-click on the BookstoreABPEL.wsdl file in the WSDLs folder and switch to the source view.
  2. In the <portType> section, rename the operation name from process to getBookData:
    Time for action – modifying WSDL
  3. In the <message> section, change the element names of both messages to BookData and BookDataResponse respectively. This way, we will reference the changes that we made in the XSD:
    Time for action – modifying WSDL
  4. Finally, change the name of the included schema file from BookstoreABPEL.xsd to BookstoreBPEL.xsd, as shown in the following screenshot:
    Time for action – modifying WSDL

What just happened?

We looked at WSDL for the BPEL process and modified the operation name. Instead of using the default process name, we renamed it to getBookData. We also modified WSDL to reflect the XSD elements that we defined. Finally, we modified the XSD filename, which we renamed previously.

This way we have become familiar with WSDL, which is generated for each BPEL process. We are now ready to implement the BPEL process.