Andy
Andy

Reputation: 3696

Starting an axis2 service programmatically

I'm programmatically starting a service in Axis 2 (1.5), like this:

ConfigurationContext context = ConfigurationContextFactory.createConfigurationContextFromFileSystem(null, null);

AxisConfiguration cfg = context.getAxisConfiguration();
Map<String, MessageReceiver> mrMap = new HashMap<String, MessageReceiver>();
mrMap.put("http://www.w3.org/ns/wsdl/in-only", RPCInOnlyMessageReceiver.class.newInstance());
mrMap.put("http://www.w3.org/ns/wsdl/in-out", RPCMessageReceiver.class.newInstance());

AxisService service = AxisService.createService(MonitorWebService.class.getName(), cfg, mrMap, "", "http://samples", MonitorWebService.class.getClassLoader());
service.setScope("application");
cfg.addService(service);
SimpleHTTPServer server = new SimpleHTTPServer(context, 8080);
server.start();

With this set up, the service is only created when the first operation request arrives - how can I force axis to construct the service immediately?

Update: I've tried using deployService(), rather than cfg.addService(), and this starts the service up immediately. However, another instance of the service is created when the first request comes in, so that's no good either.

Upvotes: 3

Views: 1686

Answers (2)

user297600
user297600

Reputation: 94

You can let one of your services implement org.apache.axis2.engine.ServiceLifeCycle. It seems you also need to announce that in the services.xml configuration, like that

<service name="MyService" scope="application" class="com.example.MyService">
...
</service>

where com.example.MyService is the class implementing ServiceLifeCycle. This class will be notified on service deployment, which usually takes place on container startup. You can hook your code to start other services (programatically) there.

Upvotes: 1

BZ.
BZ.

Reputation: 1946

A cheesy way to do it would be to have the code call the service immediately after you start the service.

Upvotes: 1

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