AddXml (HttpRequest subroutine): Difference between revisions
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This subroutine adds a [[Janus SOAP]] | This subroutine adds a [[Janus SOAP]] | ||
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==Syntax== | ==Syntax== | ||
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===Syntax terms=== | ===Syntax terms=== | ||
<table class="syntaxTable"> | <table class="syntaxTable"> | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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Revision as of 20:24, 16 June 2011
Add an XmlDoc to POST data for this request (HttpRequest class)
This subroutine adds a Janus SOAP
XmlDoc object instance to the HTTP Post data that is subsequently
sent on a Post method invocation.
Syntax
httpRequest:AddXml( doc, [options])
Syntax terms
%httpreq | A previously defined and instantiated HttpRequest object. |
---|---|
doc | An XmlDoc object that contains an instantiated XmlDoc object. |
xmloptions | Any combination of the following options (but single occurrences only):
|
Usage notes
- The XmlDoc that is passed is serialized into the post data of the request being built. It is not required that you serialize the XmlDoc first.
- Invoking this method erases any post data previously added by AddXML or AddLongString method calls.
- If you do not explicitly set a
content-type HTTP request header via AddHeader,
AddXml generates a content-type header of "text/xml" upon a Post.
To suppress this automatic header generation, you can set the
AutoSendXMLContentType property
to
False
. - The xmloptions may be specified in any case, for example, you can use
either
NoXmlDecl
ornoxmldecl
, interchangeably. - If one of the line-end
(
CR
,LF
,CRLF
) options or ifIndent
is specified, and an element to be serialized has thexml:space="preserve"
attribute, then within the serialization of that element and its descendants, no line-end (nor indentation) characters are inserted to provide readability. In addition, thexml:space="default"
attribute has no effect under these options: specified by itself, it does not influence serialization, nor does it cause resumption of readability line-ends or indents if they were suspended by a containingxml:space="preserve"
. - The AddXml method uses the
character references specified in the XML Canonicalization specification
(http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-c14n) to
display the following characters:
- For Attribute nodes: tab, carriage return, and linefeed
- For Text nodes: carriage return
Since the character references are not subject to the standard XML whitespace normalization (so not removed), a serialized document (or subtree) that is then deserialized will retain this whitespace.
These character references are used:
tab &amp;#x9; CR &amp;#xD; LF &amp;#xA; The EBCDIC and corresponding ASCII encodings of the characters is:
&nbsp; EBCDIC ASCII tab X'05' X'09' CR X'0D' X'0D' LF X'25' X'0A' For more information about XML document whitespace handling, see "Normalizing whitespace characters".
- The following example shows the effect of the SortCanonical option:
Begin %d is object Xmldoc %d = new %htr is object HttpRequest %htr = new %sl is object Stringlist %sl = new Text To %sl <top p:abc="p" q:xyz="q" xmlns:p="urn:p" xmlns:q="http://q.com" xmlns="urn:default" name="t" id="z15" /> End Text %d:LoadXml(%sl) %htr:AddXml(%d, 'SortCanonical NoEmptyElt') Print %d:Serial(, 'EBCDIC SortCanonical NoEmptyElt') End
The Print statement above (which uses the Serial method of the Janus SOAP XmlDoc API) displays the resulting XmlDoc content added to the HttpRequest object (formatted with some newlines for the sake of instruction):<top xmlns="urn:default" xmlns:p="urn:p" xmlns:q="http://q.com" id="z15" name="t" q:xyz="q" p:abc="p" > </top>
Comments:
- The reason for the name (SortCanonical) is that this ordering is part of the specification of the Canonical XML Recommendation (http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-c14n) and the Exclusive Canonical XML Recommendation (http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-exc-c14n), which constrain serializations to facilitate processing such as digital signatures.
- Notice the use of the NoEmptyElt option above. This produces an STag (
<top ...>
) and an ETag (</top>
) for an empty element, rather than just the EmptyElemTag (<top ...>
). The canonical XML recommendations state that an STag/ETag pair, rather than an EmptyElemTag, is the serialization for an empty element. - Although SortCanonical uses the Unicode sort sequence, this is limited to Unicode values less than 256 (as of version 6.9 of Janus SOAP, so it is accomplished with an 8-byte EBCDIC to 8-byte Unicode table, which is (for all intents and purposes) merely an EBCDIC-to-ASCII translation.