Table of Contents

Search

  1. Preface
  2. Web Services
  3. SOAP Web Services
  4. WSDL Data Object
  5. Schema Object
  6. How to Create a SOAP Web Service
  7. Operation Mappings
  8. Parsing Web Service SOAP Messages
  9. Generating Web Service SOAP Messages
  10. Web Service Consumer Transformation
  11. REST Web Services
  12. How to Create a REST Web Service
  13. REST Web Service Consumer Transformation
  14. REST Web Service Consumer Transformation Use Cases
  15. REST and SOAP Web Service Administration
  16. Appendix A: Datatype Compatibility

Web Services Guide

Web Services Guide

Map Ports

Map Ports

After you create input ports, map each input port to the SOAP message hierarchy. The location of the port appears next to the node in the
Operation
area.
You can map ports to the following types of nodes:
Atomic node
A simple element or an attribute that has no children and is not divisible.
Multiple-occurring atomic node
A simple element or an attribute that occurs multiple times at the same location in the hierarchy.
Complex node
An element that contains other elements.
If the parent node does not have a location, the parent node receives the input group name as the location. When the parent node has a location, each node in the hierarchy level must have an output location from the same location.
You can map an input group name to a parent node in a hierarchy level. The Developer tool updates the location field for the parent node in the hierarchy. The Developer tool does not update the child nodes that belong to the group in the hierarchy. When you map input ports to the child nodes, each input port location must be the same location as the location parent node.
After you map an input group to a hierarchy level, you can change it later. You can click
Clear
or you can delete the lines between the Ports and the Operation area. To delete the lines, drag the pointer of the lines to select them. Click
Delete
.

0 COMMENTS

We’d like to hear from you!