Table of Contents

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  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

Create a SOAP Web Service Overview

Create a SOAP Web Service Overview

When you create a SOAP web service, you create a web service object in the repository. You can create a SOAP web service from a WSDL data object or you can manually create a SOAP web service. Each SOAP web service can have one or more operations.
When you create a SOAP web service from a WSDL data object, you choose the operations that you want to include in the web service from the WSDL data object. Each operation can use a SOAP 1.1 binding or a SOAP 1.2 binding but not both.
When you manually create a web service, you create operations and define the elements of the operation input, operation output, and operation faults for each operation. You can use a reusable object to define the elements of the operation input and operation output for an operation.
A web service object has an
Overview
view and a
WSDL
view. You can create and configure operations in the
Overview
view. You can view the WSDL file content in the
WSDL
view.
After you create a web service, configure the operation mapping for each operation. You can optionally add operations to the web service.

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