Provided by: libpod-wsdl-perl_0.063-2_all bug

NAME

       Pod::WSDL - Creates WSDL documents from (extended) pod

SYNOPSIS

         use Pod::WSDL;

         my $pod = new Pod::WSDL(source => 'My::Server',
           location => 'http://localhost/My/Server',
           pretty => 1,
           withDocumentation => 1);

         print $pod->WSDL;

DESCRIPTION - How to use Pod::WSDL

   Parsing the pod
       How does Pod::WSDL work? If you instantiate a Pod::WSDL object with the name of the module (or the path
       of the file, or an open filehandle) providing the web service like this

         my $pwsdl = new Pod::WSDL(source => 'My::Module',
               location => 'http://my.services.location/on/the/web');

       Pod::WSDL will try to find "My::Module" in @INC, open the file, parse it for WSDL directives and prepare
       the information for WSDL output. By calling

         $pwsdl->WSDL;

       Pod::WSDL will output the WSDL document. That's it.

       When using Pod::WSDL, the parser expects you to do the following:

       • Put  the  pod directly above the subroutines which the web service's client is going to call. There may
         be whitespace between the pod and the sub declaration but nothing else.

       • Use the "=begin"/"=end" respectively the "=for" directives according to standard pod: anything  between
         "=begin  WSDL"  and  "=end"  will be treated as pod. Anything composing a paragraph together with "=for
         WSDL" will be treated as pod.

       Any subroutine not preceded by WSDL pod will be left  unmentioned.  Any  standard  pod  will  be  ignored
       (though, for an exception to this, see the section on own complex types below).

       The  individual  instructions  for  Pod::WSDL  always  begin  with a keyword, like "_RETURN" or "_DOC" or
       "_FAULT". After this different things may follow, according to the  specific  type  of  instruction.  The
       instruction  may  take one or more lines - everything up to the next line beginning with a keyword or the
       end of the pod is belonging to the current instruction.

   Describing Methods
       How do we use Pod::WSDL? In describing a web service's method we have to say something about  parameters,
       return  values and faults. In addition you might want to add some documentation to these items and to the
       method itself.

       Parameters

       WSDL differentiates between in-, out- and inout-parameters, so we do that, too. A different matter is the
       question, if the client can do this too, but now we are talking about possibilities, not actualities.

       The pod string describing a parameter has the structure

         (_IN|_OUT|_INOUT) NAME ($|@)TYPE DESCRIPTION

       like

         _IN foo $string This is a foo

       or

         _INOUT bar @bar An array of bars

       You will easily guess what "_IN", "_OUT" and "_INOUT" stand for so we can move on. "NAME" is the name  of
       your  parameter. It does not have any real function (the order of the parameters being the only important
       thing) but it is nice to have it since in a WSDL document the parameters need to have names.  So  instead
       of  having  Pod::WSDL  automatically  generate cryptic names (it cannot do that right now) be nice to the
       client and use some sensible name. The "TYPE" of the parameters can be any of the xsd  (schema)  standard
       types  (see [5]) or a type of your own creation. The "$" resp. "@" symbols tell Pod::WSDL and your client
       if it is a scalar or array parameter. Everything following the type up to the next instruction is treated
       as  the  parameter's  documentation.  If  you  call  the  constructor  of  Pod::WSDL  with  the  argument
       "withDocumentation => 1", it will be added to the WSDL.

       Return Values

       Return  values  work  like parameters but since in WSDL there is provision for only one return value (you
       have (in)out parameters, or can return arrays if that isn't enough), you do not need to give them a name.
       Pod::WSDL will automatically call them 'Return' in the WSDL document.  So,  the  structure  of  "_RETURN"
       instructions is

         _RETURN ($|@)TYPE DESCRIPTION

       as in

         _RETURN $string Returns a string

       The  pod  for  one  method  may  only  have  one  "_RETURN" instruction. If you don't specify a "_RETURN"
       instruction, Pod::WSDL will assume that you return void. Of course the perl subroutine still will  return
       something,  but  your web service won't. To make this clear Pod::WSDL generates an empty response message
       for this.

       If you want some method to be a one way operation (see [4], ch. 2.4.1), say so by using  the  instruction
       "_ONEWAY" in the pod. In this case no response message will be generated and a "_RETURN" instruction will
       be ignored.

       Faults

       SOAP  faults  are  usually translated into exceptions in languages like Java. If you set up a web service
       using SOAP::Lite, SOAP will trap your dying program and generate a generic fault  using  the  message  of
       "die".  It  is  also  possible to access SOAP::Lite's SOAP::Fault directly if you want more control - but
       this is not our issue. If you want to use custom-made fault messages of your own, define them in "_FAULT"
       instructions, which look like this:

         _FAULT TYPE DESCRIPTION

       An example could be the following:

         _FAULT My::Fault If anything goes wrong

       Since you probably won't return an array of fault objects, you do not need to  use  the  "($|@)"  tokens.
       Just say that you return a fault, declare its type and add an optional description.

       As  with  parameters  (but  in  contrary  to  "_RETURN"  instructions)  you  can declare as many "_FAULT"
       instructions as you like, providing for different exception types your method might throw.

       Method Documentation

       Method documentation is easily explained. Its structure is

         _DOC Here comes my documentation ...

       That's it. Use several lines of documentation if you like. If you instantiate the Pod::WSDL  object  with
       the parameter "withDocumentation => 1", it will be written into the WSDL document.

   Describing Modules - Using Own Complex Types
       Quite  often  it  will be the case that you have to use complex types as parameters or return values. One
       example of this we saw  when  talking  about  faults:  you  might  want  to  create  custom  fault  types
       (exceptions)  of  your own to fullfill special needs in the communication between web service and client.
       But of course you also might simply want to pass a complex parameter like  a  address  object  containing
       customer  data  to  your application. WSDL provides the means to describe complex types borrowing the xsd
       schema syntax. Pod::WSDL makes use of this by allowing you to add WSDL pod to your  own  types.  Assuming
       you have some own type like

         package My::Type;

         sub new {
           bless {
             foo => 'foo',
             bar => -1
           }, $_[0];
         }

         1;

       simply describe the keys of your blessed hash like this.

         =begin WSDL

           _ATTR foo $string A foo
           _ATTR bar $integer And a bar

         =end WSDL

       Put  this  pod  anywhere within the package My::Type. Pod::WSDL will find it (if it is in @INC), parse it
       and integrate it into the WSDL document. The "_ATTR" instruction works exactly as the "_IN",  "_OUT"  and
       "_INOUT" instructions for methods (see above).

       If  you  initialize the Pod::WSDL object using "withDocumentation => 1", Pod::WSDL will look for standard
       pod in the module, parse it using Pod::Text and put it into the WSDL document.

METHODS

   new
       Instantiates a new Pod::WSDL.

       Parameters

       •   source - Name of the source file, package of the source module or file  handle  on  source  file  for
           which  the WSDL shall be generated. This source must contain specialized Pod tags. So, if your source
           is  '/some/directory/modules/Foo/Bar.pm'  with  package  declaration  'Foo::Bar',   source   may   be
           '/some/directory/modules/Foo/Bar.pm' or 'Foo::Bar' (in which case '/some/directory/modules' has to be
           in @INC) or an open file handle on the file. Right?

       •   location - Target namespace for the WSDL, usually the full URL of your webservice's proxy.

       •   pretty  -  Pretty  print  WSDL,  if  true. Otherwise the WSDL will come out in one line. The software
           generating the client stubs might not mind, but a person reading the WSDL will!

       •   withDocumentation - If true, put available documentation in the WSDL (see "Pod  Syntax"  above).  For
           used  own  complex  types  ('modules')  this  will  be  the output of Pod::Text on these modules. The
           software generating the client stubs might give a damn, but a person reading the WSDL won't!

   WSDL
       Returns WSDL as string.

       Parameters

       •   pretty - Pretty print WSDL, if true. Otherwise the WSDL will come  out  in  one  line.  The  software
           generating the client stubs might not mind, but a person reading the WSDL will!

       •   withDocumentation  -  If  true, put available documentation in the WSDL (see "Pod Syntax" above). For
           used own complex types ('modules') this will be  the  output  of  Pod::Text  on  these  modules.  The
           software generating the client stubs might give a damn, but a person reading the WSDL won't!

   addNamespace
       Adds a namespace. Will be taken up in WSDL's definitions element.

       Parameters

       1.  URI of the namespace

       2.  Declarator of the namespace

EXTERNAL DEPENDENCIES

         Carp
         XML::Writer
         IO::Scalar
         Pod::Text

       The test scripts use

         XML::XPath

EXAMPLES

       see the *.t files in the distribution

BUGS

       Please send me any bug reports, I will fix them or mention the bugs here :-)

TODO

   Describe Several Signatures for one Method
       Of  course,  one  subroutine declaration might take a lot of different sets of parameters. In Java or C++
       you would have to have several methods with different signatures. In perl you fix this within the method.
       So why not put several WSDL pod blocks above the method so the web service's client can handle that.

   Implement a Better Parsing of the pod
       Right know, the pod is found using some rather  complex  regular  expressions.  This  is  evil  and  will
       certainly fail in some situations. So, an issue on top of the fixme list is to switch to regular parsing.
       I'm not sure if I can use Pod::Parser since I need the sub declaration outside the pod, too.

   Handle Several Package Declarations in One File
       So  far,  Pod::WSDL assumes a one to one relation between packages and files. If it meets several package
       declarations in one file, it will fail some way or the other. For most uses, one package in one file will
       presumably suffice, but it would be nice to be able to handle the other cases, too.

   Handle Array based blessed References
       Array based blessed references used for complex types are something of a problem.

   Get Information on Complex Types from Somewhere Else
       If you use complex types for parameters that are not your own (we assume, that the module containing  the
       web  service always is your own), you might not be able to put the WSDL pod into the module files. So why
       not fetch it from somewhere else like a configuration file?

   Integrate Pod::WSDL with SOAP::Lite
       With Axis, you simply call the web service's URL  with  the  parameter  '?wsdl'  and  you  get  the  WSDL
       document. It would be nice to be able to do this with SOAP::Lite, too.

   Implement Non RPC Style Messages
       Pod::WSDL  writes  WSDL  documents  in  encoded  RPC style. It should be able to generate literal RPC and
       document styles, too.

REFERENCES

       [1] <http://ws.apache.org/axis/>

       [2] <http://search.cpan.org/~kbrown/SOAP-0.28/>

       [3] <http://search.cpan.org/~byrne/SOAP-Lite-0.65_5/>

       [4] <http://www.w3.org/TR/wsdl.html>

       [5] <http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/>

SEE ALSO

         http://ws.apache.org/axis/
         http://search.cpan.org/~kbrown/SOAP-0.28/
         http://search.cpan.org/~byrne/SOAP-Lite-0.65_5/
         http://www.w3.org/TR/wsdl

         WSDL::Generator (a different way to do it)
         SOAP::WSDL (the client side)
         SOAP::Clean::WSDL (I have not tried this)

AUTHOR

       Tarek Ahmed, <bloerch -the character every email address contains- oelbsk.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2006 by Tarek Ahmed

       This library is alpha software and comes with no warranty whatsoever.   It  is  free  software;  you  can
       redistribute  it  and/or  modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.5 or, at
       your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.

perl v5.34.0                                       2022-06-16                                     Pod::WSDL(3pm)