I have followed this tutorial on how to get data via web service.
And in there author used PHP and REST to access service like:
NSString *string = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#weather.php?format=json", BaseURLString];
And I am having trouble to use this on .NET SOAP (.asmx) web service like this one.
How I can use NSUrlSession and AFNetworking to send/receive data to/from asmx web service?
I have a problem as I don't know how to form a request to some method on this web service and pass parameters. It's a lot different compared to SOAP. It can be that I am stupid but can't figure this alone :(
Just starting into this now. I found this:
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/cocoa/conceptual/urlloadingsystem/Articles/UsingNSURLSession.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40013509-SW1
stating this: Only HTTP and HTTPS protocols are supported (no custom protocols).
Which leaves me more than a little bit concerned.
Update: I'm receiving SOAP responses - even though it is technically a custom protocol.
Related
I'm working on asp.net mvc
I want to consume secured web service in my project
In previous I can consume unsecured web service (asmx) by calling wsdl to create proxy class ,now
I tried to create proxy class for the service by using wsdl.exe by using the following formula
Wsdl /language:language /protocol:protocol /namespace:myNameSpace /out:filename /username:username /password:password /domain:domain
But I had the following error
Error: There was an error processing 'https:// .asmx?wsdl'.
- There was an error downloading 'https:// .asmx?wsdl'
- Unable to connect to the remote server
- A socket operation was attempted to an unreachable network ??.???.???.??:???
Can you tell me how can I consume secured web service in my project
Yara
I dont know what sort of service you are talking about but I suspect you are Adding it as a Service/Web reference. If thats the case then assuming its called WebService1 and that the security you are talking about it basic authentication then:
WebService1 svc = new WebService1();
svc.AuthenticationHeaderValue = new WebService1.AuthenticationHeader();
svc.AuthenticationHeaderValue.UserName = "username";
svc.AuthenticationHeaderValue.Password = "password";
Try that. As I said I dont have much info on what you are trying to do so its a guess.
First of all it doesn't matter you are in MVC or any other technology.
If you can call https webservice using simple code, it will do wonders for you.
So first try calling simple HTTPS web service, google and play around it.
For learning purpose and to gain more knowledge, check these links
How to call HTTPS web service method from a .net console application?
Calling a https web service (C#)
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/901183
I have had experienced with iOS development but no Client Server type applications.
I have heard about HTTPS, REST, JSON, etc. I am confused on the differences.
My app that I want to build is getting a list of data to output to the user and also sending a form to the server to be processed. E.g. A Membership Application to the Server with personal information and other pertaining information to be stored in the server. I also need the connection to be secure and the user must logon to the server with a username and password.
How does my app communicate with the server? Is it using NSURLRequest?
What is the best method or protocol to accomplish this?
Thanks!
HTTPS, REST, and JSON are different tools you can use when performing networked operations (more specifically, a secure protocol, a web service architecture, and a method of object serialization, respectively). If you don't know what these mean, I would do a little reading before attempting to build an iOS app that functions as a client. The link johnathon posted in the comments is a little low-level for what you're wanting to do, but searching around for "consuming a web service with iOS" might be good.
Also, does the service already exist? If so, your task is essentially to understand how to communicate with the server.
Once you're a little more up-to-speed on the fundamentals, however, the AFNetworking library is phenomenal.
How might I go about using a web service in an iPhone app? For example, if I wanted to use a web service that you can use to convert a value into a different unit, how would I go about doing that? For example: http://www.webqc.org/balance.php
It depends what sort of 'web service' it is. If it is a stateless REST style API, passing data in the URL and/or data encoded Json or XML it couldn't be easier, just use NSURLConnection.
Using examples I found on the web I made an application (server and iOS client) - using the NSURLConnection & NSMutableURLRequest, and encoded/decoded data using YAJL. This was pretty easy to get going.
If you don't want to do this using the core libraries directly- there are some frameworks you can use, e.g. RestKit. I've not used it, but it looks good and comes recommended.
If it is a SOAP style web service, this is a lot more complicated as SOAP services often expose a stateful API.
I should say that the example that you show here is not a web-service, whilst it does come with a way of calling it just using a URL - it returns an html page which makes it hard for you to use the results. I presume that you are more interested in a service that returns results encoded as XML or Json or the like.
I am quite familiar with ASP.NET MVC and know that a controller’s method can respond with XML and JSON apart from other things (i.e. behave like a restful webservice). I am just wondering whether I can make a controller method behave like a soap web service which responds with a SOAP XML response to a POST request? Maybe it is just question of responding with XML but this would be more like a restful web service. I want to avoid having to implement a separate web service project if possible. Any feedback would be very much appreciated. Thanks.
Christian
You don't need to implement a separate web service project. All you need is to add a WCF service endpoint (.svc file) to your current web project. Also you are saying that you expect SOAP response after a GET request which of course doesn't make much sense because in the SOAP specification requests should be POST.
I believe your thought is to create a single deployable MVC Web Application that can respond to both SOAP requests and RESTful requests (maybe even more?). I have thought about this myself, however there is no point in re-inventing WCF as it can do both without any additional programming. The ASP.Net MVC assemblies were not designed to function as a web service, and although it can, probably shouldn't be when other technologies exist that were designed specifically for that purpose.
A 3rd party site sends its notifications after my web application has completed some action in order to notify me of its success. Receiving a notification item requires a response back to the 3rd party server (URL) with the a containing the value "accepted".
I have never user SOAP and with the basic info found I'm a bit lost for the case of asp.net mvc. Are there any good links showing the principle of receiving and sending SOAP responses?
Tutorials / information may be presented in other languages such as java, asp.net (classic) or something. I need to get a general idea since googling on SOAP has not given me anything for the past few hours.
You need to learn a little about WCF. See the WCF Developer Center, especially the Beginners Guide.
What you want is to create a simple WCF service that corresponds to the WSDL that they will give you. You will need to implement only the operation (method) that they will call to notify you. You can host a WCF service in IIS along with the rest of your application.
The issue will be how to correlate the notifications with the page you're on in your MVC application.
I don't think this is specific to ASP.NET MVC really. If you have a WSDL for their web service, just use that to generate stub classes using either wsdl.exe or by adding a web reference to your project, then call the web service from your controller.
If I remember correctly SOAP is basically xml requests and responses.
You might want to look into WSDL (Web Service Definition Language) to avoid having to deal with raw data, and you would likely find a great deal of tutorials on wsdl as well.