2 C and C++ XML Data Bindings {#mainpage}
3 ===========================
10 This article presents a detailed overview of the gSOAP XML data bindings for C
11 and C++. The XML data bindings for C and C++ are extensively used with gSOAP
12 Web services to serialize C and C++ data in XML as part of the SOAP/XML Web
13 services payloads. Also REST XML with gSOAP relies on XML serialization of C
14 and C++ data via XML data bindings.
16 The major advantage of XML data bindings is that your application data is
17 always **type safe** in C and C++ by binding XML schema types to C/C++ types.
18 So integers in XML are bound to C integers, strings in XML are bound to C or
19 C++ strings, complex types in XML are bound to C structs or C++ classes, and so
20 on. The structured data you create and accept will fit the data model and is
21 **static type safe**. In other words, by leveraging strong typing in C/C++,
22 your XML data meets **XML schema validation requirements** and satisfies **XML
23 interoperability requirements**.
25 In fact, gSOAP data bindings are more powerful than simply representing C/C++
26 data in XML. The gSOAP tools implement true and tested **structure-preserving
27 serialization** of C/C++ data in XML, including the serialization of cyclic
28 graph structures with id-ref XML attributes. The gSOAP tools also generate
29 routines for deep copying and deep deletion of C/C++ data structures to
30 simplify memory management. In addition, C/C++ structures are deserialized
31 into managed memory, managed by the gSOAP `soap` context.
33 At the end of this article two examples are given to illustrate the application
34 of XML data bindings. The first simple example <i>`address.cpp`</i> shows how to use
35 wsdl2h to bind an XML schema to C++. The C++ application reads and writes an
36 XML file into and from a C++ "address book" data structure as a simple example.
37 The C++ data structure is an STL vector of address objects. The second example
38 <i>`graph.cpp`</i> shows how C++ data can be accurately serialized as a tree, digraph,
39 and cyclic graph in XML. The digraph and cyclic graph serialization rules
40 implement SOAP 1.1/1.2 multi-ref encoding with id-ref attributes to link
41 elements through IDREF XML references, creating a an XML graph with pointers to
42 XML nodes that preserves the structural integrity of the serialized C++ data.
44 These examples demonstrate XML data bindings only for relatively simple data
45 structures and types. The gSOAP tools support more than just these type of
46 structures to serialize in XML. There are practically no limits to the
47 serialization of C and C++ data types in XML.
49 Also the support for XML schema (XSD) components is unlimited. The wsdl2h tool
50 maps schemas to C and C++ using built-in intuitive mapping rules, while
51 allowing the mappings to be customized using a <i>`typemap.dat`</i> file with mapping
52 instructions for wsdl2h.
54 The information in this article is applicable to gSOAP 2.8.26 and greater that
55 support C++11 features. However, C++11 is not required. The material and the
56 examples in this article use plain C and C++, until the point where we
57 introduce C++11 smart pointers and scoped enumerations. While most of the
58 examples in this article are given in C++, the concepts also apply to C with
59 the exception of containers, smart pointers, classes and their methods. None
60 of these exceptions limit the use of the gSOAP tools for C in any way.
62 The data binding concepts described in this article were first envisioned in
63 1999 by Prof. Robert van Engelen at the Florida State University. An
64 implementation was created in 2000, named "stub/skeleton compiler". The first
65 articles on its successor version "gSOAP" appeared in 2002. The principle of
66 mapping XSD components to C/C++ types and vice versa is now widely adopted in
67 systems and programming languages, including Java web services and by C# WCF.
69 We continue to be committed to our goal to empower C/C++ developers with
70 powerful autocoding tools for XML. Our commitment started in the very early
71 days of SOAP by actively participating in
72 [SOAP interoperability testing](http://www.whitemesa.com/interop.htm),
73 participating in the development and testing of the
74 [W3C XML Schema Patterns for Databinding Interoperability](http://www.w3.org/2002/ws/databinding),
75 and continues by contributing to the development of
76 [OASIS open standards](https://www.oasis-open.org) in partnership with leading
77 IT companies in the world.
79 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
81 Notational Conventions {#conventions}
82 ======================
84 The typographical conventions used by this document are:
86 * `Courier` denotes C and C++ source code.
88 * <i>`Courier`</i> denotes XML content, JSON content, file and path names, and URIs.
90 * <b>`Courier`</b> denotes HTTP content, text file content, and shell commands with command line options and arguments.
92 The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
93 "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to
94 be interpreted as described in RFC-2119.
96 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
98 Mapping WSDL and XML schemas to C/C++ {#tocpp}
99 =====================================
101 To convert WSDL and XML schemas (XSD files) to code, we use the wsdl2h command
102 on the command line (or command prompt), after opening a terminal. The wsdl2h
103 command generates the data binding interface code that is saved to a special
104 Web services and data bindings interface header file with extension <i>`.h`</i>
105 that contains the WSDL service declarations and the data binding interface
106 declarations in a familiar C/C++ format:
108 wsdl2h [options] -o file.h ... XSD and WSDL files ...
110 This command converts WSDL and XSD files to C++ (or pure C with
111 <b>`wsdl2h -c`</b>) and saves the data binding interface to a interface header
112 file <i>`file.h`</i> that uses familiar C/C++ syntax extended with `//gsoap`
113 [directives](#directives) and annotations. Notational conventions are used in
114 the data binding interface to declare serializable C/C++ types and functions
115 for Web service operations.
117 The WSDL 1.1/2.0, SOAP 1.1/1.2, and XSD 1.0/1.1 standards are supported by the
118 gSOAP tools. In addition, the most popular WS specifications are also
119 supported, including WS-Addressing, WS-ReliableMessaging, WS-Discovery,
120 WS-Security, WS-Policy, WS-SecurityPolicy, and WS-SecureConversation.
122 This article focusses mainly on XML data bindings. XML data bindings for C/C++
123 bind XML schema types to C/C++ types. So integers in XML are bound to C
124 integers, strings in XML are bound to C or C++ strings, complex types in XML
125 are bound to C structs or C++ classes, and so on.
127 A data binding is dual, meaning supporting a two way direction for development.
128 Either you start with WSDLs and/or XML schemas that are mapped to equivalent
129 C/C++ types, or you start with C/C++ types that are mapped to XSD types.
130 Either way, the end result is that you can serialize C/C++ types in XML such
131 that your XML is an instance of XML schema(s) and is validated against these
134 This covers all of the following standard XSD components with their optional
135 attributes and properties:
137 XSD component | attributes and properties
138 -------------- | -------------------------
139 schema | targetNamespace, version, elementFormDefault, attributeFormDefault, defaultAttributes
140 attribute | name, ref, type, use, default, fixed, form, targetNamespace, wsdl:arrayType
141 element | name, ref, type, default, fixed, form, nillable, abstract, substitutionGroup, minOccurs, maxOccurs, targetNamespace
143 complexType | name, abstract, mixed, defaultAttributesApply
145 choice | minOccurs, maxOccurs
146 sequence | minOccurs, maxOccurs
147 group | name, ref, minOccurs, maxOccurs
148 attributeGroup | name, ref
149 any | minOccurs, maxOccurs
152 And also the following standard XSD directives are covered:
154 directive | description
155 ---------- | -----------
156 import | Imports a schema into the importing schema for referencing
157 include | Include schema component definitions into a schema
158 override | Override by replacing schema component definitions
159 redefine | Extend or restrict schema component definitions
160 annotation | Annotates a component
162 The XSD facets and their mappings to C/C++ are:
165 -------------- | -------
167 simpleContent | class/struct wrapper with `__item` member
168 complexContent | class/struct
169 list | `enum*` bitmask (`enum*` enumerates a bitmask up to 64 bits)
170 extension | class/struct inheritance/extension
171 restriction | `typedef` and class/struct inheritance/redeclaration
172 length | `typedef` with restricted content length annotation
173 minLength | `typedef` with restricted content length annotation
174 maxLength | `typedef` with restricted content length annotation
175 minInclusive | `typedef` with numerical value range restriction annotation
176 maxInclusive | `typedef` with numerical value range restriction annotation
177 minExclusive | `typedef` with numerical value range restriction annotation
178 maxExclusive | `typedef` with numerical value range restriction annotation
179 precision | `typedef` with pattern annotation (pattern used for output, but input is not validated)
180 scale | `typedef` with pattern annotation (pattern used for output, but input is not validated)
181 totalDigits | `typedef` with pattern annotation (pattern used for output, but input is not validated)
182 fractionDigits | `typedef` with pattern annotation (pattern used for output, but input is not validated)
183 pattern | `typedef` with pattern annotation (define `soap::fsvalidate` callback to validate patterns)
184 union | string with union of value
186 All primitive XSD types are supported, including but not limited to the
190 ---------------- | -------
191 any/anyType | `_XML` string with literal XML content (or enable DOM with wsdl2h option `-d`)
192 anyURI | string (i.e. `char*`, `wchar_t*`, `std::string`, `std::wstring`)
193 string | string (i.e. `char*`, `wchar_t*`, `std::string`, `std::wstring`)
194 boolean | `bool` (C++) or `enum xsd__boolean` (C)
195 byte | `char` (i.e. `int8_t`)
196 short | `short` (i.e. `int16_t`)
197 int | `int` (i.e. `int32_t`)
198 long | `LONG64` (i.e. `long long` and `int64_t`)
199 unsignedByte | `unsigned char` (i.e. `uint8_t`)
200 unsignedShort | `unsigned short` (i.e. `uint16_t`)
201 unsignedInt | `unsigned int` (i.e. `uint32_t`)
202 unsignedLong | `ULONG64` (i.e. `unsigned long long` and `uint64_t`)
205 integer | string or `#import "custom/int128.h"` to use 128 bit `xsd__integer`
206 decimal | string or `#import "custom/long_double.h"` to use `long double`
207 precisionDecimal | string
208 duration | string or `#import "custom/duration.h"` to use 64 bit `xsd__duration`
209 dateTime | `time_t` or `#import "custom/struct_tm.h"` to use `struct tm` for `xsd__dateTime`
210 time | string or `#import "custom/long_time.h"` to use 64 bit `xsd__time`
211 date | string or `#import "custom/struct_tm_date.h"` to use `struct tm` for `xsd__date`
212 hexBinary | special class/struct `xsd__hexBinary`
213 base64Binary | special class/struct `xsd__base64Binary`
214 QName | `_QName` string (URI normalization rules are applied)
216 All other primitive XSD types not listed above are mapped to strings, by
217 wsdl2h generating a `typedef` to string for these types. For example,
218 <i>`xsd:token`</i> is bound to a C++ or C string:
221 typedef std::string xsd__token; // C++
222 typedef char *xsd__token; // C (wsdl2h option -c)
225 This associates a compatible value space to the type with the appropriate XSD
226 type name used by the soapcpp2-generated serializers.
228 It is possible to remap types by adding the appropriate mapping rules to
229 <i>`typemap.dat`</i> as we will explain in more detail in the next section.
231 Imported custom serializers are intended to extend the C/C++ type bindings when
232 the default binding to string is not satisfactory to your taste and if the
233 target platform supports these C/C++ types. To add custom serializers to
234 <i>`typemap.dat`</i> for wsdl2h, see [adding custom serializers](#custom) below.
236 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
238 Using typemap.dat to customize data bindings {#typemap}
239 ============================================
241 Use a <i>`typemap.dat`</i> file to redefine namespace prefixes and to customize type
242 bindings for the the generated header files produced by the wsdl2h tool. The
243 <i>`typemap.dat`</i> is the default file processed by wsdl2h. Use <b>`wsdl2h -tfile.dat`</b>
244 option <b>`-tfile.dat`</b> to specify a different mapping file <i>`file.dat`</i>.
246 Declarations in <i>`typemap.dat`</i> can be broken up over multiple lines by
247 continuing on the next line by ending each line to be continued with a
248 backslash <b>`\`</b>. The limit is 4095 characters per line, whether the line is
251 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
253 XML namespace bindings {#typemap1}
254 ----------------------
256 The wsdl2h tool generates C/C++ type declarations that use `ns1`, `ns2`, etc.
257 as schema-binding URI prefixes. These default prefixes are generated somewhat
258 arbitrarily for each schema targetNamespace URI, meaning that their ordering
259 may change depending on the WSDL and XSD order of processing with wsdl2h.
261 Therefore, it is **strongly recommended** to declare your own prefix for each
262 schema URI in <i>`typemap.dat`</i> to reduce maintaince effort of your code. This
263 is more robust when anticipating possible changes of the schema(s) and/or the
264 binding URI(s) and/or the tooling algorithms.
266 The first and foremost important thing to do is to define prefix-URI bindings
267 for our C/C++ code by adding the following line(s) to our <i>`typemap.dat`</i> or make
268 a copy of this file and add the line(s) that bind our choice of prefix name to
273 For example, to use `g` as a prefix for the "urn:graph" XML namespace:
277 This produces `g__name` C/C++ type names that are bound to the "urn:graph"
278 schema by association of `g` to the generated C/C++ types.
280 This means that <i>`<g:name xmlns:g="urn:graph">`</i> is parsed as an instance of a
281 `g__name` C/C++ type. Also <i>`<x:name xmlns:x="urn:graph">`</i> parses as an
282 instance of `g__name`, because the prefix <i>`x`</i> has the same URI value
283 <i>`urn:graph`</i>. Prefixes in XML have local scopes (like variables in a block).
285 The first run of wsdl2h will reveal the XML namespace URIs, so you do not need
286 to search WSDLs and XSD files for all of the target namespaces. Just copy them
287 from the generated header file after the first run into <i>`typemap.dat`</i> for
290 @note Only define a namespace prefix once in <i>`typemap.dat`</i>. That is, do not
291 use the same prefix for multiple XML namespace URIs. This is to avoid
292 namespace conflicts that may cause failed builds and failures in XML parsing
293 and XML schema validation.
295 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
297 XSD type bindings {#typemap2}
300 Custom C/C++ type bindings can be declared in <i>`typemap.dat`</i> to associate C/C++
301 types with specific schema types. These type bindings have four parts:
303 prefix__type = declaration | use | ptruse
307 - <b>`prefix__type`</b> is the schema type to be customized (the <b>`prefix__type`</b> name
308 uses the common double underscore naming convention);
310 - <b>`declaration`</b> declares the C/C++ type in the wsdl2h-generated header file.
311 This part can be empty if no explicit declaration is needed;
313 - <b>`use`</b> is an optional part that specifies how the C/C++ type is used in the
314 code. When omitted, it is the same as <b>`prefix__type`</b>;
316 - <b>`ptruse`</b> is an optional part that specifies how the type is used as a pointer
317 type. By default it is the <b>`use`</b> type name with a <b>`*`</b> or C++11
318 <b>`std::shared_ptr<type>`</b> when enabled (see further below). If <b>`use`</b> is already a
319 pointer type by the presence of a <b>`*`</b> in the <b>`use`</b> part, then the default
320 <b>`ptruse`</b> type is the same as the <b>`use`</b> type (that is, no double
321 pointers <b>`**`</b> will be created in this case).
323 For example, to map <i>`xsd:duration`</i> to a `long long` (`LONG64`) type that holds
324 millisecond duration values, we can use the custom serializer declared in
325 <i>`gsoap/custom/duration.h`</i> by adding the following line to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
327 xsd__duration = #import "custom/duration.h"
329 Here, we omitted the second and third parts, because `xsd__duration` is the
330 name that wsdl2h uses for this type in our generated code so we should leave
331 the <b>`use`</b> part unspecified. The third part is omitted to let wsdl2h use
332 `xsd__duration *` for pointers or `std::shared_ptr<xsd__duration>` if smart
333 pointers are enabled.
335 To map <i>`xsd:string`</i> to `wchar_t*` wide strings for C source code output:
337 xsd__string = | wchar_t* | wchar_t*
339 For C++ we can use the `std::wstring` wide string:
341 xsd__string = | std::wstring
343 Note that the first part is empty, because these types do not require a
344 declaration. A <b>`ptruse`</b> part is also defined for `wchar_t*`, but this
345 is actually needed because the wsdl2h tool recognizes that the <b>`use`</b>
346 part `wchar_t*` is already a pointer. By contrast, when using 8-bit strings,
347 it is recommended to use the `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING` flag to enable UTF-8 formatted
350 When the auto-generated declaration should be preserved but the <b>`use`</b> or
351 <b>`ptruse`</b> parts replaced, then we use an ellipsis for the declaration part:
353 prefix__type = ... | use | ptruse
355 This is useful to map schema polymorphic types to C types for example, where we
356 need to be able to both handle a base type and its extensions as per schema
357 extensibility. Say we have a base type called <i>`ns:base`</i> that is extended, then
358 we can remap this to a C type that permits referening the extended types via a
361 ns__base = ... | int __type_base; void*
363 such that `__type_base` and `void*` will be used to (de)serialize any data
364 type, including base and its derived types. The `__type_base` integer is set
365 to a `SOAP_TYPE_T` value to indicate what type of data the `void*` pointer
368 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
370 Custom serializers for XSD types {#custom}
371 --------------------------------
373 In the previous part we saw how a custom serializer is used to bind
374 <i>`xsd:duration`</i> to a `long long` (`LONG64` or `int64_t`) type to store millisecond
377 xsd__duration = #import "custom/duration.h"
379 The `xsd__duration` type is an alias of `long long` (`LONG64` or `int64_t`).
381 While wsdl2h will use this binding declared in <i>`typemap.dat`</i>
382 automatically, you will also need to compile <i>`gsoap/custom/duration.c`</i>.
383 Each custom serializer has an interface header file to be imported into another
384 interface header file that declares the custom type for soapcpp2 and a
385 serializer implementation file written in C, which should be compiled with the
386 application. You can compile these in C++ (rename files to <i>`.cpp`</i> if
389 A custom serializer is declared in an interface header file for soapcpp2 using
390 `extern typedef`. The typedef name declared is serializable, whereas the
391 type on which it is based is not serializable. This declaration can be
392 combined with `volatile` when the type should not be redeclared, see
393 [volatile classes and structs](#toxsd9-2). For example, the custom serializer
394 for `struct tm` is the type `xsd__datetime` declared as follows in
395 `gsoap/custom/struct_tm.h`:
398 extern typedef volatile struct tm
400 int tm_sec; ///< seconds (0 - 60)
401 int tm_min; ///< minutes (0 - 59)
402 int tm_hour; ///< hours (0 - 23)
403 int tm_mday; ///< day of month (1 - 31)
404 int tm_mon; ///< month of year (0 - 11)
405 int tm_year; ///< year - 1900
406 int tm_wday; ///< day of week (Sunday = 0) (NOT USED)
407 int tm_yday; ///< day of year (0 - 365) (NOT USED)
408 int tm_isdst; ///< is summer time in effect?
409 char* tm_zone; ///< abbreviation of timezone (NOT USED)
413 Another example is `xsd__duration` as a custom serializer for the C++11 type
414 `std::chrono::nanoseconds`:
417 extern typedef class std::chrono::nanoseconds xsd__duration;
420 Next, we present all pre-defined custom serializers that are available to you.
422 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
424 ### xsd:integer {#custom-1}
426 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:integer`</i> to a string by default. To map <i>`xsd:integer`</i> to
427 the 128 bit big int type `__int128_t`:
429 xsd__integer = #import "custom/int128.h"
431 The `xsd__integer` type is an alias of `__int128_t`.
433 @warning Beware that the <i>`xsd:integer`</i> value space of integers is in principle
434 unbounded and values can be of arbitrary length. A value range fault
435 `SOAP_TYPE` (value exceeds native representation) or `SOAP_LENGTH` (value
436 exceeds range bounds) will be thrown by the deserializer if the value is out of
439 Other XSD integer types that are restrictions of <i>`xsd:integer`</i>, are
440 <i>`xsd:nonNegativeInteger`</i> and <i>`xsd:nonPositiveInteger`</i>, which are further restricted
441 by <i>`xsd:positiveInteger`</i> and <i>`xsd:negativeInteger`</i>. To bind these types to
442 `__int128_t` add the following definitions to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
444 xsd__nonNegativeInteger = typedef xsd__integer xsd__nonNegativeInteger 0 : ;
445 xsd__nonPositiveInteger = typedef xsd__integer xsd__nonPositiveInteger : 0 ;
446 xsd__positiveInteger = typedef xsd__integer xsd__positiveInteger 1 : ;
447 xsd__negativeInteger = typedef xsd__integer xsd__negativeInteger : -1 ;
449 Or simply uncomment these definitions in <i>`typemap.dat`</i> when you are using the
450 latest gSOAP releases.
452 @note If `__int128_t` 128 bit integers are not supported on your platform and if it
453 is certain that <i>`xsd:integer`</i> values are within 64 bit value bounds for your
454 application's use, then you can map this type to `LONG64`:
456 xsd__integer = typedef LONG64 xsd__integer;
458 @note Again, a value range fault `SOAP_TYPE` or `SOAP_LENGTH` will be thrown by
459 the deserializer if the value is out of range.
461 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/int128.c`</i> with your project.
463 @see Section [numerical types](#toxsd5).
465 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
467 ### xsd:decimal {#custom-2}
469 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:decimal`</i> to a string by default. To map <i>`xsd:decimal`</i> to
470 extended precision floating point:
472 xsd__decimal = #import "custom/long_double.h" | long double
474 By contrast to all other custom serializers, this serializer enables `long
475 double` natively without requiring a new binding name (`xsd__decimal` is NOT
478 If your system supports <i>`quadmath.h`</i> quadruple precision floating point
479 `__float128`, you can map <i>`xsd:decimal`</i> to `xsd__decimal` that is an alias of
482 xsd__decimal = #import "custom/float128.h"
484 @warning Beware that <i>`xsd:decimal`</i> is in principle a decimal value with arbitraty
485 lengths. A value range fault `SOAP_TYPE` will be thrown by the deserializer if
486 the value is out of range.
488 In the XML payload the special values <i>`INF`</i>, <i>`-INF`</i>, <i>`NaN`</i>
489 represent plus or minus infinity and not-a-number, respectively.
491 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/long_double.c`</i> with your
494 @see Section [numerical types](#toxsd5).
496 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
498 ### xsd:dateTime {#custom-3}
500 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> to `time_t` by default.
502 The trouble with `time_t` when represented as 32 bit `long` integers is that it
503 is limited to dates between 1970 and 2038. A 64 bit `time_t` is safe to use if
504 the target platform supports it, but lack of 64 bit `time_t` portability may
505 still cause date range issues.
507 For this reason `struct tm` should be used to represent wider date ranges. This
508 custom serializer avoids using date and time information in `time_t`. You get
509 the raw date and time information. You only lose the day of the week
510 information. It is always Sunday (`tm_wday=0`).
512 To map <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> to `xsd__dateTime` which is an alias of `struct tm`:
514 xsd__dateTime = #import "custom/struct_tm.h"
516 If the limited date range of `time_t` is not a problem but you want to increase
517 the time precision with fractional seconds, then we suggest to map <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i>
520 xsd__dateTime = #import "custom/struct_timeval.h"
522 If the limited date range of `time_t` is not a problem but you want to use the
523 C++11 time point type `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point` (which internally
526 xsd__dateTime = #import "custom/chrono_time_point.h"
528 Again, we should make sure that the dates will not exceed the date range when
529 using the default `time_t` binding for <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> or when binding
530 <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> to `struct timeval` or to `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point`.
531 These are safe to use in applications that use <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> to record date
532 stamps within a given window. Otherwise, we recommend the `struct tm` custom
535 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm.c`</i> with your
538 You could even map <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> to a plain string (use `char*` with C and
539 `std::string` with C++). For example:
541 xsd__dateTime = | char*
543 @see Section [date and time types](#toxsd7).
545 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
547 ### xsd:date {#custom-4}
549 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:date`</i> to a string by default. We can map <i>`xsd:date`</i> to
552 xsd__date = #import "custom/struct_tm_date.h"
554 The `xsd__date` type is an alias of `struct tm`. The serializer ignores the
555 time part and the deserializer only populates the date part of the struct,
556 setting the time to 00:00:00. There is no unreasonable limit on the date range
557 because the year field is stored as an integer (`int`).
559 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm_date.c`</i> with your
562 @see Section [date and time types](#toxsd7).
564 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
566 ### xsd:time {#custom-5}
568 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:time`</i> to a string by default. We can map <i>`xsd:time`</i> to
569 an `unsigned long long` (`ULONG64` or `uint64_t`) integer with microsecond time
572 xsd__time = #import "custom/long_time.h"
574 This type represents 00:00:00.000000 to 23:59:59.999999, from `0` to an upper
575 bound of `86399999999`. A microsecond resolution means that a 1 second
576 increment requires an increment of 1000000 in the integer value. The serializer
577 adds a UTC time zone.
579 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/long_time.c`</i> with your
582 @see Section [date and time types](#toxsd7).
584 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
586 ### xsd:duration {#custom-6}
588 The wsdl2h tool maps <i>`xsd:duration`</i> to a string by default, unless <i>`xsd:duration`</i>
589 is mapped to a `long long` (`LONG64` or `int64_t`) type with with millisecond
590 (ms) time duration precision:
592 xsd__duration = #import "custom/duration.h"
594 The `xsd__duration` type is a 64 bit signed integer that can represent
595 106,751,991,167 days forwards (positive) and backwards (negative) in time in
596 increments of 1 ms (1/1000 of a second).
598 Rescaling of the duration value by may be needed when adding the duration value
599 to a `time_t` value, because `time_t` may or may not have a seconds resolution,
600 depending on the platform and possible changes to `time_t`.
602 Rescaling is done automatically when you add a C++11 `std::chrono::nanoseconds`
603 value to a `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point` value. To use
604 `std::chrono::nanoseconds` as <i>`xsd:duration`</i>:
606 xsd__duration = #import "custom/chrono_duration.h"
608 This type can represent 384,307,168 days (2^63 nanoseconds) forwards and
609 backwards in time in increments of 1 ns (1/1,000,000,000 of a second).
611 Certain observations with respect to receiving durations in years and months
612 apply to both of these serializer decoders for <i>`xsd:duration`</i>.
614 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/duration.c`</i> with your
617 @see Section [time duration types](#toxsd8).
619 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
621 Custom Qt serializers for XSD types {#qt}
622 -----------------------------------
624 The gSOAP distribution includes several custom serializers for Qt types. Also
625 Qt container classes are supported, see
626 [the built-in typemap.dat variables $CONTAINER, $POINTER and $SIZE](#typemap5).
628 This feature requires gSOAP 2.8.34 or higher and Qt 4.8 or higher.
630 Each Qt custom serializer has an interface header file for soapcpp2 and a C++
631 implementation file to be compiled with your project.
633 Other Qt primitive types that are Qt `typedef`s of C/C++ types do not require a
636 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
638 ### xsd:string {#qt-1}
640 To use Qt strings instead of C++ strings, add the following definition to
641 <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
643 xsd__string = #import "custom/qstring.h"
645 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qstring.cpp`</i> with your
648 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
650 ### xsd:base64Binary {#qt-2}
652 To use Qt byte arrays for <i>`xsd:base64Binary`</i> instead of the
653 `xsd__base64Binary` class, add the following definition to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
655 xsd__base64Binary = #import "custom/qbytearray_base64.h"
657 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qbytearray_base64.cpp`</i> with
660 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
662 ### xsd:hexBinary {#qt-3}
664 To use Qt byte arrays for <i>`xsd:hexBinary`</i> instead of the `xsd__base64Binary`
665 class, add the following definition to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
667 xsd__hexBinary = #import "custom/qbytearray_hex.h"
669 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qbytearray_hex.cpp`</i> with
672 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
674 ### xsd:dateTime {#qt-4}
676 To use Qt QDateTime for <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i>, add the following definition to
677 <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
679 xsd__dateTime = #import "custom/datetime.h"
681 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qdatetime.cpp`</i> with
684 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
688 To use Qt QDate for <i>`xsd:date`</i>, add the following definition to
689 <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
691 xsd__date = #import "custom/qdate.h"
693 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qdate.cpp`</i> with your
696 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
700 To use Qt QDate for <i>`xsd:time`</i>, add the following definition to
701 <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
703 xsd__time = #import "custom/qtime.h"
705 After running wsdl2h and soapcpp2, compile <i>`gsoap/custom/qtime.cpp`</i> with your
708 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
710 Class/struct member additions {#typemap3}
711 -----------------------------
713 All generated classes and structs can be augmented with additional
714 members such as methods, constructors and destructors, and private members:
716 prefix__type = $ member-declaration
718 For example, we can add method declarations and private members to a class, say
719 `ns__record` as follows:
721 ns__record = $ ns__record(const ns__record &); // copy constructor
722 ns__record = $ void print(); // a print method
723 ns__record = $ private: int status; // a private member
725 Method declarations cannot include any code, because soapcpp2's input permits
726 only type declarations, not code.
728 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
730 Replacing XSD types by equivalent alternatives {#typemap4}
731 ----------------------------------------------
733 Type replacements can be given to replace one type entirely with another given
736 prefix__type1 == prefix__type2
738 This replaces all `prefix__type1` by `prefix__type2` in the wsdl2h output.
740 @warning Do not agressively replace types, because this can cause XML schema
741 validation to fail when a value-type mismatch is encountered in the XML input.
742 Therefore, only replace similar types with other similar types that are wider
743 (e.g. `short` by `int` and `float` by `double`).
745 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
747 The built-in typemap.dat variables $CONTAINER, $POINTER and $SIZE {#typemap5}
748 -----------------------------------------------------------------
750 The <i>`typemap.dat`</i> <b>`$CONTAINER`</b> variable defines the container type to use in
751 the wsdl2h-generated declarations for C++, which is `std::vector` by default.
752 For example, to use `std::list` as the container in the wsdl2h-generated
753 declarations we add the following line to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
755 $CONTAINER = std::list
757 Also a Qt container can be used instead of the default `std::vector`, for
765 To remove containers, use <b>`wsdl2h -s`</b>. This also removes `std::string`,
766 but you can re-introduce `std::string` with
767 <b>`xsd__string = | std::string`</b> in <i>`typemap.dat`</i>.
769 The <i>`typemap.dat`</i> <b>`$POINTER`</b> variable defines the smart pointer to use in the
770 wsdl2h-generated declarations for C++, which replaces the use of `*` pointers.
773 $POINTER = std::shared_ptr
775 Not all pointers in the generated output are replaced by smart pointers by
776 wsdl2h, such as pointers as union members and pointers as struct/class members
777 that point to arrays of values.
779 @note The standard smart pointer `std::shared_ptr` is generally safe to use.
780 Other smart pointers such as `std::unique_ptr` and `std::auto_ptr` may cause
781 compile-time errors when classes have smart pointer members but no copy
782 constructor (a default copy constructor). A copy constructor is required for
783 non-shared smart pointer copying or swapping.
785 Alternatives to `std::shared_ptr` of the form `NAMESPACE::shared_ptr` can be
786 assigned to <b>`$POINTER`</b> when the namespace `NAMESPACE` also implements
787 `NAMESPACE::make_shared` and when the shared pointer class provides `reset()`
788 and`get()` methods and the dereference operator. For example Boost
792 #include <boost/shared_ptr.hpp>
794 $POINTER = boost::shared_ptr
796 The user-defined content between <b>`[`</b> and <b>`]`</b> ensures that we include the Boost
797 header files that are needed to support `boost::shared_ptr` and
798 `boost::make_shared`.
800 The variable <b>`$SIZE`</b> defines the type of array sizes, which is `int` by
801 default. For example, to change array size types to `size_t`:
805 Permissible types are `int` and `size_t`. This variable does not affect the
806 size of dynamic arrays, `xsd__hexBinary` and `xsd__base64Binary` types, which
809 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
811 User-defined content {#typemap6}
814 Any other content to be generated by wsdl2h can be included in <i>`typemap.dat`</i> by
815 enclosing it within brackets <b>`[`</b> and <b>`]`</b> anywhere in the <i>`typemap.dat`</i> file.
816 Each of the two brackets must appear at the start of a new line.
818 For example, we can add an `#import "wsa5.h"` to the wsdl2h-generated output as
822 #import "import/wsa5.h"
825 which emits the `#import "import/wsa5.h"` literally at the start of the
826 wsdl2h-generated header file.
828 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
830 Mapping C/C++ to XML schema {#toxsd}
831 ===========================
833 The soapcpp2 command generates the data binding implementation code from a data
834 binding interface <i>`file.h`</i>:
836 soapcpp2 [options] file.h
838 where <i>`file.h`</i> is a interface header file that declares the XML data
839 binding interface. The <i>`file.h`</i> is typically generated by wsdl2h, but
840 you can also declare one yourself. If so, add `//gsoap`
841 [directives](#directives) and declare in this file all our C/C++ types you want
844 You can also declare functions that will be converted to Web service operations
845 by soapcpp2. Global function declarations define service operations, which are
849 int prefix__func(arg1, arg2, ..., argn, result);
852 where `arg1`, `arg2`, ..., `argn` are formal argument declarations of the input
853 and `result` is a formal argument for the output, which must be a pointer or
854 reference to the result object to be populated. More information on declaring
855 and implementing service operation functions can be found in the
856 [gSOAP user guide.](../../guide/html/index.html)
858 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
860 Overview of serializable C/C++ types {#toxsd1}
861 ------------------------------------
863 The following C/C++ types are supported by soapcpp2 and mapped to XSD types
864 and constructs. See the subsections below for more details or follow the links.
866 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
868 ### List of Boolean types
871 ----------------------------- | -----
873 `enum xsd__boolean` | C alternative to C++ `bool` with `false_` and `true_`
875 @see Section [C++ bool and C alternative](#toxsd3).
877 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
879 ### List of enumeration and bitmask types
881 Enumeration Type | Notes
882 ----------------------------- | -----
884 `enum class` | C++11 scoped enumeration, requires `soapcpp2 -c++11`
885 `enum*` | a bitmask that enumerates values 1, 2, 4, 8, ...
886 `enum* class` | C++11 scoped enumeration bitmask, requires `soapcpp2 -c++11`
888 @see Section [enumerations and bitmasks](#toxsd4).
890 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
892 ### List of numerical types
894 Numerical Type | Notes
895 ----------------------------- | -----
897 `short` | 16 bit integer
898 `int` | 32 bit integer
899 `long` | 32 bit integer
900 `LONG64` | 64 bit integer
901 `xsd__integer` | 128 bit integer, use `#import "custom/int128.h"`
902 `long long` | same as `LONG64`
903 `unsigned char` | unsigned byte
904 `unsigned short` | unsigned 16 bit integer
905 `unsigned int` | unsigned 32 bit integer
906 `unsigned long` | unsigned 32 bit integer
907 `ULONG64` | unsigned 64 bit integer
908 `unsigned long long` | same as `ULONG64`
909 `int8_t` | same as `char`
910 `int16_t` | same as `short`
911 `int32_t` | same as `int`
912 `int64_t` | same as `LONG64`
913 `uint8_t` | same as `unsigned char`
914 `uint16_t` | same as `unsigned short`
915 `uint32_t` | same as `unsigned int`
916 `uint64_t` | same as `ULONG64`
917 `size_t` | transient type (not serializable)
918 `float` | 32 bit float
919 `double` | 64 bit float
920 `long double` | extended precision float, use `#import "custom/long_double.h"`
921 `xsd__decimal` | `quadmath.h` library 128 bit quadruple precision float, use `#import "custom/float128.h"`
922 `typedef` | declares a type name, with optional value range and string length bounds
924 @see Section [numerical types](#toxsd5).
926 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
928 ### List of string types
931 ----------------------------- | -----
932 `char*` | string (may contain UTF-8 with flag `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING`)
933 `wchar_t*` | wide string
934 `std::string` | C++ string (may contain UTF-8 with flag `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING`)
935 `std::wstring` | C++ wide string
936 `char[N]` | fixed-size string, requires `soapcpp2 -b`
937 `_QName` | normalized QName content
938 `_XML` | literal XML string content with wide characters in UTF-8
939 `typedef` | declares a new string type name, may restrict string length
941 @see Section [string types](#toxsd6).
943 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
945 ### List of date and time types
947 Date and Time Type | Notes
948 --------------------------------------- | -----
949 `time_t` | date and time point since epoch
950 `struct tm` | date and time point, use `#import "custom/struct_tm.h"`
951 `struct tm` | date point, use `#import "custom/struct_tm_date.h"`
952 `struct timeval` | date and time point, use `#import "custom/struct_timeval.h"`
953 `unsigned long long` | time point in microseconds, use `#import "custom/long_time.h"`
954 `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point` | date and time point, use `#import "custom/chrono_time_point.h"`
956 @see Section [date and time types](#toxsd7).
958 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
960 ### List of time duration types
962 Time Duration Type | Notes
963 ----------------------------- | -----
964 `long long` | duration in milliseconds, use `#import "custom/duration.h"`
965 `std::chrono::nanoseconds` | duration in nanoseconds, use `#import "custom/chrono_duration.h"`
967 @see Section [time duration types](#toxsd8).
969 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
971 ### List of classes, structs, unions, pointers, containers, and arrays
973 Classes, Structs, and Members | Notes
974 ----------------------------- | -----
975 `class` | C++ class with single inheritance only
976 `struct` | C struct or C++ struct without inheritance
977 `std::shared_ptr<T>` | C++11 smart shared pointer
978 `std::unique_ptr<T>` | C++11 smart pointer
979 `std::auto_ptr<T>` | C++ smart pointer
980 `std::deque<T>` | use `#import "import/stldeque.h"`
981 `std::list<T>` | use `#import "import/stllist.h"`
982 `std::vector<T>` | use `#import "import/stlvector.h"`
983 `std::set<T>` | use `#import "import/stlset.h"`
984 `template<T> class` | a container with `begin()`, `end()`, `size()`, `clear()`, and `insert()` methods
985 `T*` | pointer to data of type `T`
986 `T*` | as a class or struct member: points to data of type `T` or array of `T` with member `__size`
987 `T[N]` | as a class or struct member: fixed-size array of type `T`
988 `union` | as a class or struct member: requires a variant selector member `__union`
989 `void*` | as a class or struct member: requires a `__type` member to indicate the type of object pointed to
991 @see Section [classes and structs](#toxsd9).
993 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
995 ### List of special classes and structs
997 Special Classes and Structs | Notes
998 ----------------------------- | -----
999 Special Array class/struct | single and multidimensional SOAP Arrays
1000 Special Wrapper class/struct | complexTypes with simpleContent, wraps `__item` member
1001 `xsd__hexBinary` | binary content
1002 `xsd__base64Binary` | binary content and optional DIME/MIME/MTOM attachments
1003 `xsd__anyType` | DOM elements, use `#import "dom.h"`
1004 `@xsd__anyAttribute` | DOM attributes, use `#import "dom.h"`
1006 @see Section [special classes and structs](#toxsd10).
1008 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1010 Colon notation versus name prefixing with XML tag name translation {#toxsd2}
1011 ------------------------------------------------------------------
1013 To bind C/C++ type names to XSD types, a simple form of name prefixing is used
1014 by the gSOAP tools by prepending the XML namespace prefix to the C/C++ type
1015 name with a pair of undescrores. This also ensures that name clashes cannot
1016 occur when multiple WSDL and XSD files are converted to C/C++. Also, C++
1017 namespaces are not sufficiently rich to capture XML schema namespaces
1018 accurately, for example when class members are associated with schema elements
1019 defined in another XML namespace and thus the XML namespace scope of the
1020 member's name is relevant, not just its type.
1022 However, from a C/C++ centric point of view this can be cumbersome. Therefore,
1023 colon notation is an alternative to physically augmenting C/C++ names with
1026 For example, the following class uses colon notation to bind the `record` class
1027 to the <i>`urn:types`</i> schema:
1030 //gsoap ns schema namespace: urn:types
1031 class ns:record // binding 'ns:' to a type name
1035 ns:record *spouse; // using 'ns:' with the type name
1036 ns:record(); // using 'ns:' here too
1037 ~ns:record(); // and here
1041 The colon notation is stripped away by soapcpp2 when generating the data
1042 binding implementation code for our project. So the final code just uses
1043 `record` to identify this class and its constructor/destructor.
1045 When using colon notation make sure to be consistent and not use colon notation
1046 mixed with prefixed forms. The qualified name `ns:record` differs from `ns__record`,
1047 because `ns:record` is compiled to an unqualified `record` name in the source
1048 code output by the soapcpp2 tool.
1050 Colon notation also facilitates overruling the elementFormDefault and
1051 attributeFormDefault declaration that is applied to local elements and
1052 attributes, when declared as members of classes, structs, and unions. For more
1053 details, see [qualified and unqualified members](#toxsd9-6).
1055 A C/C++ identifier name (a type name, member name, function name, or parameter
1056 name) is translated to an XML tag name by the following rules:
1058 - Two leading underscores indicates that the identifier name has no XML tag
1059 name, i.e. this name is not visible in XML and is not translated.
1061 - A leading underscore is removed, but the underscore indicates that: **a**) a
1062 struct/class member name or parameter name has a wildcard XML tag name (i.e.
1063 matches any XML tag), or **b**) a type name that has a
1064 [document root element definition](#toxsd9-7).
1066 - Trailing underscores are removed (i.e. trailing underscores can be used to
1067 avoid name clashes with keywords).
1069 - Underscores within names are translated to hyphens (hyphens are more common
1072 - `_USCORE` is translated to an underscore in the translated XML tag name.
1074 - `_DOT` is translated to a dot (<i>`.`</i>) in the translated XML tag name.
1076 - `_xHHHH` is translated to the Unicode character with code point HHHH (hex).
1078 - C++11 Unicode identifier name characters in UTF-8 are translated as-is.
1080 For example, the C/C++ namespace qualified identifier name `s_a__my_way` is
1081 translated to the XML tag name <i>`s-a:my-way`</i> by translating the prefix `s_a`
1082 and the local name `my_way`.
1084 Struct/class member and parameter name translation can be overruled by using
1085 [backtick XML tags](#toxsd9-5-1) (with gSOAP 2.8.30 and greater).
1087 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1089 C++ bool and C alternative {#toxsd3}
1090 --------------------------
1092 The C++ `bool` type is bound to built-in XSD type <i>`xsd:boolean`</i>.
1094 The C alternative is to define an enumeration:
1097 enum xsd__boolean { false_, true_ };
1100 or by defining an enumeration in C with pseudo-scoped enumeration constants:
1103 enum xsd__boolean { xsd__boolean__false, xsd__boolean__true };
1106 The XML value space of these types is <i>`false`</i> and <i>`true`</i>, but also accepted
1107 are <i>`0`</i> and <i>`1`</i> values for <i>`false`</i> and <i>`true`</i>, respectively.
1109 To prevent name clashes, `false_` and `true_` have a trailing underscore in
1110 their `enum` symbols. Trailing underscores are removed from the XML value space.
1112 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1114 Enumerations and bitmasks {#toxsd4}
1115 -------------------------
1117 Enumerations are mapped to XSD simpleType enumeration restrictions of
1118 <i>`xsd:string`</i>, <i>`xsd:QName`</i>, and <i>`xsd:long`</i>.
1120 Consider for example:
1123 enum ns__Color { RED, WHITE, BLUE };
1126 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1131 <simpleType name="Color">
1132 <restriction base="xsd:string">
1133 <enumeration value="RED"/>
1134 <enumeration value="WHITE"/>
1135 <enumeration value="BLUE"/>
1141 Enumeration name constants can be pseudo-scoped to prevent name clashes,
1142 because enumeration name constants have a global scope in C and C++:
1145 enum ns__Color { ns__Color__RED, ns__Color__WHITE, ns__Color__BLUE };
1148 You can also use C++11 scoped enumerations to prevent name clashes:
1151 enum class ns__Color : int { RED, WHITE, BLUE };
1154 Here, the enumeration class base type `: int` is optional. In place of `int`
1155 in the example above, we can also use `int8_t`, `int16_t`, `int32_t`, or
1158 The XML value space of the enumertions defined above is <i>`RED`</i>, <i>`WHITE`</i>, and
1161 Prefix-qualified enumeration name constants are mapped to simpleType
1162 restrictions of <i>`xsd:QName`</i>, for example:
1165 enum ns__types { xsd__int, xsd__float };
1168 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:QName`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1173 <simpleType name="types">
1174 <restriction base="xsd:QName">
1175 <enumeration value="xsd:int"/>
1176 <enumeration value="xsd:float"/>
1182 Enumeration name constants can be pseudo-numeric as follows:
1185 enum ns__Primes { _3 = 3, _5 = 5, _7 = 7, _11 = 11 };
1188 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:long`</i>:
1192 <simpleType name="Color">
1193 <restriction base="xsd:long">
1194 <enumeration value="3"/>
1195 <enumeration value="5"/>
1196 <enumeration value="7"/>
1197 <enumeration value="11"/>
1203 The XML value space of this type is <i>`3`</i>, <i>`5`</i>, <i>`7`</i>, and <i>`11`</i>.
1205 Besides (pseudo-) scoped enumerations, another way to prevent name clashes
1206 accross enumerations is to start an enumeration name constant with one
1207 underscore or followed it by any number of underscores, which makes it
1208 unique. The leading and trailing underscores are removed from the XML value
1212 enum ns__ABC { A, B, C };
1213 enum ns__BA { B, A }; // BAD: B = 1 but B is already defined as 2
1214 enum ns__BA_ { B_, A_ }; // OK
1217 The gSOAP soapcpp2 tool permits reusing enumeration name constants across
1218 (non-scoped) enumerations as long as these values are assigned the same
1219 constant. Therefore, the following is permitted:
1222 enum ns__Primes { _3 = 3, _5 = 5, _7 = 7, _11 = 11 };
1223 enum ns__Throws { _1 = 1, _2 = 2, _3 = 3, _4 = 4, _5 = 5, _6 = 6 };
1226 A bitmask type is an `enum*` "product enumeration" with a geometric,
1227 power-of-two sequence of values assigned to the enumeration constants:
1230 enum* ns__Options { SSL3, TLS10, TLS11, TLS12, TLS13 };
1233 where the product enum assigns 1 to `SSL3`, 2 to `TLS10`, 4 to `TLS11`, 8
1234 to `TLS12`, and 16 to `TLS13`, which allows these enumeration constants to be
1235 used in composing bitmasks with `|` (bitwise or) `&` (bitwise and), and `~`
1239 enum ns__Options options = (enum ns__Options)(SSL3 | TLS10 | TLS11 | TLS12 | TLS13);
1240 if (options & SSL3) // if SSL3 is an option, warn and remove from options
1247 The bitmask type maps to a simpleType list restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in the
1248 soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
1252 <simpleType name="Options">
1254 <restriction base="xsd:string">
1255 <enumeration value="SSL3"/>
1256 <enumeration value="TLS10"/>
1257 <enumeration value="TLS11"/>
1258 <enumeration value="TLS12"/>
1259 <enumeration value="TLS13"/>
1266 The XML value space of this type consists of all 16 possible subsets of the
1267 four values, represented by an XML string with space-separated values. For
1268 example, the bitmask `TLS10 | TLS11 | TLS12` equals 14 and is represented by
1269 the XML text <i>`TLS10 TLS11 TLS12`</i>.
1271 You can also use C++11 scoped enumerations with bitmasks using `enum*` product
1275 enum* class ns__Options { SSL3, TLS10, TLS11, TLS12, TLS13 };
1278 The base type of a scoped enumeration bitmask, when explicitly given, is
1279 ignored. The base type is either `int` or `int64_t`, depending on the number
1280 of constants enumerated in the bitmask.
1282 To convert `enum` name constants and bitmasks to a string, we use the
1283 auto-generated function for enum `T`:
1286 const char *soap_T2s(struct soap*, enum T val)
1289 The string returned is stored in an internal buffer of the current `soap`
1290 context, so you should copy it to keep it from being overwritten. For example,
1291 use `char *soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char*)`.
1293 To convert a string to an `enum` constant or bitmask, we use the auto-generated
1297 int soap_s2T(struct soap*, const char *str, enum T *val)
1300 This function takes the name (or names, space-separated for bitmasks) of
1301 the enumeration constant in a string `str`. Names should be given without the
1302 pseudo-scope prefix and without trailing underscores. The function sets `val`
1303 to the corresponding integer enum constant or to a bitmask. The function
1304 returns `SOAP_OK` (zero) on success or an error if the string is not a valid
1307 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1309 Numerical types {#toxsd5}
1312 Integer and floating point types are mapped to the equivalent built-in XSD
1313 types with the same sign and bit width.
1315 The `size_t` type is transient (not serializable) because its width is platform
1316 dependent. We recommend to use `uint64_t` instead.
1318 The XML value space of integer types are their decimal representations without
1321 The XML value space of floating point types are their decimal representations.
1322 The decimal representations are formatted with the printf format string `"%.9G"`
1323 for floats and the printf format string `"%.17lG"` for double. To change the
1324 format strings, we can assign new strings to the following `soap` context
1328 soap.float_format = "%g";
1329 soap.double_format = "%lg";
1330 soap.long_double_format = "%Lg";
1333 Decimal representations may result in a loss of precision of the least
1334 significant decimal. Therefore, the format strings that are used by default
1335 are sufficiently precise to avoid loss, but this may result in long decimal
1336 fractions in the XML value space.
1338 The `long double` extended floating point type requires a custom serializer:
1341 #import "custom/long_double.h"
1342 ... // use long double
1345 You can now use `long double`, which has a serializer that serializes this type
1346 as <i>`xsd:decimal`</i>. Compile and link your code with the file
1347 <i>`gsoap/custom/long_double.c`</i>.
1349 The value space of floating point values includes the special values
1350 <i>`INF`</i>, <i>`-INF`</i>, and <i>`NaN`</i>. You can check a value for plus
1351 or minus infinity and not-a-number as follows:
1354 soap_isinf(x) && x > 0 // is x INF?
1355 soap_isinf(x) && x < 0 // is x -INF?
1356 soap_isnan(x) // is x NaN?
1359 To assign these values, use:
1362 // x is float // x is double, long double, or __float128
1363 x = FLT_PINFY; x = DBL_PINFTY;
1364 x = FLT_NINFY; x = DBL_NINFTY;
1365 x = FLT_NAN; x = DBL_NAN;
1368 If your system supports `__float128` then you can also use this 128 bit
1369 floating point type with a custom serializer:
1372 #import "custom/float128.h"
1373 ... // use xsd__decimal
1376 Then use the `xsd__decimal` alias of `__float128`, which has a serializer. Do
1377 not use `__float128` directly, which is transient (not serializable).
1379 To check for <i>`INF`</i>, <i>`-INF`</i>, and <i>`NaN`</i> of a `__float128`
1383 isinfq(x) && x > 0 // is x INF?
1384 isinfq(x) && x < 0 // is x -INF?
1385 isnanq(x) // is x NaN?
1388 The range of a `typedef`-defined numerical type can be restricted using the range
1389 `:` operator with inclusive lower and upper bounds. For example:
1392 typedef int ns__narrow -10 : 10;
1395 This maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:int`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1400 <simpleType name="narrow">
1401 <restriction base="xsd:int">
1402 <minInclusive value="-10"/>
1403 <maxInclusive value="10"/>
1409 The lower and upper bound of a range are optional. When omitted, values are
1410 not bound from below or from above, respectively.
1412 The range of a floating point `typedef`-defined type can be restricted within
1413 floating point constant bounds.
1415 Also with a floating point `typedef` a `printf`-format pattern can be given of the
1416 form `"%[width][.precision]f"` to format decimal values using the given width
1417 and precision fields:
1420 typedef float ns__PH "%5.2f" 0.0 : 14.0;
1423 This maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:float`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1428 <simpleType name="PH">
1429 <restriction base="xsd:float">
1430 <totalDigits value="5"/>
1431 <fractionDigits value="2"/>
1432 <minInclusive value="0"/>
1433 <maxInclusive value="14"/>
1439 For exclusive bounds, we use the `<` operator instead of the `:` range
1443 typedef float ns__epsilon 0.0 < 1.0;
1446 Values `eps` of `ns__epsilon` are restricted between `0.0 < eps < 1.0`.
1448 This maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:float`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1453 <simpleType name="epsilon">
1454 <restriction base="xsd:float">
1455 <minExclusive value="0"/>
1456 <maxExclusive value="1"/>
1462 To make just one of the bounds exclusive, while keeping the other bound
1463 inclusive, we add a `<` on the left or on the right side of the range ':'
1464 operator. For example:
1467 typedef float ns__pos 0.0 < : ; // 0.0 < pos
1468 typedef float ns__neg : < 0.0 ; // neg < 0.0
1471 It is valid to make both left and right side exclusive with `< : <` which is in
1472 fact identical to the exlusive range `<` operator:
1475 typedef float ns__epsilon 0.0 < : < 1.0; // 0.0 < eps < 1.0
1478 It helps to think of the `:` as a placeholder of the value between the two
1479 bounds, which is easier to memorize than the shorthand forms of bounds from
1480 which the `:` is removed:
1482 | bounds | validation check | shorthand |
1483 | ------------ | ---------------- | ----------- |
1484 | `1 : ` | 1 <= x | `1 ` |
1485 | `1 : 10 ` | 1 <= x <= 10 | |
1486 | ` : 10 ` | x <= 10 | |
1487 | `1 < : < 10` | 1 < x < 10 | `1 < 10 ` |
1488 | `1 : < 10` | 1 <= x < 10 | |
1489 | ` : < 10` | x < 10 | ` < 10 ` |
1490 | `1 < : ` | 1 < x | `1 < ` |
1491 | `1 < : 10 ` | 1 < x <= 10 | |
1493 Besides `float`, also `double` and `long double` values can be restricted. For
1494 example, consider a nonzero probability extended floating point precision type:
1497 #import "custom/long_double.h"
1498 typedef long double ns__probability "%16Lg" 0.0 < : 1.0;
1501 Value range restrictions are validated by the parser for all inbound XML data.
1502 A type fault `SOAP_TYPE` will be thrown by the deserializer if the value is out
1505 Finally, if your system supports `__int128_t` then you can also use this 128
1506 bit integer type with a custom serializer:
1509 #import "custom/int128.h"
1510 ... // use xsd__integer
1513 Use the `xsd__integer` alias of `__int128_t`, which has a serializer. Do not
1514 use `__int128_t` directly, which is transient (not serializable).
1516 To convert numeric values to a string, we use the auto-generated function for
1520 const char *soap_T2s(struct soap*, T val)
1523 For numeric types `T`, the string returned is stored in an internal buffer of
1524 the current `soap` context, so you should copy it to keep it from being
1525 overwritten. For example, use `char *soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char*)`.
1527 To convert a string to a numeric value, we use the auto-generated function
1530 int soap_s2T(struct soap*, const char *str, T *val)
1533 where `T` is for example `int`, `LONG64`, `float`, `decimal` (the custom
1534 serializer name of `long double`) or `xsd__integer` (the custom serializer name
1535 of `__int128_t`). The function `soap_s2T` returns `SOAP_OK` on success or an
1536 error when the value is not numeric. For floating point types, `"INF"`, `"-INF"`
1537 and `"NaN"` are valid strings to convert to numbers.
1539 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1541 String types {#toxsd6}
1544 String types are mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:string`</i> and <i>`xsd:QName`</i> XSD types.
1546 The wide strings `wchar_t*` and `std::wstring` may contain Unicode that is
1547 preserved in the XML value space.
1549 Strings `char*` and `std::string` can only contain extended Latin, but we can
1550 store UTF-8 content that is preserved in the XML value space when the `soap`
1551 context is initialized with the flag `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING`.
1553 @warning Beware that many XML 1.0 parsers reject all control characters (those
1554 between `#x1` and `#x1F`) except for `#x9`, `#xA`, and `#xD`. With the
1555 newer XML 1.1 version parsers (including gSOAP) you should be fine.
1557 The length of a string of a `typedef`-defined string type can be restricted:
1560 typedef std::string ns__password 6 : 16;
1563 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1568 <simpleType name="password">
1569 <restriction base="xsd:string">
1570 <minLength value="6"/>
1571 <maxLength value="16"/>
1577 String length restrictions are validated by the parser for inbound XML data.
1578 A value length fault `SOAP_LENGTH` will be thrown by the deserializer if the
1579 string is too long or too short.
1581 In addition, an XSD regex pattern restriction can be associated with a string
1585 typedef std::string ns__password "([a-zA-Z]|[0-9]|-)+" 6 : 16;
1588 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1593 <simpleType name="password">
1594 <restriction base="xsd:string">
1595 <pattern value="([a-zA-Z0-9]|-)+"/>
1596 <minLength value="6"/>
1597 <maxLength value="16"/>
1603 Pattern restrictions are validated by the parser for inbound XML data only if
1604 the `soap::fsvalidate` and `soap::fwvalidate` callbacks are defined.
1606 Exclusive length bounds can be used with strings:
1609 typedef std::string ns__string255 : < 256; // same as 0 : 255
1612 Fixed-size strings (`char[N]`) are rare occurrences in the wild, but apparently
1613 still used in some projects to store strings. To facilitate fixed-size string
1614 serialization, use <b>`soapcpp2 -b`</b> option <b>`-b`</b>. For example:
1617 typedef char ns__buffer[10]; // requires soapcpp2 option -b
1620 which maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in the soapcpp2-generated
1625 <simpleType name="buffer">
1626 <restriction base="xsd:string">
1627 <maxLength value="9"/>
1633 Fixed-size strings must contain NUL-terminated text and should not contain raw
1634 binary data. Also, the length limitation is more restrictive for UTF-8 content
1635 (enabled with the `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING`) that requires multibyte character
1636 encodings. As a consequence, UTF-8 content may be truncated to fit.
1638 Raw binary data can be stored in a `xsd__base64Binary` or `xsd__hexBinary`
1639 structure, or transmitted as a MIME attachment.
1641 The built-in `_QName` type is a regular C string type (`char*`) that maps to
1642 <i>`xsd:QName`</i> but has the added advantage that it holds normalized qualified names.
1643 There are actually two forms of normalized QName content, to ensure any QName
1644 is represented accurately:
1651 The first form of string is used when the prefix (and the binding URI) is
1652 defined in the namespace table and is bound to a URI (see the .nsmap file).
1653 The second form is used when the URI is not defined in the namespace table and
1654 therefore no prefix is available to bind and normalize the URI to.
1656 A `_QName` string may contain a sequence of space-separated QName values, not
1657 just one, and all QName values are normalized to the format shown above.
1659 To define a `std::string` base type for <i>`xsd:QName`</i>, we use a `typedef`:
1662 typedef std::string xsd__QName;
1665 The `xsd__QName` string content is normalized, just as with the `_QName`
1668 To serialize strings that contain literal XML content to be reproduced in the
1669 XML value space, use the built-in `_XML` string type, which is a regular C
1670 string type (`char*`) that maps to plain XML CDATA.
1672 To define a `std::string` base type for literal XML content, use a `typedef`:
1675 typedef std::string XML;
1678 Strings can hold any of the values of the XSD built-in primitive types. We can
1679 use a string `typedef` to declare the use of the string type as a XSD built-in
1683 typedef std::string xsd__token;
1686 You must ensure that the string values we populate in this type conform to the
1687 XML standard, which in case of <i>`xsd:token`</i> is the lexical and value spaces of
1688 <i>`xsd:token`</i> are the sets of all strings after whitespace replacement of any
1689 occurrence of `#x9`, `#xA` , and `#xD` by `#x20` and collapsing.
1691 As of version 2.8.49, the gSOAP parser will automatically collapse or replace
1692 the white space content when receiving data for XSD types that require white
1693 space collapsed or replaced. This normalization is applied to strings
1694 directly. The decision to collapse or replace is based on the `typedef` name
1695 corresponding to the built-in string-based XSD type.
1697 To copy `char*` or `wchar_t*` strings with a context that manages the allocated
1698 memory, use functions
1701 char *soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char*)
1702 wchar_t *soap_wstrdup(struct soap*, const wchar_t*)
1705 To convert a wide string to a UTF-8 encoded string, use function
1708 const char* SOAP_FMAC2 soap_wchar2s(struct soap*, const wchar_t *s)
1711 The function allocates and returns a string, with its memory being managed by
1714 To convert a UTF-8 encoded string to a wide string, use function
1717 int soap_s2wchar(struct soap*, const char *from, wchar_t **to, long minlen, long maxlen)
1720 where `to` is set to point to an allocated `wchar_t*` string. Pass `-1` for
1721 `minlen` and `maxlen` to ignore length constraints on the target string. The
1722 function returns `SOAP_OK` or an error when the length constraints are not met.
1724 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1726 Date and time types {#toxsd7}
1729 The C/C++ `time_t` type is mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> XSD type that
1730 represents a date and time within a time zone (typically UTC).
1732 The XML value space contains ISO 8601 Gregorian time instances of the form
1733 <i>`[-]CCYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sss[Z|(+|-)hh:mm]`</i>, where <i>`Z`</i> is the UTC time zone
1734 or a time zone offset <i>`(+|-)hh:mm]`</i> from UTC is used.
1736 A `time_t` value is considered and represented in UTC by the serializer.
1738 Because the `time_t` value range is restricted to dates after 01/01/1970 and
1739 before 2038 assuming `time_t` is a `long` 32 bit, care must be taken to ensure
1740 the range of <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> values in XML exchanges do not exceed the `time_t`
1743 This restriction does not hold for `struct tm` (<i>`time.h`</i> library), which we can use
1744 to store and exchange a date and time in UTC without date range restrictions.
1745 The serializer uses the `struct tm` members directly for the XML value space of
1746 <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i>:
1751 int tm_sec; // seconds (0 - 60)
1752 int tm_min; // minutes (0 - 59)
1753 int tm_hour; // hours (0 - 23)
1754 int tm_mday; // day of month (1 - 31)
1755 int tm_mon; // month of year (0 - 11)
1756 int tm_year; // year - 1900
1757 int tm_wday; // day of week (Sunday = 0) (NOT USED)
1758 int tm_yday; // day of year (0 - 365) (NOT USED)
1759 int tm_isdst; // is summer time in effect?
1760 char* tm_zone; // abbreviation of timezone (NOT USED)
1764 You will lose the day of the week information. It is always Sunday
1765 (`tm_wday=0`) and the day of the year is not set either. The time zone is UTC.
1767 This `struct tm` type is mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> XSD type and
1768 serialized with the custom serializer <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm.h`</i> that declares a
1769 `xsd__dateTime` type:
1772 #import "custom/struct_tm.h" // import typedef struct tm xsd__dateTime;
1773 ... // use xsd__dateTime
1776 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm.c`</i>.
1778 The `struct timeval` (<i>`sys/time.h`</i> library) type is mapped to the
1779 built-in <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> XSD type and serialized with the custom serializer
1780 <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_timeval.h`</i> that declares a `xsd__dateTime` type:
1783 #import "custom/struct_timeval.h" // import typedef struct timeval xsd__dateTime;
1784 ... // use xsd__dateTime
1787 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_timeval.c`</i>.
1789 The same value range restrictions apply to `struct timeval` as they apply to
1790 `time_t`. The added benefit of `struct timeval` is the addition of a
1791 microsecond-precise clock:
1796 time_t tv_sec; // seconds since Jan. 1, 1970
1797 suseconds_t tv_usec; // and microseconds
1801 A C++11 `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point` type is mapped to the built-in
1802 <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i> XSD type and serialized with the custom serializer
1803 <i>`gsoap/custom/chrono_time_point.h`</i> that declares a `xsd__dateTime` type:
1806 #import "custom/chrono_time_point.h" // import typedef std::chrono::system_clock::time_point xsd__dateTime;
1807 ... // use xsd__dateTime
1810 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/chrono_time_point.cpp`</i>.
1812 The `struct tm` type is mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:date`</i> XSD type and serialized
1813 with the custom serializer <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm_date.h`</i> that declares a
1817 #import "custom/struct_tm_date.h" // import typedef struct tm xsd__date;
1818 ... // use xsd__date
1821 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/struct_tm_date.c`</i>.
1823 The XML value space of <i>`xsd:date`</i> are Gregorian calendar dates of the form
1824 <i>`[-]CCYY-MM-DD[Z|(+|-)hh:mm]`</i> with a time zone.
1826 The serializer ignores the time part and the deserializer only populates the
1827 date part of the struct, setting the time to 00:00:00. There is no unreasonable
1828 limit on the date range because the year field is stored as an integer (`int`).
1830 An `unsigned long long` (`ULONG64` or `uint64_t`) type that contains a 24 hour
1831 time in microseconds UTC is mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:time`</i> XSD type and
1832 serialized with the custom serializer <i>`gsoap/custom/long_time.h`</i> that declares a
1836 #import "custom/long_time.h" // import typedef unsigned long long xsd__time;
1837 ... // use xsd__time
1840 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/long_time.c`</i>.
1842 This type represents `00:00:00.000000` to `23:59:59.999999`, from 0 to an
1843 upper bound of 86,399,999,999. A microsecond resolution means that a 1 second
1844 increment requires an increment of 1,000,000 in the integer value.
1846 The XML value space of <i>`xsd:time`</i> are points in time recurring each day of the
1847 form <i>`hh:mm:ss.sss[Z|(+|-)hh:mm]`</i>, where <i>`Z`</i> is the UTC time zone or a time
1848 zone offset from UTC is used. The `xsd__time` value is always considered and
1849 represented in UTC by the serializer.
1851 To convert date and/or time values to a string, we use the auto-generated
1852 function for type `T`:
1855 const char *soap_T2s(struct soap*, T val)
1858 For date and time types `T`, the string returned is stored in an internal
1859 buffer of the current `soap` context, so you should copy it to keep it from being
1860 overwritten. For example, use `char *soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char*)`.
1862 To convert a string to a date/time value, we use the auto-generated function
1865 int soap_s2T(struct soap*, const char *str, T *val)
1868 where `T` is for example `dateTime` (for `time_t`), `xsd__dateTime` (for
1869 `struct tm`, `struct timeval`, or `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point`).
1870 The function `soap_s2T` returns `SOAP_OK` on success or an error when the value
1873 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1875 Time duration types {#toxsd8}
1878 The XML value space of <i>`xsd:duration`</i> are values of the form <i>`PnYnMnDTnHnMnS`</i>
1879 where the capital letters are delimiters. Delimiters may be omitted when the
1880 corresponding member is not used.
1882 A `long long` (`LONG64` or `int64_t`) type that contains a duration (time
1883 lapse) in milliseconds is mapped to the built-in <i>`xsd:duration`</i> XSD type and
1884 serialized with the custom serializer <i>`gsoap/custom/duration.h`</i> that declares a
1885 `xsd__duration` type:
1888 #import "custom/duration.h" // import typedef long long xsd__duration;
1889 ... // use xsd__duration
1892 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/duration.c`</i>.
1894 The duration type `xsd__duration` can represent 106,751,991,167 days forward
1895 and backward with millisecond precision.
1897 Durations that exceed a month are always output in days, rather than months to
1898 avoid days-per-month conversion inacurracies.
1900 Durations that are received in years and months instead of total number of days
1901 from a reference point are not well defined, since there is no accepted
1902 reference time point (it may or may not be the current time). The decoder
1903 simple assumes that there are 30 days per month. For example, conversion of
1904 "P4M" gives 120 days. Therefore, the durations "P4M" and "P120D" are assumed
1905 to be identical, which is not necessarily true depending on the reference point
1908 Rescaling of the duration value by may be needed when adding the duration value
1909 to a `time_t` value, because `time_t` may or may not have a seconds resolution,
1910 depending on the platform and possible changes to `time_t`.
1912 Rescaling is done automatically when you add a C++11 `std::chrono::nanoseconds`
1913 value to a `std::chrono::system_clock::time_point` value. To use
1914 `std::chrono::nanoseconds` as <i>`xsd:duration`</i>:
1917 #import "custom/chrono_duration.h" // import typedef std::chrono::duration xsd__duration;
1918 ... // use xsd__duration
1921 Compile and link your code with <i>`gsoap/custom/chrono_duration.cpp`</i>.
1923 This type can represent 384,307,168 days (2^63 nanoseconds) forwards and
1924 backwards in time in increments of 1 ns (1/1000000000 second).
1926 The same observations with respect to receiving durations in years and months
1927 apply to this serializer's decoder.
1929 To convert duration values to a string, we use the auto-generated function
1932 const char *soap_xsd__duration2s(struct soap*, xsd__duration val)
1935 The string returned is stored in an internal buffer, so you should copy it to
1936 keep it from being overwritten, Use `soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char*)`
1937 for example to copy this string.
1939 To convert a string to a duration value, we use the auto-generated function
1942 int soap_s2xsd__dateTime(struct soap*, const char *str, xsd__dateTime *val)
1945 The function returns `SOAP_OK` on success or an error when the value is not a
1948 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
1950 Classes and structs {#toxsd9}
1953 Classes and structs are mapped to XSD complexTypes. The XML value space
1954 consists of XML elements with attributes and subelements, possibly constrained
1955 by XML schema validation rules that enforce element and attribute occurrence
1956 contraints, numerical value range constraints, and string length and pattern
1959 Classes that are declared with the gSOAP tools are limited to single
1960 inheritence only. The soapcpp2 tool does not allow structs to be inherited.
1962 The class and struct name is bound to an XML namespace by means of the prefix
1963 naming convention or by using [colon notation](#toxsd1):
1966 //gsoap ns schema namespace: urn:types
1979 In the example above, we also added a context pointer to the `soap` context that
1980 manages this instance. It is set when the instance is created in the engine's
1981 context, for example when deserialized and populated by the engine.
1983 The class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
1987 <complexType name="record">
1989 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
1990 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
1991 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
1997 The following sections apply to both structs and classes. Structs require the
1998 use of the `struct` keyword with the struct name, otherwise soapcpp2 will throw
1999 a syntax error. As is often done in C, use a `typedef` to declare a `struct`
2000 that can be used without the `struct` keyword.
2002 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2004 ### Serializable versus transient types and data members {#toxsd9-1}
2006 Public data members of a class or struct are serializable when their types are
2007 serializable. Private and protected members are transient and not
2010 Also `const` and `static` members are not serializable, with the exception of
2011 `const char*` and `const wchar_t*`. Types and specific class/struct members
2012 can be made transient with the `extern` qualifier for types and by marking
2013 members with `[` and `]`:
2016 extern class std::ostream; // declare std::ostream transient
2019 [ int num; ] // not serialized: member is marked transient with [ ]
2020 std::ostream out; // not serialized: std:ostream is transient
2021 static const int MAX = 1024; // not serialized: static const member
2023 std::string id; // not serialized: private member
2027 By declaring `std::ostream` transient with `extern` you can use this type
2028 wherever you need it without soapcpp2 complaining that this class and any other
2029 class or type declared as `extern` is not defined. Do not use `extern` with
2030 `typedef`, because this declares a custom serializer, see
2031 [adding custom serializers](#custom).
2033 Marking members transient with `[` and `]` makes them transient (and visually
2034 makes them stand out). This has otherwise no effect on the generated code for
2035 the class or struct to be used in your application code.
2037 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2039 ### Derived types in C++ {#toxsd9-1-1}
2041 Extensible and restricted types in XML schemas are derived types from single
2042 simple and complex base types. XML schema derived types are naturally
2043 represented by C++ derived classes using single inheritance. Besides the
2044 concept of extensions versus restrictions, there are two kinds of derived
2045 types: complexTypes with simpleContent, meaning types with XML CDATA values,
2046 and complexTypes with complexContent, meaning types with sub-elements. Both
2047 are permitted to have one or more XML attributes.
2049 A complexType with simpleContent is defined as a wrapper to contain XML CDATA
2050 values and any number of attributes, see
2051 [wrapper class/struct with simpleContent](#toxsd10-4).
2052 Wrapper class/struct types can form a hierarchy of derived types in C++ using
2053 inheritance. For example:
2058 std::string __item; // string to hold any simpleContent
2060 class ns__data : public xsd__anyType
2062 @ std::string value 1; // extends xsd:anyType with a required attribute
2066 The `ns__data` class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2070 <complexType name="string">
2072 <extension base="xsd:string">
2073 <attribute name="value" type="xsd:string" use="required"/>
2080 The XML value space consists of an element with the string contents an optional
2085 <ns:data value="abc">xyz</ns:data>
2089 By contrast, a complexType with complexContent typically extends a given base
2090 complexType. For example:
2098 class ns__derived : public ns__base
2100 @ std::string value 1; // extends ns:base with an attribute
2101 std::string text 1; // extends ns:base with an element
2105 The `ns__base` and `ns__derived` classes maps to complexTypes in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2109 <complexType name="base">
2111 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2112 <element name="number" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2115 <complexType name="derived">
2117 <extension base="ns:base">
2119 <element name="text" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2123 <attribute name="value" type="xsd:string" use="required"/>
2128 The XML value space of `ns__derived` consists of three requires child elements
2129 and an optional attribute:
2133 <ns:derived value="abc">
2135 <number>123</number>
2141 Derived types can be used for two main purposes in XML schema by extending or
2142 restricting base types. One purpose is to reuse a base type when defining a
2143 derived type, such that common parts do not need to be replicated. The second
2144 purpose is to be able to use a derived type in place of a base type in XML, which
2145 is indicated by an <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute with the qualified name of the
2146 derived type. Consider for example the following class that uses the
2147 previously declared base types `xsd__anyType` and `ns__base`:
2152 xsd__anyType *base1 1; // required element
2153 ns__base *base2 1; // required element
2157 We can assign base type values to the `ns_record` members:
2161 record.base1 = soap_new_xsd__anyType(soap);
2162 record.base2 = soap_new_ns__base(soap);
2163 soap_write_ns__record(soap, &record);
2166 This produces the following XML fragment populated with default values (empty
2167 text for strings and zeros for numbers), where element <i>`base1`</i> has a
2168 simpleContent value and element <i>`base2`</i> has two child elements:
2182 We can also assign derived type values to the `ns_record` members:
2186 record.base1 = soap_new_ns__data(soap);
2187 record.base2 = soap_new_ns__derived(soap);
2188 soap_write_ns__record(soap, &record);
2191 This produces the following XML fragment populated with default values (empty
2192 text for strings and zeros for numbers), where element <i>`base1`</i> has
2193 schema type <i>`ns:data`</i> with simpleContent and an attribute, and
2194 <i>`base2`</i> has schema type <i>`ns:derived`</i> with three child elements
2200 <base1 xsi:type="ns:data" value=""></base1>
2201 <base2 xsi:type="ns:derived" value="">
2210 Deserialization automatically allocates and assigns a `ns__base` class instance to a
2211 `ns__base` pointer when deserializing the <i>`ns:base`</i> schema type and allocates and
2212 assigns a `ns__derived` class instance to a `ns__base` pointer when deserializing the
2213 <i>`ns:derived`</i> type when an element with <i>`xsi:type="ns:derived"`</i> is
2214 parsed. All classes are extended by soapcpp2 by a `soap_type()` method that
2215 returns the unique `SOAP_TYPE_T` value of the class `T`. This makes it easy to
2216 check whether the deserialized data contains a derived type to implement
2217 type-safe code, for example:
2221 soap_read_ns__record(soap, &record);
2222 if (record.base1->soap_type() == SOAP_TYPE_ns__data)
2223 std::cout << "Derived ns:data "
2224 << dynamic_cast<ns__data*>(record.base1)->value
2227 std::cout << "Base xsd:anyType" << std::endl;
2228 if (record.base2->soap_type() == SOAP_TYPE_ns__derived)
2229 std::cout << "Derived ns:derived "
2230 << dynamic_cast<ns__derived*>(record.base2)->value
2233 std::cout << "Base ns:base" << std::endl;
2236 This example should use the `SOAP_XML_STRICT` mode flag to initialize the
2237 `soap` context to ensure that all required values are present in the
2238 deserialized structures.
2240 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2242 ### Derived types in C {#toxsd9-1-2}
2244 While single inheritance works well in C++ to represent derived types as we
2245 discussed in the previous section, this will obviously not work in C. Two
2246 methods to serialize derived types in C are presented here. The first method
2247 uses `void*` to serialize anything. The second method is more accurate and is
2248 relatively new in gSOAP.
2250 To serialize any type is possible with [tagged void pointer members](#toxsd9-12) to
2251 serialize data pointed to by a `void*` member, which can be any serializable
2252 type, such as derived types. For `void*` deserialization to work the XML
2253 parsed must contain an <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute with a schema type. Only
2254 then can the deserializer instantiate the corresponding serializable C/C++
2255 type. Base types serialized do not require an <i>`xsi:type`</i> to indicate
2256 the base schema type, so this approach is not guaranteed to work and requires a
2257 workaround with an anonymous wrapper struct/class that contains both the base
2258 type and a `void*`. For example:
2261 struct ns__base // a base type
2266 struct ns__derived // extends ns__base with two additional members
2273 struct __ns__base // a wrapper, not visible in XML
2275 int __type; // the SOAP_TYPE_T pointed to by __self
2276 void *__self; // points to any type
2277 struct ns__base *__self; // wraps ns__base for the current element tag
2281 struct __ns__base base;
2285 The `__ns__base` wrapper wraps the `ns__base` type to (de)serialize the
2286 <i>`base`</i> element that has no <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute and uses `void*`
2287 to (de)serialize the <i>`base`</i> element that has <i>`xsi:type`</i>
2288 attribute. This works fine at the XML parsing level, but the generated
2289 XML schema components do not accurately represent the derived type, because it
2290 lacks the extension/restriction of the derived type (and the `__ns__base`
2291 wrapper is invisible).
2293 Using `void*` to represent derived types in a base type wrapper is not very
2294 accurate because we can serialize anything, not just derived types of a given
2295 base type. The wrapper may also hold two values: the base type value and a
2296 derived type value. Furthermore, using arrays or containers that hold base and
2297 derived types becomes quite tricky because an array item could hold both the
2298 base and derived type.
2300 As of gSOAP version 2.8.75, `wsdl2h -F` option `-F` generates base type structs
2301 extended with transient pointer members to its derived types. To serialize the
2302 base type itself, all of the pointer members are NULL. If one of the pointer
2303 members points to a derived type the derived type is serialized instead.
2304 Deserialization is automatic, in that the base type is deserialized if the
2305 element has no <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute or the attribute is the base schema
2306 type, and a derived type is deserialized if the element has an
2307 <i>`xsi>type`</i> attribute with the derived schema type.
2309 This method is fully automated for the wsdl2h tool to generate an interface
2310 header file for soapcpp2 with the type derivations in C. To use this method to
2311 generate code from WSDLs and XSDs, use `wsdl2h -F` option `-F`. This also
2312 works in C++ if desired, but C++ inheritance works fine without this method.
2314 Using this method with soapcpp2 alone using a manually-specified interface
2315 header file produces the specified type inheritance in the soapcpp2-generated
2316 WSDL and XML schema files as complexType extensions.
2318 The soapcpp2 tool warns if a derived type has multiple base types. At most one
2319 base type for a derived type may be specified.
2321 This method with transient pointers to derived types makes it easy to use base
2322 and derived types in C:
2325 struct ns__base // a base type
2329 [ struct ns__derived *ns__derived; ] // points to derived type if non-NULL
2331 struct ns__derived // extends ns__base with two additional members
2340 struct ns__base base; // contains base type or derived type value
2344 The `ns__base` struct includes the special member `ns__derived` that points to
2345 a `ns__derived` value. This special member must be:
2347 - a transient member (i.e. non-serializable) by placing the declaration within
2349 - the member name must match the type name (to be more precise, at least the
2350 initial part of the member name must match the type name as in the example
2351 `ns__derived_` works too).
2353 To serialize the `ns__base` value requires the `ns__derived` member to be NULL.
2354 To serialize the `ns__derived` value requires the `ns__derived` member to point
2355 to the `ns__derived` value to serialize and the `ns__base` members are
2358 We can assign the base type value to the `ns_record::base` member:
2361 struct ns__record record;
2362 soap_default_ns__record(soap, &record);
2363 soap_write_ns__record(soap, &record);
2366 This produces the following XML fragment populated with default values (empty
2367 text for strings and zeros for numbers), where element <i>`base`</i> has two
2381 We can also assign the derived type value to the `ns_record::base` member:
2384 struct ns__record record;
2385 soap_default_ns__record(soap, &record);
2386 record.base.ns__derived = soap_new_ns__derived(soap, -1);
2387 soap_write_ns__record(soap, &record);
2390 This produces the following XML fragment populated with default values (empty
2391 text for strings and zeros for numbers), where element <i>`base`</i> has schema
2392 type <i>`ns:derived`</i> with three child elements and an attribute:
2397 <base xsi:type="ns:derived" value="">
2406 Deserialization automatically assigns values to the base members for the
2407 `ns__base` type and populates the `ns__derived` member when a derived type with
2408 <i>`xsi:type="ns:derived"`</i> is parsed. This makes it easy to decompose the
2412 struct ns__record record;
2413 soap_read_ns__record(soap, &record);
2414 if (record.ns__derived)
2415 printf("Derived type with name=%s number=%d text=%s value=%s\n",
2416 record.ns__derived->name,
2417 record.ns__derived->number,
2418 record.ns__derived->text,
2419 record.ns__derived->value);
2421 printf("Base type with name=%s number=%d\n",
2426 This example requires the `SOAP_XML_STRICT` mode flag to initialize the `soap`
2427 context to ensure that all required values are present in the deserialized
2428 structures, otherwise the `char*` strings may be NULL since XML validation
2429 constraints are not enforced on the XML input.
2431 Deeper levels of simulated inheritance are possible, for example:
2434 struct ns__base // a base type
2438 [ struct ns__derived *ns__derived; ] // points to derived type if non-NULL
2440 struct ns__derived // extends ns__base with two additional members
2446 [ struct ns__derived_derived *ns__derived_derived; ] // points to derived_derived type if non-NULL
2448 struct ns__derived_derived // extends ns__derived with an additional member
2458 This requires two pointer traversals from the base type `ns__base` via
2459 `ns__derived` to reach `ns__derived_derived`.
2461 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2463 ### Volatile classes and structs {#toxsd9-2}
2465 Classes and structs can be declared `volatile` in the interface header file for
2466 soapcpp2, which only has meaning for the gSOAP tools. This annotation means
2467 that these types are already declared elsewhere in your project's source code
2468 and you do not want soapcpp2 to generate code with a second declaration of
2471 For example, `struct tm` is declared in the <i>`time.h`</i> library. You can
2472 make it serializable and include a partial list of data members that you want
2478 int tm_sec; // seconds (0 - 60)
2479 int tm_min; // minutes (0 - 59)
2480 int tm_hour; // hours (0 - 23)
2481 int tm_mday; // day of month (1 - 31)
2482 int tm_mon; // month of year (0 - 11)
2483 int tm_year; // year - 1900
2487 You can declare classes and structs `volatile` for any such types you want to
2488 serialize by only providing the public data members you want to serialize.
2490 In addition, [colon notation](#toxsd2) is a simple and effective way to bind an
2491 existing class or struct to a schema. For example, you can change the `tm` name
2492 as follows without affecting the code that uses `struct tm` generated by
2496 volatile struct ns:tm { ... }
2499 This struct maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2503 <complexType name="tm">
2505 <element name="tm-sec" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2506 <element name="tm-min" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2507 <element name="tm-hour" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2508 <element name="tm-mday" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2509 <element name="tm-mon" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2510 <element name="tm-year" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
2516 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2518 ### Mutable classes and structs {#toxsd9-3}
2520 Classes and structs can be declared `mutable` with the gSOAP tools. This means
2521 that their definition can be spread out over the source code. This promotes the
2522 concept of a class or struct as a *row of named values*, also known as a *named
2523 tuple*, that can be extended at compile time in your source code with additional
2524 members. Because these types differ from the traditional object-oriented
2525 principles and design concepts of classes and objects, constructors and
2526 destructors cannot be defined (also because we cannot guarantee merging these
2527 into one such that all members will be initialized). A default constructor,
2528 copy constructor, assignment operation, and destructor will be assigned
2529 automatically by soapcpp2.
2532 mutable struct ns__tuple
2537 mutable struct ns__tuple
2544 The members are collected into one definition generated by soapcpp2. Members
2545 may be repeated from one definition to another, but only if their associated
2546 types are identical. So, for example, a third extension with a `value` member
2547 with a different type fails:
2550 mutable struct ns__tuple
2552 float value; // BAD: value is already declared std::string
2556 The `mutable` concept has proven to be very useful when declaring and
2557 collecting SOAP Headers for multiple services, which are collected into one
2558 `struct SOAP_ENV__Header` by the soapcpp2 tool.
2560 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2562 ### Default and fixed member values {#toxsd9-4}
2564 Class and struct data members in C and C++ may be declared with an optional
2565 default initialization value that is provided "inline" with the declaration of
2571 std::string name = "Joe";
2576 Alternatively, use C++11 default initialization syntax:
2581 std::string name { "Joe" };
2586 These initializations are made by the default constructor that is added by
2587 soapcpp2 to each class and struct (in C++ only). A constructor is only added
2588 when a default constructor is not already defined with the class declaration.
2590 You can explicitly (re)initialize an object with these initial values by using
2591 the soapcpp2 auto-generated functions:
2593 - `void T::soap_default(struct soap*)` for `class T` (C++ only)
2595 - `void soap_default_T(struct soap*, T*)` for `struct T` (C and C++).
2597 If `T` is a struct or class that has a `soap` pointer member to a `::soap`
2598 context then this pointer member will be set to the first argument passed to
2599 these functions to initialize their `soap` pointer member.
2601 Default value initializations can be provided for members that have primitive
2602 types (`bool`, `enum`, `time_t`, numeric and string types).
2604 Default value initializations of pointer members is permitted, but the effect
2605 is different. To conform to XML schema validation, an attribute member that is
2606 a pointer to a primitive type will be assigned the default value when parsed
2607 from XML. An element member that is a pointer to a primitive type will be
2608 assigned when the element is empty when parsed from XML.
2610 As of gSOAP 2.8.48 and greater, a fixed value can be assigned with a `==`. A
2611 fixed value is also verified by the parser's validator.
2613 Default and fixed values for members with or without pointers are best
2614 explained with the following two example fragments.
2616 A record class (can be a struct in C) with default values for attributes and
2617 elements is declared as follows:
2620 class ns__record_with_default
2622 @ std::string a = "A"; // optional XML attribute with default value "A"
2623 @ std::string b 1 = "B"; // required XML attribute with default value "B"
2624 @ std::string *c = "C"; // optional XML attribute with default value "C"
2625 std::string d 0 = "D"; // optional XML element with default value "D"
2626 std::string e = "E"; // required XML element with default value "E"
2627 std::string *f = "F"; // optional XML element with default value "F"
2632 Attributes are considered optional by default, unless marked as required with
2633 the occurrence constraint `1`. Elements are considered required unless the
2634 member type is a pointer or if the member is marked optional with occurrence
2637 Instead of default values, fixed values indicate that the attribute or element
2638 must contain that value, and only that value, when provided in XML. A fixed
2639 value is specified with a `==`.
2641 Attributes with default or fixed values may be omitted in XML. When omitted,
2642 the default/fixed value is used at the receiving side, i.e. the deserializer
2643 assigns the default/fixed value when the attribute is absent. Therefore, there
2644 is no need to make attributes with default/fixed values pointer based, because
2645 there is no way to distinguish an omitted attribute from a populated attribute
2646 on the receiving side. The `c` member in the example above can be a
2647 non-pointer for this reason. The wsdl2h tool does not generate pointers for
2648 attributes with default/fixed values.
2650 Elements with default or fixed values may be optional and the use of
2651 default/fixed values with elements differs from attributes. The default/fixed
2652 value of an element is only used for elements that are empty. Omitted optional
2653 elements are simply absent. No default/fixed value is assigned.
2655 A record class (can be a struct in C) with fixed values for attributes and
2656 elements is declared as follows:
2659 class ns__record_with_fixed
2661 @ std::string g == "G"; // optional XML attribute with fixed value "G"
2662 @ std::string h 1 == "H"; // required XML attribute with fixed value "H"
2663 @ std::string *i == "I"; // optional XML attribute with fixed value "I"
2664 std::string j 0 == "J"; // optional XML element with fixed value "J"
2665 std::string k == "K"; // required XML element with fixed value "K"
2666 std::string *l == "L"; // optional XML element with fixed value "L"
2671 The XML schema validation rules for the two example classes above are as
2675 ------ | ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2676 `a` | attribute may appear once; if it does not appear its value is "A", otherwise its value is that given (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns the default value "A")
2677 `b` | has no effect when parsing XML (but note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns the default value "B")
2678 `c` | attribute may appear once; if it does not appear its value is "C", otherwise its value is that given (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns NULL)
2679 `d` | element may appear once; if it does not appear or if it is empty, its value is "D"; otherwise its value is that given (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns the default value "D")
2680 `e` | has no effect when parsing XML (but note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns the default value "E")
2681 `f` | element may appear once; if it does not appear it is not provided; if it does appear and it is empty, its value is "F"; otherwise its value is that given (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_default` assigns NULL)
2682 `g` | attribute may appear once; if it does not appear its value is "G", if it does not appear its value is "G" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns the fixed value "G")
2683 `h` | attribute must appear once, its value must be "H" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns the fixed value "H")
2684 `i` | attribute may appear once; if it does not appear its value is "I", if it does not appear its value is "I" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns NULL)
2685 `j` | element may appear once, if it does not appear it is not provided; if it does appear and it is empty, its value is "J"; if it does appear and it is not empty, its value must be "J" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns the fixed value "J")
2686 `k` | element must appear once, its value must be "K" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns the fixed value "K")
2687 `l` | element may appear once, if it does not appear it is not provided; if it does appear and it is empty, its value is "J"; if it does appear and it is not empty, its value must be "J" (also note: instantiating `ns__record_with_fixed` assigns NULL)
2689 @see Section [operations on classes and structs](#toxsd9-14).
2691 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2693 ### Attribute members {#toxsd9-5}
2695 Class and struct data members are declared as XML attributes by annotating
2696 their type with a `@` qualifier:
2701 @ std::string name; // required (non-pointer means required)
2702 @ uint64_t SSN; // required (non-pointer means required)
2703 ns__record *spouse; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
2707 This class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2711 <complexType name="record">
2713 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
2715 <attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required"/>
2716 <attribute name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" use="required"/>
2721 An example XML instance of `ns__record` is:
2725 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" name="Joe" SSN="1234567890">
2726 <spouse name="Jane" SSN="1987654320">
2732 Attribute data members are restricted to primitive types (`bool`, `enum`,
2733 `time_t`, numeric and string types), `xsd__hexBinary`, `xsd__base64Binary`, and
2734 custom serializers, such as `xsd__dateTime`. Custom serializers for types that
2735 may be used as attributes should define `soap_s2T` and `soap_T2s` functions that
2736 convert values of type `T` to strings and back.
2738 Attribute data members can be pointers and smart pointers to these types, which
2739 permits attributes to be optional.
2741 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2743 ### Backtick XML tags {#toxsd9-5-1}
2745 The XML tag name of a class/struct member is the name of the member with the
2746 usual XML tag translation, see [colon notation](#toxsd2).
2748 To override the standard translation of identifier names to XML tag names of
2749 attributes and elements, add the XML tag name in backticks (requires gSOAP
2755 @ std::string name `full-name`;
2756 @ uint64_t SSN `tax-id`;
2757 ns__record *spouse `married-to`;
2761 This class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2765 <complexType name="record">
2767 <element name="married-to" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>
2769 <attribute name="full-name" type="xsd:string" use="required"/>
2770 <attribute name="tax-id" type="xsd:unsignedLong" use="required"/>
2775 An example XML instance of `ns__record` is:
2779 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" full-name="Joe" tax-id="1234567890">
2780 <married-to full-name="Jane" tax-id="1987654320">
2786 A backtick XML tag name may contain any non-empty sequence of ASCII and UTF-8
2787 characters except white space and the backtick character. A backtick tag can
2788 be combined with member constraints and default member initializers:
2791 @ uint64_t SSN `tax-id` 0:1 = 999;
2794 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2796 ### Qualified and unqualified members {#toxsd9-6}
2798 Class, struct, and union data members are mapped to namespace qualified or
2799 unqualified tag names of local elements and attributes. If a data member has
2800 no prefix then the default form of qualification is applied based on the
2801 element/attribute form that is declared with the XML schema of the class, struct,
2802 or union type. If the member name has a namespace prefix by colon notation,
2803 then the prefix overrules the default (un)qualified form. Therefore,
2804 [colon notation](#toxsd2) is an effective mechanism to control qualification of
2805 tag names of individual members of classes, structs, and unions.
2807 The XML schema elementFormDefault and attributeFormDefault declarations control
2808 the tag name qualification of local elements and attributes, respectively.
2810 - "unqualified" indicates that local elements/attributes are not qualified with
2811 the namespace prefix.
2813 - "qualified" indicates that local elements/attributes must be qualified with
2814 the namespace prefix.
2816 Individual schema declarations of local elements and attributes may overrule
2817 this by using the form declaration in an XML schema and by using colon notation
2818 to add namespace prefixes to class, struct, and union members in the header
2821 Consider for example an `ns__record` class in the `ns` namespace in which local
2822 elements are qualified and local attributes are unqualified by default:
2825 //gsoap ns schema namespace: urn:types
2826 //gsoap ns schema elementForm: qualified
2827 //gsoap ns schema attributeForm: unqualified
2836 This class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema with
2837 targetNamespace "urn:types", elementFormDefault qualified and
2838 attributeFormDefault unqualified:
2842 <schema targetNamespace="urn:types"
2844 elementFormDefault="qualified"
2845 attributeFormDefault="unqualified"
2847 <complexType name="record">
2849 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>
2851 <attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required"/>
2852 <attribute name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" use="required"/>
2858 An example XML instance of `ns__record` is:
2862 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" name="Joe" SSN="1234567890">
2863 <ns:spouse> name="Jane" SSN="1987654320">
2869 Here the root element <i>`<ns:record>`</i> is qualified because it is a root
2870 element of the XML schema with target namespace "urn:types". Its local element
2871 <i>`<ns:spouse>`</i> is namespace qualified because the elementFormDefault of
2872 local elements is qualified. Attributes are unqualified.
2874 The default namespace (un)qualification of local elements and attributes can be
2875 overruled by adding a prefix to the member name by using colon notation:
2878 //gsoap ns schema namespace: urn:types
2879 //gsoap ns schema elementForm: qualified
2880 //gsoap ns schema attributeForm: unqualified
2883 @ std::string ns:name; // 'ns:' qualified
2885 ns__record *:spouse; // ':' unqualified (empty prefix)
2889 The colon notation for member <i>`ns:name`</i> forces qualification of its attribute
2890 tag in XML. The colon notation for member <i>`:spouse`</i> removes qualification from
2891 its local element tag:
2895 <schema targetNamespace="urn:types"
2897 elementFormDefault="unqualified"
2898 attributeFormDefault="unqualified"
2900 <complexType name="record">
2902 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" form="unqualified"/>
2904 <attribute name="name" type="xsd:string" use="required" form="qualified"/>
2905 <attribute name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" use="required"/>
2911 XML instances of `ns__record` have unqualified spouse elements and qualified
2916 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ns:name="Joe" SSN="1234567890">
2917 <spouse> ns:name="Jane" SSN="1987654320">
2923 Members of a class or struct can also be prefixed using the `prefix__name`
2924 convention or using colon notation `prefix:name`. However, this has a
2925 different effect by referring to global (root) elements and attributes, see
2926 [document root element definitions](#toxsd9-7).
2928 [Backtick XML tags](#toxsd9-5-1) can be used in place of the member name
2929 annotations and will achieve the same effect as described when these tag names
2930 are (un)qualified (requires gSOAP 2.8.30 or greater).
2932 @note You must declare a target namespace with a `//gsoap ns schema namespace:`
2933 directive to enable the `elementForm` and `attributeForm` directives in order
2934 to generate valid XML schemas with soapcpp2. See [directives](#directives) for
2937 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
2939 ### Defining document root elements {#toxsd9-7}
2941 To define and reference XML document root elements we use type names that start
2948 Alternatively, we can use a `typedef` to define a document root element with a
2952 typedef ns__record _ns__record;
2955 This `typedef` maps to a global root element that is added to the
2956 soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
2960 <element name="record" type="ns:record"/>
2964 An example XML instance of `_ns__record` is:
2968 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types">
2970 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
2973 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
2979 Global-level element/attribute definitions are also referenced and/or added to
2980 the generated XML schema when serializable data members reference these by
2981 their qualified name:
2984 typedef std::string _ns__name 1 : 100;
2987 @ _QName xsi__type; // built-in XSD attribute xsi:type
2988 _ns__name ns__name; // ref to global ns:name element
2990 _ns__record *spouse;
2994 These types map to the following comonents in the soapcpp2-generated XML
2999 <simpleType name="name">
3000 <restriction base="xsd:string">
3001 <minLength value="1"/>
3002 <maxLength value="100"/>
3005 <element name="name" type="ns:name"/>
3006 <complexType name="record">
3008 <element ref="ns:name" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3009 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3010 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>
3012 <attribute ref="xsi:type" use="optional"/>
3014 <element name="record" type="ns:record"/>
3018 Use only use qualified member names when their types match the global-level
3019 element types that they refer to. For example:
3022 typedef std::string _ns__name; // global element ns:name of type xsd:string
3025 int ns__name; // BAD: global element ns:name is NOT type int
3026 _ns__record ns__record; // OK: ns:record is a global-level root element
3031 Therefore, we recommend to use qualified member names only when necessary to
3032 refer to standard XSD elements and attributes, such as `xsi__type`, and
3035 By contrast, colon notation has the desired effect to (un)qualify local tag
3036 names by overruling the default element/attribute namespace qualification, see
3037 [qualified and unqualified members](#toxsd9-6).
3039 As an alternative to prefixing member names, use the backtick tag (requires
3040 gSOAP 2.8.30 or greater):
3043 typedef std::string _ns__name 1 : 100;
3046 @ _QName t <i>`xsi:type`</i>; // built-in XSD attribute xsi:type
3047 _ns__name s <i>`ns:name`</i>; // ref to global ns:name element
3049 _ns__record *spouse;
3053 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3055 ### (Smart) pointer members and their occurrence constraints {#toxsd9-8}
3057 A public pointer-typed data member is serialized by following its (smart)
3058 pointer(s) to the value pointed to. To serialize pointers to dynamic arrays of
3059 data, please see the next section on
3060 [container and array members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-9).
3062 Pointers that are NULL and smart pointers that are empty are serialized to
3063 produce omitted element and attribute values, unless an element is required
3064 and is nillable (struct/class members marked with `nullptr`) in which case the
3065 element is rendered as an empty element with <i>`xsi:nil="true"`</i>.
3067 To control the occurrence requirements of pointer-based data members,
3068 occurrence constraints are associated with data members in the form of a range
3069 `minOccurs : maxOccurs`. For non-repeatable (meaning, not a container or array)
3070 data members, there are only three reasonable occurrence constraints:
3072 - `0:0` means that this element or attribute is prohibited.
3074 - `0:1` means that this element or attribute is optional.
3076 - `1:1` means that this element or attribute is required.
3078 Pointer-based data members have a default `0:1` occurrence constraint, making
3079 them optional, and their XML schema local element/attribute definition is
3080 marked as nillable. Non-pointer data members have a default `1:1` occurence
3081 constraint, making them required.
3083 A `nullptr` occurrence constraint may be applicable to required elements that
3084 are nillable pointer types, thus `nullptr 1:1`. This indicates that the
3085 element is nillable (can be `NULL` or `nullptr`). A pointer data member that
3086 is explicitly marked as required and nillable with `nullptr 1:1` will be
3087 serialized as an element with an <i>`xsi:nil`</i> attribute, thus effectively
3088 revealing the NULL property of its value.
3090 A non-pointer data member that is explicitly marked as optional with `0:1` will
3091 be set to its default value when no XML value is presented to the deserializer.
3092 A default value can be assigned to a data member that has a primitive type or
3093 is a (smart) pointer to primitive type.
3095 Consider for example:
3100 std::shared_ptr<std::string> name; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
3101 uint64_t SSN 0:1 = 999; // force optional with default 999
3102 ns__record *spouse nullptr 1:1; // force required and nillabe when absent
3106 This class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3110 <complexType name="record">
3112 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3113 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" default="999"/>
3114 <element name="spouse" type="ns:record" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3120 An example XML instance of `ns__record` with its `name` string value set to
3121 `Joe`, `SSN` set to its default, and `spouse` set to NULL:
3125 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3128 <spouse xsi:nil="true"/>
3133 @note In general, a smart pointer is simply declared as a `volatile` template
3134 in a interface header file for soapcpp2:
3136 volatile template <class T> class NAMESPACE::shared_ptr;
3139 @note The soapcpp2 tool generates code that uses `NAMESPACE::shared_ptr` and
3140 `NAMESPACE::make_shared` to create shared pointers to objects, where
3141 `NAMESPACE` is any valid C++ namespace such as `std` and `boost` if you have
3144 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3146 ### Container and array members and their occurrence constraints {#toxsd9-9}
3148 Class and struct data member types that are containers `std::deque`,
3149 `std::list`, `std::vector` and `std::set` are serialized as a collection of
3150 the values they contain. You can also serialize dynamic arrays, which is the
3151 alternative for C to store collections of data. Let's start with STL containers.
3153 You can use `std::deque`, `std::list`, `std::vector`, and `std::set` containers
3157 #import "import/stl.h" // import all containers
3158 #import "import/stldeque.h" // import deque
3159 #import "import/stllist.h" // import list
3160 #import "import/stlvector.h" // import vector
3161 #import "import/stlset.h" // import set
3164 For example, to use a vector data mamber to store names in a record:
3167 #import "import/stlvector.h"
3170 std::vector<std::string> names;
3175 To limit the number of names in the vector within reasonable bounds, occurrence
3176 constraints are associated with the container. Occurrence constraints are of
3177 the form `minOccurs : maxOccurs`:
3180 #import "import/stlvector.h"
3183 std::vector<std::string> names 1:10;
3188 This class maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3192 <complexType name="record">
3194 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="10"/>
3195 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3201 @note In general, a container is simply declared as a template in an interface
3202 header file for soapcpp2. All class templates are considered containers
3203 (except when declared `volatile`, see smart pointers). For example,
3204 `std::vector` is declared in <i>`gsoap/import/stlvector.h`</i> as:
3206 template <class T> class std::vector;
3209 @note You can define and use your own containers. The soapcpp2 tool generates
3210 code that uses the following members of the `template <typename T> class C`
3214 C::iterator C::begin()
3215 C::const_iterator C::begin() const
3216 C::iterator C::end()
3217 C::const_iterator C::end() const
3218 size_t C::size() const
3219 C::iterator C::insert(C::iterator pos, const T& val)
3222 @note For more details see the example `simple_vector` container with
3223 documentation in the package under <i>`gsoap/samples/template`</i>.
3225 Because C does not support a container template library, we can use a
3226 dynamically-sized array of values. This array is declared as a size-pointer
3227 pair of members within a struct or class. The array size information is stored
3228 in a special size tag member with the name `__size` or `__sizeX`, where `X` can
3229 be any name, or by an `$int` member to identify the member as a special size
3235 $ int sizeofnames; // array size
3236 char* *names; // array of char* names
3241 This struct maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3245 <complexType name="record">
3247 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" nillable="true"/>
3248 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3254 To limit the number of names in the array within reasonable bounds, occurrence
3255 constraints are associated with the array size member. Occurrence constraints
3256 are of the form `minOccurs : maxOccurs`:
3261 $ int sizeofnames 1:10; // array size 1..10
3262 char* *names; // array of one to ten char* names
3267 This struct maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3271 <complexType name="record">
3273 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="10" nillable="true"/>
3274 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3280 Arrays can also be declared as nested elements, similar to SOAP-encoded dynamic arrays, and these arrays can be used with or without SOAP applications. This requires a separate struct or class with the name of the SOAP array, which should not be qualified with a namespace prefix:
3283 struct ArrayOfstring
3285 char* *__ptr 1:100; // array of 1..100 strings
3286 int __size; // array size
3290 struct ArrayOfstring names; // array of char* names
3295 The `ns__record` struct maps to a complexType that references the <i>`ArrayOfstring`</i> complexType with an sequence of 1 to 100 <i>`item`</i> elements:
3299 <complexType name="ArrayOfstring">
3301 <element name="item" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="100"/>
3304 <complexType name="record">
3306 <element name="names" type="ns:ArrayOfstring" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3307 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3313 To change the <i>`item`</i> element name in the WSDL, XML schema, and XML messages, use `__ptrName` where `Name` is the name you want to use.
3315 @note When <b>`soapcpp2 -e`</b> option <b>`-e`</b> is used, the <i>`ArrayOfstring`</i> becomes a SOAP-encoded array for SOAP 1.1/1.2 RPC encoded messaging:
3318 <import namespace="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"/>
3319 <complexType name="ArrayOfstring">
3321 <restriction base="SOAP-ENC:Array">
3323 <element name="item" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="100"/>
3325 <attribute ref="SOAP-ENC:arrayType" WSDL:arrayType="xsd:string[]"/>
3329 <complexType name="record">
3331 <element name="names" type="ns:ArrayOfstring" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3332 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3338 Fixed-size arrays can be used to store a fixed number of values:
3343 char* names[10]; // array of 10 char* names
3348 The fixed-size array is similar to a SOAP-encoded array, which can be used with or without SOAP applications. This struct maps to a complexType that references a <i>`Array10Ofstring`</i> complexType with ten <i>`item`</i> elements:
3352 <complexType name="record">
3354 <element name="names" type="ns:Array10Ofstring" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3355 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3358 <complexType name="Array10Ofstring">
3360 <element name="item" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="10"/>
3366 @note When <b>`soapcpp2 -e`</b> option <b>`-e`</b> is used, the <i>`Array10Ofstring`</i> becomes a SOAP-encoded array for SOAP 1.1/1.2 RPC encoded messaging, see previous note.
3368 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3370 ### Sequencing with hidden members {#toxsd9-10}
3372 A member becomes a hidden XML element, i.e. not visibly rendered in XML, when
3373 its name starts with a double underscore. This makes it possible to sequence a
3374 collection of data members, basically by forming a sequence of elements that
3375 can be optional or repeated together.
3377 To create a sequence of members that are optional, use a pointer-based hidden
3378 member that is a struct with the collection of members to sequence:
3383 std::string name; // required name
3384 struct __ns__optional
3386 uint64_t SSN; // SSN in optional group
3387 std::string phone; // phone number in optional group
3388 } *__optional; // optional group
3392 Here we used a hidden struct type `__ns__optional` which starts with a double
3393 underscore, because we do not want to define a new global type for the XML
3394 schema we generate. We just need a unique name for a structure that sequences
3397 This struct maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3401 <complexType name="record">
3403 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3404 <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1">
3405 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3406 <element name="phone" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3413 The `name` member is a required element of the <i>`ns:record`</i> complexType.
3414 The <i>`ns:record`</i> complexType has an optional sequence of `SSN` and
3417 To create repetitions of a sequence of members, use an array as follows:
3422 std::string name; // required name
3423 $ int sizeofarray; // size of group array
3426 uint64_t SSN; // SSN in group
3427 std::string phone; // phone number in group
3428 } *__array; // group array
3432 This struct maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3436 <complexType name="record">
3438 <element name="name" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3439 <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">
3440 <element name="SSN" type="xsd:unsignedLong" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3441 <element name="phone" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3448 The `name` member is a required element of the <i>`ns:record`</i> complexType.
3449 The <i>`ns:record`</i> complexType has a potentially unbounded sequence of
3450 `SSN` and `phone` elements. You can specify array bounds instead of zero to
3451 unbounded, see [container and array members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-9).
3453 The XML value space consists of a sequence of SSN and phone elements:
3458 <name>numbers</name>
3459 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
3460 <phone>555-123-4567</phone>
3461 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
3462 <phone>555-789-1234</phone>
3463 <SSN>2345678901</SSN>
3464 <phone>555-987-6543</phone>
3469 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3471 ### Tagged union members {#toxsd9-11}
3473 A union member in a class or in a struct cannot be serialized unless a
3474 discriminating *variant selector* member is provided that tells the serializer
3475 which union field to serialize. This effectively creates a *tagged union*.
3477 The variant selector is associated with the union as a selector-union pair of members.
3478 The variant selector is a member with the name `__union` or `__unionX`, where
3479 `X` can be any name, or by an `$int` member to identify the member as a variant
3485 $ int xORnORs; // variant selector with values SOAP_UNION_fieldname
3496 The variant selector values are auto-generated based on the union name `choice`
3497 and the names of its members `x`, `n`, and `s`:
3499 - `xORnORs = SOAP_UNION_ns__choice_x` when `u.x` is valid.
3501 - `xORnORs = SOAP_UNION_ns__choice_n` when `u.n` is valid.
3503 - `xORnORs = SOAP_UNION_ns__choice_s` when `u.s` is valid.
3505 - `xORnORs = 0` when none are valid (should only be used with great care,
3506 because XSD validation may fail when content is required but absent).
3508 This class maps to a complexType with a sequence and choice in the
3509 soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3513 <complexType name="record">
3516 <element name="x" type="xsd:float" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3517 <element name="n" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3518 <element name="s" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3520 <element name="names" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3526 An STL container or dynamic array of a union requires wrapping the variant
3527 selector and union member in a struct:
3533 struct ns__data // data with a choice of x, n, or s
3535 $ int xORnORs; // variant selector with values SOAP_UNION_fieldname
3542 }> data; // vector with data
3546 and an equivalent definition with a dynamic array instead of a `std::vector`
3547 (you can use this in C with structs):
3552 $ int sizeOfdata; // size of dynamic array
3553 struct ns__data // data with a choice of x, n, or s
3555 $ int xORnORs; // variant selector with values SOAP_UNION_fieldname
3562 } *data; // points to the data array of length sizeOfdata
3566 This maps to two complexTypes in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3570 <complexType name="data">
3572 <element name="x" type="xsd:float" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3573 <element name="n" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3574 <element name="s" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3577 <complexType name="record">
3579 <element name="data" type="ns:data" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
3585 The XML value space consists of a sequence of item elements each wrapped in an
3590 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3607 To remove the wrapping data element, simply rename the wrapping struct to
3608 `__ns__data` and the member to `__data` to make this member invisible to the
3609 serializer. The double underscore prefix naming convention is used for the
3610 struct name and member name. Also use a dynamic array instead of a STL
3611 container (so you can also use this approach in C with structs):
3616 $ int sizeOfdata; // size of dynamic array
3617 struct __ns__data // contains choice of x, n, or s
3619 $ int xORnORs; // variant selector with values SOAP_UNION_fieldname
3626 } *__data; // points to the data array of length sizeOfdata
3630 This maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3634 <complexType name="record">
3635 <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">
3637 <element name="x" type="xsd:float" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3638 <element name="n" type="xsd:int" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3639 <element name="s" type="xsd:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3646 The XML value space consists of a sequence of <i>`<x>`</i>, <i>`<n>`</i>, and/or <i>`<s>`</i>
3651 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3660 Please note that structs, classes, and unions are unnested by soapcpp2 (as in
3661 the C standard of nested structs and unions). Therefore, the `ns__choice`
3662 union in the `ns__record` class is redeclared at the top level despite its
3663 nesting within the `ns__record` class. This means that you will have to choose
3664 a unique name for each nested struct, class, and union.
3666 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3668 ### Tagged void pointer members {#toxsd9-12}
3670 To serialize data pointed to by `void*` requires run-time type information that
3671 tells the serializer what type of data to serialize by means of a *tagged void
3672 pointer*. This type information is stored in a special type tag member of a
3673 struct/class with the name `__type` or `__typeX`, where `X` can be any name, or
3674 alternatively by an `$int` special member of any name as a type tag:
3679 $ int typeOfdata; // type tag with values SOAP_TYPE_T
3680 void *data; // points to some data of type T
3684 A type tag member has nonzero values `SOAP_TYPE_T` where `T` is the name of a
3685 struct/class or the name of a primitive type, such as `int`, `std__string` (for
3686 `std::string`), `string` (for `char*`).
3688 This class maps to a complexType with a sequence in the soapcpp2-generated
3693 <complexType name="record">
3695 <element name="data" type="xsd:anyType" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>
3701 The XML value space consists of the XML value space of the type with the
3702 addition of an <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute to the enveloping element:
3706 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3707 <data xsi:type="xsd:int">123</data>
3712 This <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute is important for the receiving end to distinguish
3713 the type of data to instantiate. The receiver cannot deserialize the data
3714 without an <i>`xsd:type`</i> attribute.
3716 You can find the `SOAP_TYPE_T` name of each serializable type in the
3717 auto-generated <i>`soapStub.h`</i> file.
3719 Also all serializable C++ classes have a virtual `int T::soap_type()` member
3720 that returns their `SOAP_TYPE_T` value that you can use.
3722 When the `void*` pointer is NULL or when `typeOfdata` is zero, the data is not
3725 An STL container or dynamic array of `void*` pointers to <i>`xsd:anyType`</i> data
3726 requires wrapping the type tag and `void*` members in a struct:
3732 struct ns__data // data with an xsd:anyType item
3734 $ int typeOfitem; // type tag with values SOAP_TYPE_T
3735 void *item; // points to some item of type T
3736 }> data; // vector with data
3740 and an equivalent definition with a dynamic array instead of a `std::vector`
3741 (you can use this in C with structs):
3746 $ int sizeOfdata; // size of dynamic array
3747 struct ns__data // data with an xsd:anyType item
3749 $ int typeOfitem; // type tag with values SOAP_TYPE_T
3750 void *item; // points to some item of type T
3751 } *data; // points to the data array of length sizeOfdata
3755 This maps to two complexTypes in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3759 <complexType name="data">
3761 <element name="item" type="xsd:anyType" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1" nillable="true"/>
3764 <complexType name="record">
3766 <element name="data" type="ns:data" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
3772 The XML value space consists of a sequence of item elements each wrapped in a
3777 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3779 <item xsi:type="xsd:int">123</item>
3782 <item xsi:type="xsd:double">3.1</item>
3785 <item xsi:type="xsd:string">abc</item>
3791 To remove the wrapping data elements, simply rename the wrapping struct and
3792 member to `__data` to make this member invisible to the serializer with the
3793 double underscore prefix naming convention. Also use a dynamic array instead
3794 of a STL container (you can use this in C with structs):
3799 $ int sizeOfdata; // size of dynamic array
3800 struct __data // contains xsd:anyType item
3802 $ int typeOfitem; // type tag with values SOAP_TYPE_T
3803 void *item; // points to some item of type T
3804 } *__data; // points to the data array of length sizeOfdata
3808 This maps to a complexType in the soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
3812 <complexType name="record">
3813 <sequence minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded">
3814 <element name="item" type="xsd:anyType" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
3820 The XML value space consists of a sequence of data elements:
3824 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" ...>
3825 <item xsi:type="xsd:int">123</item>
3826 <item xsi:type="xsd:double">3.1</item>
3827 <item xsi:type="xsd:string">abc</item>
3832 Again, please note that structs, classes, and unions are unnested by soapcpp2
3833 (as in the C standard of nested structs and unions). Therefore, the `__data`
3834 struct in the `ns__record` class is redeclared at the top level despite its
3835 nesting within the `ns__record` class. This means that you will have to choose
3836 a unique name for each nested struct, class, and union.
3838 @see Section [XSD type bindings](#typemap2).
3840 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3842 ### Adding get and set methods {#toxsd9-13}
3844 A public `get` method may be added to a class or struct, which will be
3845 triggered by the deserializer. This method will be invoked right after the
3846 instance is populated by the deserializer. The `get` method can be used to
3847 update or verify deserialized content. It should return `SOAP_OK` or set
3848 `soap::error` to a nonzero error code and return it.
3850 A public `set` method may be added to a class or struct, which will be
3851 triggered by the serializer. The method will be invoked just before the
3852 instance is serialized. Likewise, the `set` method should return `SOAP_OK` or
3853 set set `soap::error` to a nonzero error code and return it.
3855 For example, adding a `set` and `get` method to a class declaration:
3860 int set(struct soap*); // triggered before serialization
3861 int get(struct soap*); // triggered after deserialization
3866 To add these and othe rmethods to classes and structs with wsdl2h and
3867 <i>`typemap.dat`</i>, please see [class/struct member additions](#typemap3).
3869 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3871 ### Operations on classes and structs {#toxsd9-14}
3873 The following functions/macros are generated by soapcpp2 for each type `T`,
3874 which should make it easier to send, receive, and copy XML data in C and in
3877 - `int soap_write_T(struct soap*, T*)` writes an instance of `T` to a file via
3878 file descriptor `int soap::sendfd)` or to a stream via `std::ostream
3879 *soap::os` (C++ only) or saves into a NUL-terminated string by setting
3880 `const char **soap::os` to a string pointer to be set (C only). Returns
3881 `SOAP_OK` on success or an error code, also stored in `soap::error`.
3883 - `int soap_read_T(struct soap*, T*)` reads an instance of `T` from a file via
3884 file descriptor `int soap::recvfd)` or from a stream via `std::istream
3885 *soap::is` (C++ only) or reads from a NUL-termianted string `const char
3886 *soap::is` (C only). Returns `SOAP_OK` on success or an error code, also
3887 stored in `soap::error`.
3889 - `void soap_default_T(struct soap*, T*)` sets an instance `T` to its default
3890 value, resetting members of a struct to their initial values (for classes we
3891 use method `T::soap_default`, see below). If `T` is a struct that has a
3892 `soap` pointer member to a `::soap` context then this pointer member will be
3893 set to the first argument passed to this function to initialize its `soap`
3896 - `T * soap_dup_T(struct soap*, T *dst, const T *src)` (requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ec`</b>)
3897 deep copy `src` into `dst`, replicating all deep cycles and shared pointers
3898 when a managing `soap` context is provided as argument. When `dst` is NULL,
3899 allocates space for `dst` and returns a pointer to the allocated copy. Deep
3900 copy results in a tree when the `soap` context is NULL, but the presence of
3901 deep cycles will lead to non-termination. Use flag `SOAP_XML_TREE` with
3902 managing context to copy into a tree without cycles and pointers to shared
3903 objects. Returns `dst` or allocated copy when `dst` is NULL.
3905 - `void soap_del_T(const T*)` (requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ed`</b>) deletes all
3906 heap-allocated members of this object by deep deletion ONLY IF this object
3907 and all of its (deep) members are not managed by a `soap` context AND the deep
3908 structure is a tree (no cycles and co-referenced objects by way of multiple
3909 (non-smart) pointers pointing to the same data). Can be safely used after
3910 `T * soap_dup_T(NULL, NULL, const T*)` to delete the deep copy returned.
3911 Does not delete the object itself.
3913 When in C++ mode, soapcpp2 tool adds several methods to classes in addition to
3914 adding a default constructor and destructor (when these were not explicitly
3917 The public methods added to a class `T`:
3919 - `virtual int T::soap_type(void)` returns a unique type ID (`SOAP_TYPE_T`).
3920 This numeric ID can be used to distinguish base from derived instances.
3922 - `virtual void T::soap_default(struct soap*)` sets all data members to
3923 default values. If class `T` has a `soap` pointer member to a `::soap`
3924 context then this pointer member will be set to the argument passed to this
3925 function to initialize its `soap` pointer member.
3927 - `virtual void T::soap_serialize(struct soap*) const` serializes object to
3928 prepare for SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoded output (or with `SOAP_XML_GRAPH`) by
3929 analyzing its (cyclic) structures.
3931 - `virtual int T::soap_put(struct soap*, const char *tag, const char *type) const`
3932 emits object in XML, compliant with SOAP 1.1 encoding style, return error
3933 code or `SOAP_OK`. Requires `soap_begin_send(soap)` and
3934 `soap_end_send(soap)`.
3936 - `virtual int T::soap_out(struct soap*, const char *tag, int id, const char *type) const`
3937 emits object in XML, with tag and optional id attribute and <i>`xsi:type`</i>,
3938 return error code or `SOAP_OK`. Requires `soap_begin_send(soap)` and
3939 `soap_end_send(soap)`.
3941 - `virtual void * T::soap_get(struct soap*, const char *tag, const char *type)`
3942 Get object from XML, compliant with SOAP 1.1 encoding style, return pointer
3943 to object or NULL on error. Requires `soap_begin_recv(soap)` and
3944 `soap_end_recv(soap)`.
3946 - `virtual void *soap_in(struct soap*, const char *tag, const char *type)`
3947 Get object from XML, with matching tag and type (NULL matches any tag and
3948 type), return pointer to object or NULL on error. Requires
3949 `soap_begin_recv(soap)` and `soap_end_recv(soap)`
3951 - `virtual T * T::soap_alloc(void) const` returns a new object of type `T`,
3952 default initialized and not managed by a `soap` context.
3954 - `virtual T * T::soap_dup(struct soap*) const` (requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ec`</b>)
3955 returns a duplicate of this object by deep copying, replicating all deep
3956 cycles and shared pointers when a managing `soap` context is provided as
3957 argument. Deep copy is a tree when argument is NULL, but the presence of
3958 deep cycles will lead to non-termination. Use flag `SOAP_XML_TREE` with the
3959 managing context to copy into a tree without cycles and pointers to shared
3962 - `virtual void T::soap_del() const` (rquires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ed`</b>) deletes all
3963 heap-allocated members of this object by deep deletion ONLY IF this object
3964 and all of its (deep) members are not managed by a `soap` context AND the deep
3965 structure is a tree (no cycles and co-referenced objects by way of multiple
3966 (non-smart) pointers pointing to the same data). Can be safely used after
3967 `soap_dup(NULL)` to delete the deep copy. Does not delete the object itself.
3969 Also, there are four variations of `soap_new_T` for
3970 class/struct/template type `T` that soapcpp2 auto-generates to create instances
3971 on a context-managed heap:
3973 - `T * soap_new_T(struct soap*)` returns a new instance of `T` with default data
3974 member initializations that are set with the soapcpp2 auto-generated `void
3975 T::soap_default(struct soap*)` method), but ONLY IF the soapcpp2
3976 auto-generated default constructor is used that invokes `soap_default()` and
3977 was not replaced by a user-defined default constructor.
3979 - `T * soap_new_T(struct soap*, int n)` returns an array of `n` new instances of
3980 `T`. Similar to the above, instances are initialized.
3982 - `T * soap_new_req_T(struct soap*, ...)` returns a new instance of `T` and sets
3983 the required data members to the values specified in `...`. The required data
3984 members are those with nonzero minOccurs, see the subsections on
3985 [(smart) pointer members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-8) and
3986 [container and array members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-9).
3988 - `T * soap_new_set_T(struct soap*, ...)` returns a new instance of `T` and sets
3989 the public/serializable data members to the values specified in `...`.
3991 The above functions can be invoked with a NULL `soap` context, but we will be
3992 responsible to use `delete T` to remove this instance from the unmanaged heap.
3994 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
3996 Special classes and structs {#toxsd10}
3997 ---------------------------
3999 The following applies to both structs and classes. The examples show classes
4000 in C++. For C, use structs and omit the C++ features. Structs also require
4001 the use of the `struct` keyword, otherwise soapcpp2 will throw a syntax error.
4003 ### SOAP-encoded arrays {#toxsd10-1}
4005 A class or struct with the following layout is a one-dimensional SOAP-encoded
4011 T *__ptr; // array pointer
4012 int __size; // array size
4016 where `T` is the array element type. A multidimensional SOAP Array is:
4021 T *__ptr; // array pointer
4022 int __size[N]; // array size of each dimension
4026 where `N` is the constant number of dimensions. The pointer points to an array
4027 of `__size[0]*__size[1]* ... * __size[N-1]` elements.
4029 This maps to a complexType restriction of SOAP-ENC:Array in the
4030 soapcpp2-generated XML schema:
4034 <complexType name="ArrayOfT">
4036 <restriction base="SOAP-ENC:Array">
4038 <element name="item" type="T" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" nillable="true"/>
4040 <attribute ref="SOAP-ENC:arrayType" WSDL:arrayType="ArrayOfT[]"/>
4047 The name of the class can be arbitrary. We often use `ArrayOfT` without a
4048 prefix to distinguish arrays from other classes and structs.
4050 With SOAP 1.1 encoding, an optional offset member can be added that controls
4051 the start of the index range for each dimension:
4056 T *__ptr; // array pointer
4057 int __size[N]; // array size of each dimension
4058 int __offset[N]; // array offsets to start each dimension
4062 For example, we can define a matrix of floats as follows:
4072 The following code populates the matrix and serializes it in XML:
4075 soap *soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_INDENT);
4077 double a[6] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 };
4081 soap_write_Matrix(soap, &A);
4084 Matrix A is serialized as an array with 2x3 values:
4088 <SOAP-ENC:Array SOAP-ENC:arrayType="xsd:double[2,3]" ...>
4099 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4101 ### XSD hexBinary and base64Binary types {#toxsd10-2}
4103 A special case of a one-dimensional array is used to define <i>`xsd:hexBinary`</i> and
4104 <i>`xsd:base64Binary`</i> types when the pointer type is `unsigned char`:
4107 class xsd__hexBinary
4109 unsigned char *__ptr; // points to raw binary data
4110 int __size; // size of data
4117 class xsd__base64Binary
4119 unsigned char *__ptr; // points to raw binary data
4120 int __size; // size of data
4124 To create a new binary type, use either one of the following three forms that
4125 declare a new `ns__binary` type that is a <i>`simpleType`</i> restriction of
4126 <i>`xsd:base64Binary`</i>:
4129 typedef xsd__base64Binary ns__binary;
4132 class ns__binary : public xsd__base64Binary
4134 ... // attribute members (@) and class methods
4140 unsigned char *__ptr; // points to raw binary data
4141 int __size; // size of data
4142 ... // attribute members (@) and class methods (optional)
4146 Here, `xsd__base64Binary` is reused in the first two cases, where
4147 `xsd__base64Binary` is declared as shown above.
4149 @see [DIME/MIME/MTOM attachment binary types](#toxsd10-3)
4151 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4153 ### DIME/MIME/MTOM attachment binary types {#toxsd10-3}
4155 A class or struct with a binary content layout can be extended to support
4156 attachments. The following struct or class type can be used as DIME, MIME, and
4157 MTOM attachment and also be used for <i>`xsd:base64Binary`</i> type values:
4160 class xsd__base64Binary
4162 unsigned char *__ptr; // points to raw binary data
4163 int __size; // size of data
4164 char *id; // NULL to generate an id, or set to a unique UUID
4165 char *type; // MIME type of the data
4166 char *options; // optional description of MIME attachment
4170 When the `id`, `type`, or `options` members are non-NULL, an attachment will be
4171 used instead of base64 XML content. DIME attachments are the default. To
4172 switch to MIME use the `SOAP_ENC_MIME` context flag. To switch to MTOM use the
4173 `SOAP_ENC_MTOM` context flag.
4175 MTOM is typically used with XOP <i>`<xop:Include>`</i> elements, which is
4176 preferred and declared as follows:
4179 //gsoap xop schema import: http://www.w3.org/2004/08/xop/include
4182 unsigned char *__ptr; // points to raw binary data
4183 int __size; // size of data
4184 char *id; // NULL to generate an id, or set to a unique UUID
4185 char *type; // MIME type of the data
4186 char *options; // optional description of MIME attachment
4190 Attachments are beyond the scope of this article. See the
4191 [gSOAP user guide.](../../guide/html/index.html) for more details.
4193 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4195 ### Wrapper class/struct with simpleContent {#toxsd10-4}
4197 A class or struct with the following layout is a complexType that wraps
4203 T __item; // primitive type for the simpleContent
4204 ... // attribute members (@) and class methods (optional)
4208 The type `T` is a primitive type (`bool`, `enum`, `time_t`, numeric and string
4209 types), `xsd__hexBinary`, `xsd__base64Binary`, and custom serializers, such as
4212 This maps to a complexType with simpleContent in the soapcpp2-generated XML
4217 <complexType name="simple">
4219 <extension base="T"/>
4225 A wrapper class/struct may include any number of members that are declared as
4226 attributes with `@`, which should be placed after the `__item` member.
4228 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4230 ### DOM anyType and anyAttribute {#toxsd10-5}
4232 Use of a DOM is optional and enabled by `#import "dom.h"` to use the DOM
4233 `xsd__anyType` element node and `xsd__anyAttribute` attribute node:
4240 @ xsd__anyAttribute attributes; // optional DOM attributes
4241 xsd__anyType *name; // optional DOM element (pointer means minOccurs=0)
4242 xsd__anyType address; // required DOM element (minOccurs=1)
4243 xsd__anyType email 0; // optional DOM element (minOccurs=0)
4244 ... // other members
4248 where `name` contains XML stored in a DOM node set and `attributes` is a list
4249 of all visibly rendered attributes. The name `attributes` is arbitrary and any
4252 You should place the `xsd__anyType` members at the end of the struct or class.
4253 This ensures that the DOM members are populated last as a "catch all". A
4254 member name starting with double underscore is a wildcard member. These
4255 members are placed at the end of a struct or class automatically by soapcpp2.
4257 An `#import "dom.h"` import is automatically added by <b>`wsdl2h -d`</b> with
4258 option <b>`-d`</b> to bind <i>`xsd:anyType`</i> to DOM nodes, and also to
4259 populate <i>`xsd:any`</i>, <i>`xsd:anyAttribute`</i> and <i>`xsd:mixed`</i> XML
4267 @ xsd__anyAttribute __anyAttribute; // optional DOM attributes
4268 std::vector<xsd__anyType> __any 0; // optional DOM elements (minOccurs=0)
4269 xsd__anyType __mixed 0; // optional mixed content (minOccurs=0)
4270 ... // other members
4274 where the members prefixed with `__` are "invisible" to the XML parser, meaning
4275 that these members are not bound to XML tag names.
4277 In C you can use a dynamic arrary instead of `std::vector`:
4284 @ xsd__anyAttribute __anyAttribute; // optional DOM attributes
4285 $ int __sizeOfany; // size of the array
4286 xsd__anyType *__any; // optional DOM elements (pointer means minOccurs=0)
4287 xsd__anyType __mixed 0; // optional mixed content (minOccurs=0)
4288 ... // other members
4292 Classes can inherit DOM, which enables full use of polymorphism with one base
4298 class ns__record : public xsd__anyType
4300 std::vector<xsd__anyType*> array; // array of objects of any class
4301 ... // other members
4305 This permits an `xsd__anyType` pointer to refer to a derived class such as
4306 `ns__record`, which will be serialized with an <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribute that is
4307 set to "ns:record". The <i>`xsi:type`</i> attributes add the necessary type information
4308 to distinguish the XML content from the DOM base type. This is important for
4309 the receiving end: without <i>`xsd:type`</i> attributes with type names, only base DOM
4310 objects are recognized and instantiated.
4312 Because C lacks object-oriented programming concepts such as class inheritance
4313 and polymorphism, you should consider using [derived types in C and C++](#toxsd9-1-1).
4315 An alternative is to use the special [tagged void pointer members](#toxsd9-12)
4316 to serialize data pointed to by a `void*` member, which can be any serializable
4317 type, such as derived types. This approach uses <i>`xsi:type`</i> attributes
4318 to identify the type of value serialized.
4320 To ensure that wsdl2h generates pointer-based `xsd__anyType` DOM nodes with
4321 <b>`wsdl2h -d`</b> using option <b>`-d`</b> for <i>`xsd:any`</i>, add the
4322 following line to <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
4324 xsd__any = | xsd__anyType*
4326 This lets wsdl2h produce class/struct members and containers with
4327 `xsd__anyType*` for <i>`xsd:any`</i> instead of `xsd__anyType`. To just force all
4328 <i>`xsd:anyType`</i> uses to be pointer-based, declare in <i>`typemap.dat`</i>:
4330 xsd__anyType = | xsd__anyType*
4332 If you use <b>`wsdl2h -d -p`</b> using options <b>`-d`</b> and <b>`-p`</b> then
4333 every class will inherit DOM as shown above. Without option `-d`, an
4334 `xsd__anyType` type is generated to serve as the root type in the type
4338 class xsd__anyType { _XML __item; struct soap *soap; };
4340 class ns__record : public xsd__anyType
4346 where the `_XML __item` member holds any XML content as a literal XML string.
4348 To use the DOM API, compile <i>`dom.c`</i> (or <i>`dom.cpp`</i> for C++), or
4349 link the gSOAP library with <b>`-lgsoapssl`</b> (or <b>`-lgsoapssl++`</b> for C++).
4351 @see Documentation of [XML DOM and XPath](http://www.genivia.com/doc/dom/html)
4354 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4356 Directives {#directives}
4359 You can use `//gsoap` directives in the interface header file with the data
4360 binding interface for soapcpp2. These directives are used to configure the
4361 code generated by soapcpp2 by declaring various. properties of Web services
4362 and XML schemas. When using the wsdl2h tool, you will notice that wsdl2h
4363 generates directives automatically based on the WSDL and XSD input.
4365 Service directives are applicable to service and operations described by WSDL.
4366 Schema directives are applicable to types, elements, and attributes defined by
4369 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4371 Service directives {#directives-1}
4374 A service directive must start at a new line and is of the form:
4377 //gsoap <prefix> service <property>: <value>
4380 where `<prefix>` is the XML namespace prefix of a service binding. The
4381 `<property>` and `<value>` fields are one of the following:
4384 --------------- | -----
4385 `name` | name of the service, optionally followed by text describing the service
4386 `namespace` | URI of the WSDL targetNamespace
4387 `documentation` | text describing the service (see also the `name` property), multiple permitted
4388 `doc` | an alias for the `documentation` property
4389 `style` | `document` (default) SOAP messaging style or `rpc` for SOAP RPC
4390 `encoding` | `literal` (default), `encoded` for SOAP encoding, or a custom URI
4391 `protocol` | specifies SOAP or REST, see below
4392 `port` | URL of the service endpoint, usually an http or https address, to use in the WSDL definitions/service/port/address/\@location
4393 `location` | an alias for the `port` property
4394 `endpoint` | an alias for the `port` property
4395 `transport` | URI declaration of the transport, usually `http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/http`
4396 `definitions` | name of the WSDL definitions/\@name
4397 `type` | name of the WSDL definitions/portType/\@name (WSDL2.0 interface/\@name)
4398 `portType` | an alias for the `type` property (`portType` follows SOAP 1.1 naming conventions)
4399 `interface` | an alias for the `type` property (`interface` follows SOAP 1.2 naming conventions)
4400 `binding` | name of the WSDL definitions/binding/\@name
4401 `portName` | name of the WSDL definitions/service/port/\@name
4402 `executable` | name of the "executable" to use in the WSDL definitions/service/port/address/\@location
4404 The service `name` and `namespace` properties are required in order to generate
4405 a valid WSDL with soapcpp2. The other properties are optional.
4407 The `style` and `encoding` property defaults are changed with
4408 <b>`soapcpp2 -e`</b> option <b>`-e`</b> to `rpc` and `encoded`, respectively.
4410 The `protocol` property is `SOAP` by default (SOAP 1.1). Protocol property
4413 protocol value | description
4414 -------------- | -----------
4415 `SOAP` | SOAP transport, supporting both SOAP 1.1 and 1.2
4416 `SOAP1.1` | SOAP 1.1 transport (same as `soapcpp2 -1`)
4417 `SOAP1.2` | SOAP 1.2 transport (same as `soapcpp2 -2`)
4418 `SOAP-GET` | one-way SOAP 1.1 or 1.2 with HTTP GET
4419 `SOAP1.1-GET` | one-way SOAP 1.1 with HTTP GET
4420 `SOAP1.2-GET` | one-way SOAP 1.2 with HTTP GET
4421 `HTTP` | non-SOAP REST protocol with HTTP POST
4422 `POST` | non-SOAP REST protocol with HTTP POST
4423 `GET` | non-SOAP REST protocol with HTTP GET
4424 `PUT` | non-SOAP REST protocol with HTTP PUT
4425 `DELETE` | non-SOAP REST protocol with HTTP DELETE
4427 You can bind service operations to the WSDL namespace of a service by using the
4428 namespace prefix as part of the identifier name of the function that defines
4429 the service operation:
4432 int prefix__func(arg1, arg2, ..., argn, result);
4435 You can override the `port` endpoint URL at runtime in the auto-generated
4436 `soap_call_prefix__func` service call (C/C++ client side) and in the C++ proxy
4439 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4441 Service method directives {#directives-2}
4442 -------------------------
4444 Service properties are applicable to a service and to all of its operations.
4445 Service method directives are specifically applicable to a service operation.
4447 A service method directive is of the form:
4450 //gsoap <prefix> service method-<property>: <method> <value>
4453 where `<prefix>` is the XML namespace prefix of a service binding and
4454 `<method>` is the unqualified name of a service operation. The `<property>`
4455 and `<value>` fields are one of the following:
4457 method property | value
4458 --------------------------- | -----
4459 `method-documentation` | text describing the service operation
4460 `method` | an alias for the `method-documentation` property
4461 `method-action` | `""` or URI SOAPAction HTTP header, or URL query string for REST protocols
4462 `method-input-action` | `""` or URI SOAPAction HTTP header of service request messages
4463 `method-output-action` | `""` or URI SOAPAction HTTP header of service response messages
4464 `method-fault-action` | `""` or URI SOAPAction HTTP header of service fault messages
4465 `method-header-part` | member name of the `SOAP_ENV__Header` struct used in SOAP Header
4466 `method-input-header-part` | member name of the `SOAP_ENV__Header` struct used in SOAP Headers of requests
4467 `method-output-header-part` | member name of the `SOAP_ENV__Header` struct used in SOAP Headers of responses
4468 `method-fault` | type name of a struct or class member used in `SOAP_ENV__Details` struct
4469 `method-mime-type` | REST content type or SOAP MIME attachment content type(s)
4470 `method-input-mime-type` | REST content type or SOAP MIME attachment content type(s) of request message
4471 `method-output-mime-type` | REST content type or SOAP MIME attachment content type(s) of response message
4472 `method-style` | `document` or `rpc`
4473 `method-encoding` | `literal`, `encoded`, or a custom URI for encodingStyle of messages
4474 `method-response-encoding` | `literal`, `encoded`, or a custom URI for encodingStyle of response messages
4475 `method-protocol` | SOAP or REST, see [service directives](#directives-1)
4477 The `method-header-part` properties can be repeated for a service operation to
4478 declare multiple SOAP Header parts that the service operation requires. You
4479 can use `method-input-header-part` and `method-output-header-part` to
4480 differentiate between request and response messages.
4482 The `method-fault` property can be repeated for a service operation to declare
4483 multiple faults that the service operation may return.
4485 The `method-action` property serves two purposes:
4487 -# To set the SOAPAction header for SOAP protocols, i.e. sets the
4488 definitions/binding/operation/SOAP:operation/\@soapAction.
4490 -# To set the URL query string for endpoints with REST protocols, i.e. sets the
4491 definitions/binding/operation/HTTP:operation/\@location, which specifies
4492 a URL query string (starts with a `?`) to complete the service endpoint URL
4493 or extends the endpoint URL with a local path (starts with a `/`).
4495 Use `method-input-action` and `method-output-action` to differentiate the
4496 SOAPAction between SOAP request and response messages.
4498 You can always override the port endpoint URL and action values at runtime in
4499 the auto-generated `soap_call_prefix__func` service call (C/C++ client side)
4500 and in the auto-generated C++ proxy class service calls. A runtime NULL
4501 endpoint URL and/or action uses the defaults set by these directives.
4503 The `method-mime-type` property serves two purposes:
4505 -# To set the type of MIME/MTOM attachments used with SOAP protocols. Multiple
4506 attachment types can be declared for a SOAP service operation, i.e. adds
4507 definitions/binding/operation/input/MIME:multipartRelated/MIME:part/MIME:content/\@type
4508 for each type specified.
4510 -# To set the MIME type of a REST operation. This replaces XML declared in
4511 WSDL by definitions/binding/operation/(input|output)/MIME:mimeXml with
4512 MIME:content/\@type. Use `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` with REST POST
4513 and PUT protocols to send encoded form data automatically instead of XML.
4514 Only primitive type values can be transmitted with form data, such as
4515 numbers and strings, i.e. only types that are legal to use as
4516 [attributes members](#toxsd9-5).
4518 Use `method-input-mime-type` and `method-output-mime-type` to differentiate the
4519 attachment types between request and response messages.
4521 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4523 Schema directives {#directives-3}
4526 A schema directive is of the form:
4529 //gsoap <prefix> schema <property>: <value>
4532 where `<prefix>` is the XML namespace prefix of a schema. The `<property>` and
4533 `<value>` fields are one of the following:
4536 --------------- | -----
4537 `namespace` | URI of the XSD targetNamespace
4538 `namespace2` | alternate URI pattern for the XSD namespace (i.e. URI is also accepted by the XML parser)
4539 `import` | URI of an imported namespace, as an alternative or in addition to `namespace`, adds `xsd:import` to the generated WSDL and XSD files
4540 `form` | `unqualified` (default) or `qualified` local element and attribute form defaults
4541 `elementForm` | `unqualified` (default) or `qualified` local element form default
4542 `attributeForm` | `unqualified` (default) or `qualified` local attribute form default
4543 `typed` | `no` (default) or `yes` for serializers to add `xsi:type` attributes to XML
4545 To learn more about the local form defaults, see [qualified and unqualified members.](#toxsd9-6)
4547 The `namespace2` URI is a pattern with `*` matching any sequence of characters
4548 and `-` matching any character. This pattern instructs the XML parser and validator
4549 to also accept the URI pattern as a valid namespace for the specified `<prefix>`.
4551 The `typed` property is implicitly `yes` when <b>`soapcpp2 -t`</b> option <b>`-t`</b> is used.
4553 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4555 Schema type directives {#directives-4}
4556 ----------------------
4558 A schema type directive is of the form:
4561 //gsoap <prefix> schema type-<property>: <name> <value>
4562 //gsoap <prefix> schema type-<property>: <name>::<member> <value>
4565 where `<prefix>` is the XML namespace prefix of a schema and `<name>` is an
4566 unqualified name of a C/C++ type, and the optional `<member>` is a class/struct
4567 members or enum constant.
4569 You can describe a type with one of the following:
4571 type property | value
4572 -------------------- | -----
4573 `type-documentation` | text describing the schema type
4574 `type` | an alias for the `type-documentation` property
4576 For example, you can add a description to an enumeration:
4579 //gsoap ns schema type: Vowels The letters A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y
4580 //gsoap ns schema type: Vowels::Y A vowel, sometimes
4581 enum class ns__Vowels : char { A = 'A', E = 'E', I = 'I', O = 'O', U = 'U', Y = 'Y' };
4584 This documented enumeration maps to a simpleType restriction of <i>`xsd:string`</i> in
4585 the soapcpp2-generated schema:
4589 <simpleType name="Vowels">
4591 <documentation>The letters A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y</documentation>
4593 <restriction base="xsd:string">
4594 <enumeration value="A"/>
4595 <enumeration value="E"/>
4596 <enumeration value="I"/>
4597 <enumeration value="O"/>
4598 <enumeration value="U"/>
4599 <enumeration value="Y">
4601 <documentation>A vowel, sometimes</documentation>
4609 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4611 Serialization rules {#rules}
4614 A presentation on XML data bindings is not complete without discussing the
4615 serialization rules and options that put your data in XML on the wire or store
4616 it a file or buffer.
4618 There are several options to choose from to serialize data in XML. The choice
4619 depends on the use of the SOAP protocol or if SOAP is not required. The wsdl2h
4620 tool automates this for you by taking the WSDL transport bindings into account
4621 when generating the service functions in C and C++ that use SOAP or REST.
4623 The gSOAP tools are not limited to SOAP. The tools implement generic XML data
4624 bindings for SOAP, REST, and other uses of XML. So you can read and write XML
4625 using the serializing [operations on classes and structs](#toxsd9-14).
4627 The following sections briefly explain the serialization rules with respect to
4628 the SOAP protocol for XML Web services. A basic understanding of the SOAP
4629 protocol is useful when developing client and server applications that must
4630 interoperate with other SOAP applications.
4632 SOAP/REST Web service client and service operations are represented as
4633 functions in your interface header file with the data binding interface for
4634 soapcpp2. The soapcpp2 tool will translate these function to client-side
4635 service invocation calls and server-side service operation dispatchers.
4637 A discussion of SOAP clients and servers is beyond the scope of this article.
4638 However, the SOAP options discussed here also apply to SOAP client and server
4641 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4643 SOAP document versus rpc style {#doc-rpc}
4644 ------------------------------
4646 The `wsdl:binding/soap:binding/@style` attribute in the <i>`<wsdl:binding>`</i>
4647 section of a WSDL is either "document" or "rpc". The "rpc" style refers to
4648 SOAP RPC (Remote Procedure Call), which is more restrictive than the "document"
4649 style by requiring one XML element in the SOAP Body to act as the procedure
4650 name with XML subelements as its parameters.
4652 For example, the following directives in the interface header file for soapcpp2
4653 declare that `DBupdate` is a SOAP RPC encoding service method:
4656 //gsoap ns service namespace: urn:DB
4657 //gsoap ns service method-protocol: DBupdate SOAP
4658 //gsoap ns service method-style: DBupdate rpc
4659 int ns__DBupdate(...);
4662 The XML payload has a SOAP envelope, optional SOAP header, and a SOAP body with
4663 one element representing the operation with the parameters as subelements:
4668 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
4669 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
4670 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
4671 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
4678 </SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
4682 The "document" style puts no restrictions on the SOAP Body content. However, we
4683 recommend that the first element's tag name in the SOAP Body should be unique
4684 to each type of operation, so that the receiver can dispatch the operation
4685 based on this element's tag name. Alternatively, the HTTP URL path can be used
4686 to specify the operation, or the HTTP action header can be used to dispatch
4687 operations automatically on the server side (soapcpp2 options -a and -A).
4689 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4691 SOAP literal versus encoding {#lit-enc}
4692 ----------------------------
4694 The `wsdl:operation/soap:body/@use` attribute in the <i>`<wsdl:binding>`</i> section
4695 of a WSDL is either "literal" or "encoded". The "encoded" use refers to the
4696 SOAP encoding rules that support id-ref multi-referenced elements to serialize
4699 SOAP encoding is very useful if the data internally forms a graph (including
4700 cycles) and we want the graph to be serialized in XML in a format that ensures
4701 that its structure is preserved. In that case, SOAP 1.2 encoding is the best
4704 SOAP encoding also adds encoding rules for [SOAP arrays](#toxsd10) to serialize
4705 multi-dimensional arrays. The use of XML attributes to exchange XML data in
4706 SOAP encoding is not permitted. The only attributes permitted are the standard
4707 XSD attributes, SOAP encoding attributes (such as for arrays), and id-ref.
4709 For example, the following directives in the interface header file for soapcpp2
4710 declare that `DBupdate` is a SOAP RPC encoding service method:
4713 //gsoap ns service namespace: urn:DB
4714 //gsoap ns service method-protocol: DBupdate SOAP
4715 //gsoap ns service method-style: DBupdate rpc
4716 //gsoap ns service method-encoding: DBupdate encoded
4717 int ns__DBupdate(...);
4720 The XML payload has a SOAP envelope, optional SOAP header, and a SOAP body with
4721 an encodingStyle attribute for SOAP 1.1 encoding and an element representing the
4722 operation with parameters that are SOAP 1.1 encoded:
4727 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
4728 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
4729 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
4730 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
4732 <SOAP-ENV:Body SOAP-ENV:encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/">
4734 <records SOAP-ENC:arrayType="ns:record[3]">
4737 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
4741 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
4745 <SSN>2345678901</SSN>
4749 <id id="_1" xsi:type="xsd:string">Joe</id>
4751 </SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
4755 In the XML fragment shown above the name "Joe" is shared by two records and the
4756 string is referenced by SOAP 1.1 href and id attributes.
4758 While the soapcpp-generated serializers only introduce multi-referenced
4759 elements in the payload when they are actually multi-referenced in the data
4760 graph, other SOAP applications may render multi-referenced elements more
4761 aggressively. The example could also be rendered as:
4766 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
4767 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
4768 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
4769 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
4771 <SOAP-ENV:Body SOAP-ENV:encodingStyle="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/">
4773 <records SOAP-ENC:arrayType="ns:record[3]">
4779 <id id="id1" xsi:type="ns:record">
4781 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
4783 <id id="id2" xsi:type="ns:record">
4785 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
4787 <id id="id3" xsi:type="ns:record">
4789 <SSN>2345678901</SSN>
4791 <id id="id4" xsi:type="xsd:string">Joe</id>
4792 <id id="id5" xsi:type="xsd:string">Jane</id>
4794 </SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
4798 SOAP 1.2 encoding is cleaner and produces more accurate XML encodings of data
4799 graphs by setting the id attribute on the element that is referenced:
4804 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope"
4805 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-encoding"
4806 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
4807 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
4810 <ns:DBupdate SOAP-ENV:encodingStyle="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-encoding">
4811 <records SOAP-ENC:itemType="ns:record" SOAP-ENC:arraySize="3">
4813 <name SOAP-ENC:id="_1">Joe</name>
4814 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
4818 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
4821 <name SOAP-ENC:ref="_1"/>
4822 <SSN>2345678901</SSN>
4827 </SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
4831 @note Some SOAP 1.2 applications consider the namespace `SOAP-ENC` of
4832 <i>`SOAP-ENC:id`</i> and <i>`SOAP-ENC:ref`</i> optional. With gSOAP, the SOAP
4833 1.2 encoding serialization follows the 2007 standard, while accepting
4834 unqualified id and ref attributes.
4836 To remove all rendered id-ref multi-referenced elements, use the
4837 `SOAP_XML_TREE` flag to initialize the `soap` context.
4839 Some XSD validation rules are turned off with SOAP encoding, because of the
4840 presence of additional attributes, such as id and ref/href, SOAP arrays with
4841 arbitrary element tags for array elements, and the occurrence of additional
4842 multi-ref elements in the SOAP 1.1 Body.
4844 The use of "literal" puts no restrictions on the XML in the SOAP Body. Full
4845 XSD validation is possible, which can be enabled with the `SOAP_XML_STRICT`
4846 flag to initialize the `soap` context. However, data graphs will be
4847 serialized as trees and cycles in the data will be cut from the XML rendition.
4849 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4851 SOAP 1.1 versus SOAP 1.2 {#soap}
4852 ------------------------
4854 There are two SOAP protocol versions: 1.1 and 1.2. The gSOAP tools can switch
4855 between the two versions seamlessly. You can declare the default SOAP version
4856 for a service operation as follows:
4859 //gsoap ns service method-protocol: DBupdate SOAP1.2
4862 Use `SOAP` (SOAP 1.1), `SOAP1.1`, `SOAP1.2`, and `HTTP` to switch SOAP versions
4863 or enable REST methods with HTTP POST. See [service directives](#directives-1)
4864 and [XML serialization](#non-soap).
4866 The soapcpp2 tool auto-generates client and server code. At the client side,
4867 this operation sends data with SOAP 1.2 but accepts responses also in SOAP 1.1.
4868 At the server side, this operation accepts requests in SOAP 1.1 and 1.2 and
4869 will return responses in the same SOAP version.
4871 As we discussed in the previous section, the SOAP 1.2 protocol has a cleaner
4872 multi-referenced element serialization format that greatly enhances the
4873 accuracy of data graph serialization with SOAP RPC encoding and is therefore
4876 The SOAP 1.2 protocol default can also be set by importing and loading
4877 <i>`gsoap/import/soap12.h`</i>:
4883 Finally, the soapcpp2 tool has options to force SOAP 1.1, SOAP 1.2, or remove
4884 SOAP altogether with <b>`soapcpp2 -1`</b> (SOAP 1.1), <b>`soapcpp2 -2`</b>
4885 (SOAP 1.2) and <b>`soapcpp2 -0`</b> (plain XML, no SOAP).
4887 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4889 XML serialization {#non-soap}
4892 You can serialize data to XML that is stored on the heap, on the stack (locals), and
4893 static data as long as the serializable (i.e. non-transient) values are
4894 properly initialized and pointers in the data structures are either NULL or
4895 point to valid structures.
4897 When XML is deserialized into data, the data is put on the heap and managed by the
4898 `::soap` context, see also [memory management](#memory).
4900 You can read and write XML directly to a file or stream with the serializing
4901 [operations on classes and structs](#toxsd9-14).
4903 To define and use XML Web service client and service operations, we can declare
4904 these operations in your interface header file with the data binding interface
4905 for soapcpp2 as functions. The function are translated by soapcpp2 to
4906 client-side service invocation calls and server-side service operation
4909 The REST operations POST, GET, and PUT are declared with `//gsoap` directives
4910 in the interface header file for soapcpp2. For example, a REST HTTP POST
4911 operation is declared as follows:
4914 //gsoap ns service namespace: urn:DB
4915 //gsoap ns service method-protocol: DBupdate POST
4916 int ns__DBupdate(...);
4919 There are no SOAP Envelope and SOAP Body elements in the payload for
4920 `DBupdate`. Also the XML serialization rules are identical to SOAP
4921 document/literal, meaning no SOAP RPC encoding XML structures are implicitly
4922 used. The XML payload only has the operation name as an element with its
4923 parameters serialized as subelements:
4927 <ns:DBupdate xmln:ns="urn:DB" ...>
4933 To force id-ref serialization with REST similar to SOAP 1.2 multi-reference
4934 encoding, use the `SOAP_XML_GRAPH` flag to initialize the `soap` context.
4935 The XML serialization includes id and ref attributes for multi-referenced
4936 elements as follows:
4940 <ns:DBupdate xmln:ns="urn:DB" ...>
4943 <name id="_1">Joe</name>
4944 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
4948 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
4952 <SSN>2345678901</SSN>
4959 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4961 Input and output {#io}
4964 Reading and writing XML from/to files, streams and string buffers is done via
4965 the managing `soap` context by setting one of the following context variables that
4966 control IO sources and sinks:
4969 soap->recvfd = fd; // an int file descriptor to read from (0 by default)
4970 soap->sendfd = fd; // an int file descriptor to write to (1 by default)
4971 soap->is = &is; // C++ only: a std::istream is object to read from
4972 soap->os = &os; // C++ only: a std::ostream os object to write to
4973 soap->is = cs; // C only: a const char* string to read from (soap->is will advance)
4974 soap->os = &cs; // C only: pointer to a const char*, will be set to point to the string output
4977 Normally, all of these context variables are NULL, which is required to send and
4978 receive data over sockets by gSOAP client and server applications. Therefore,
4979 if you set any of these context variables in a client or server application
4980 then you should reset them to NULL to ensure that socket communications are not
4983 @note The use of `soap::is` and `soap::os` in C requires gSOAP 2.8.28 or greater.
4985 In the following sections, we present more details on how to read and write to
4986 files and streams, and use string buffers as sources and sinks for XML data.
4988 In addition, you can set IO callback functions to handle IO at a lower level.
4989 For more details on defining your own callback functions, see the
4990 [gSOAP user guide.](../../guide/html/index.html)
4992 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
4994 Reading and writing from/to files and streams {#io1}
4995 ---------------------------------------------
4997 The default IO is standard input and output. Other sources and sinks (those
4998 listed above) will be used until you (re)set them. For example with file-based
5002 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "r");
5005 soap->recvfd = fileno(fp); // get file descriptor of file to read from
5006 if (soap_read_ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5007 ... // handle IO error
5009 soap->recvfd = 0; // read from stdin, or -1 to block reading
5012 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "w");
5015 soap->sendfd = fileno(fp); // get file descriptor of file to write to
5016 if (soap_write_ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5017 ... // handle IO error
5019 soap->sendfd = 1; // write to stdout, or -1 to block writing
5023 Similar code with streams in C++:
5029 fs.open("record.xml", std::ios::in);
5033 if (soap_read__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5034 ... // handle IO error
5039 fs.open("record.xml", std::ios::out);
5043 if (soap_write__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5044 ... // handle IO error
5050 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5052 Reading and writing from/to string buffers {#io2}
5053 ------------------------------------------
5055 For C++ we recommend to use `std::stringstream` objects from the
5056 <i>`sstream`</i> C++ library as illustrated in the following example:
5061 std::stringstream ss;
5062 ss.str("..."); // XML to parse
5064 if (soap_read__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5065 ... // handle IO error
5069 if (soap_write__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5070 ... // handle IO error
5072 std::string s = ss.str(); // string with XML
5075 For C we can use `soap::is` and `soap::os` to point to strings of XML content
5076 as follows (this requires gSOAP 2.8.28 or later):
5079 soap->is = "..."; // XML to parse
5080 if (soap_read__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5081 ... // handle IO error
5084 const char *cs = NULL;
5086 if (soap_write__ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5087 ... // handle IO error
5089 ... = cs; // string with XML (do not free(cs): managed by the context and freed with soap_end())
5092 The type of `soap::os` is a pointer to a `const char*` string. The pointer is
5093 set by the managing `soap` context to point to the XML data that is stored on
5094 the context-managed heap.
5096 For earlier gSOAP versions we recommend to use IO callbacks `soap::frecv` and
5097 `soap::fsend`, see the [gSOAP user guide.](../../guide/html/index.html).
5099 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5101 Memory management {#memory}
5104 Memory management with the `soap` context enables us to allocate data in
5105 context-managed heap space that can be collectively deleted. All deserialized
5106 data is placed on the context-managed heap by the `soap` context of the engine.
5108 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5110 Memory management in C {#memory1}
5111 ----------------------
5113 When working with gSOAP in C (i.e. using <b>`wsdl2h -c`</b> option <b>`-c`</b>
5114 or <b>`soapcpp2 -c`</b> option <b>`-c`</b>), data is allocated on the managed heap with:
5116 - `void *soap_malloc(struct soap*, size_t len)`.
5118 You can also make shallow copies of data with `soap_memdup` that uses
5119 `soap_malloc` and a safe version of `memcpy` to copy a chunk of data `src` with
5120 length `len` to the context-managed heap:
5122 - `void * soap_memdup(struct soap*, const void *src, size_t len)`
5124 This function returns a pointer to the copy. This function requires gSOAP
5127 In gSOAP 2.8.35 and greater versions, you can use an auto-generated function to
5128 allocate and initialize data of type `T` on the managed heap:
5130 - `T * soap_new_T(struct soap*, int n)`
5132 This function returns an array of length `n` of type `T` data that is default
5133 initialized (by internally calling `soap_malloc(soap, n * sizeof(T))` and then
5134 `soap_default_T(soap, T*)` on each array value). Use a negative value or `n=1`
5135 to allocate and initialize a single value.
5137 The `soap_malloc` function is a wrapper around `malloc`, but which also permits
5138 the `soap` context to track all heap allocations for collective deletion
5139 with `soap_end(soap)`:
5145 struct soap *soap = soap_new(); // new context
5147 struct ns__record *record = (struct ns__record*)soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(struct ns__record));
5148 soap_default_ns__record(soap, record); // auto-generated struct initializer
5150 soap_destroy(soap); // only for C++, see section on C++ below
5151 soap_end(soap); // delete record and all other heap allocations
5152 soap_free(soap); // delete context
5155 All data on the managed heap is mass-deleted with `soap_end(soap)` which must
5156 be called before `soap_done(soap)` or `soap_free(soap)`, which end the use of
5157 the `soap` context and free the context, respectively. Use
5158 `soap_free(soap)` only when the context is allocated with `soap_new()`. Use
5159 `soap_done(soap)` only when the context is stack allocated (so cannot be
5160 deleted from the heap).
5162 The managed heap is checked for memory leaks at run time when the source code
5163 is compiled with option <b>`-DDEBUG`</b>.
5165 The soapcpp2 auto-generated deserializers in C use `soap_malloc` to allocate
5166 and populate deserialized structures, which are managed by the context for
5167 collective deletion.
5169 To make `char*` and `wchar_t*` string copies to the context-managed heap, we
5170 can use the functions:
5172 - `char *soap_strdup(struct soap*, const char *str)` and
5174 - `wchar_t *soap_wstrdup(struct soap*, const wchar_t *wstr)`.
5176 If your C compiler supports `typeof` then you can use the following macro to
5177 simplify the managed heap allocation and initialization of primitive values:
5180 #define soap_assign(soap, lhs, rhs) (*(lhs = (typeof(lhs))soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(*lhs))) = rhs)
5183 Pointers to primitive values are often used for optional members. For example,
5184 assume we have the following struct:
5189 const char *name 1; // required (minOccurs=1)
5190 uint64_t *SSN; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
5191 struct ns__record *spouse; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
5195 Use `soap_assign` to create a SSN value on the managed heap:
5198 struct soap *soap = soap_new(); // new context
5200 struct ns__record *record = (struct ns__record*)soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(struct ns__record));
5201 soap_default_ns__record(soap, record);
5202 record->name = soap_strdup(soap, "Joe");
5203 soap_assign(soap, record->SSN, 1234567890UL);
5205 soap_end(soap); // delete managed soap_malloc'ed heap data
5206 soap_free(soap); // delete context
5209 Without the `soap_assign` macro, you will need two lines of code, one to
5210 allocate and one to assign (you should also use this if your system can run out
5214 assert((record->SSN = (uint64_t*)soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(utint64_t))) != NULL);
5215 *record->SSN = 1234567890UL;
5218 The serializer can serialize any heap, stack, or static allocated data. So we
5219 can also create a new record as follows:
5222 struct soap *soap = soap_new(); // new context
5224 struct ns__record *record = (struct ns__record*)soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(struct ns__record));
5225 static uint64_t SSN = 1234567890UL;
5226 soap_default_ns__record(soap, record);
5227 record->name = "Joe";
5228 record->SSN = &SSN; // safe to use static values: the value of record->SSN is never changed
5230 soap_end(soap); // delete managed soap_malloc'ed heap data
5231 soap_free(soap); // delete context
5234 Use the soapcpp2 auto-generated `soap_dup_T` functions to duplicate data into
5235 another `soap` context (this requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ec`</b> option <b>`-Ec`</b> to
5236 generate), here shown for C with the second argument `dst` NULL because we want
5237 to allocate a new managed structure:
5240 struct soap *other_soap = soap_new(); // another context
5241 struct ns__record *other_record = soap_dup_ns__record(other_soap, NULL, record);
5243 soap_destroy(other_soap); // only for C++, see section on C++ below
5244 soap_end(other_soap); // delete other_record and all of its deep data
5245 soap_free(other_soap); // delete context
5248 The only reason to use another `soap` context and not to use the primary `soap`
5249 context is when the primary context must be destroyed together with all of the
5250 objects it manages while some of the objects must be kept alive. If the
5251 objects that are kept alive contain deep cycles then this is the only option we
5252 have, because deep copy with a managing `soap` context detects and preserves
5253 these cycles unless the `SOAP_XML_TREE` flag is used with the `soap` context:
5256 struct soap *other_soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_TREE); // another context
5257 struct ns__record *other_record = soap_dup_ns__record(other_soap, NULL, record);
5260 The resulting deep copy will be a full copy of the source data structure as a
5261 tree without co-referenced data (i.e. no digraph) and without cycles. Cycles
5262 are pruned and (one of the) pointers that forms a cycle is repaced by NULL.
5264 You can also deep copy into unmanaged space and use the auto-generated
5265 `soap_del_T()` function (requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ed`</b> option <b>`-Ed`</b> to generate) to delete
5269 struct ns__record *other_record = soap_dup_ns__record(NULL, NULL, record);
5271 soap_del_ns__record(other_record); // deep delete record data members
5272 free(other_record); // delete the record
5275 But you should not do this for any data that has deep cycles in its runtime
5276 data structure. Cycles in the data structure will lead to non-termination when
5277 making unmanaged deep copies. Consider for example:
5282 const char *name 1; // required (minOccurs=1)
5283 uint64_t SSN; // required (non-pointer means minOccurs=1)
5284 struct ns__record *spouse; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
5288 The code to populate a structure with a mutual spouse relationship:
5291 struct soap *soap = soap_new();
5293 struct ns__record pers1, pers2;
5294 soap_default_ns__record(soap, &pers1);
5295 soap_default_ns__record(soap, &pers2);
5296 pers1.name = "Joe"; // OK to serialize static data
5297 pers1.SSN = 1234567890;
5298 pers1.spouse = &pers2;
5299 pers2.name = soap_strdup(soap, "Jane"); // allocates and copies a string
5300 pers2.SSN = 1987654320;
5301 pers2.spouse = &pers1;
5303 struct ns__record *pers3 = soap_dup_ns__record(NULL, NULL, &pers1); // BAD
5304 struct ns__record *pers4 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5305 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE);
5306 struct ns__record *pers5 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5309 The bad case is where there is no context used in the first argument. The deep
5310 copy functions use a context to keep track of co-referenced data nodes and
5311 cycles in the data structure copies, to copy co-referenced nodes just once.
5312 Co-references in a data structure are formed by pointers and smart pointers
5313 such as `std::shared_ptr`, such that at least two pointers point to the same
5316 The serializer can serialize any heap, stack, or static allocated data, such as
5317 in the code shown above. So we can serialize the stack-allocated `pers1`
5321 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "w");
5324 soap->sendfd = fileno(fp); // file descriptor to write to
5325 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_GRAPH); // support id-ref w/o requiring SOAP
5326 soap_clr_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE); // if set, clear
5327 soap_write_ns__record(soap, &pers1);
5329 soap->sendfd = -1; // block further writing
5333 which produces an XML document record.xml that is similar to:
5337 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" id="Joe">
5339 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
5342 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
5343 <spouse ref="#Joe"/>
5349 Deserialization of an XML document with a SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoded id-ref graph
5350 leads to the same non-termination problem when we later try to copy the data
5351 into unmanaged memory heap space:
5354 struct soap *soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_GRAPH); // support id-ref w/o SOAP
5356 struct ns__record pers1;
5357 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "r");
5360 soap->recvfd = fileno(fp);
5361 if (soap_read_ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5362 ... // handle IO error
5364 soap->recvfd = -1; // blocks further reading
5367 struct ns__record *pers3 = soap_dup_ns__record(NULL, NULL, &pers1); // BAD
5368 struct ns__record *pers4 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5369 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE);
5370 struct ns__record *pers5 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5373 Copying data with `soap_dup_T(soap)` into managed heap memory space is always
5374 safe. Copying into unmanaged heap memory space requires diligence. But
5375 deleting unmanaged data is easy with `soap_del_T()`.
5377 You can also use `soap_del_T()` to delete structures that you created in C, but
5378 only if these structures are created with `malloc` and do NOT contain pointers
5379 to stack and static data.
5381 You can unlink one or more allocated objects from the managed heap to allow the
5382 object to live after `soap_end(soap)` by using:
5384 - `void soap_unlink(struct soap *soap, void *ptr)`
5386 The unlinked heap-allocated data pointed to by `ptr` can be accessed after
5387 `soap_end(soap)`. Do not forget to free the data with `free(ptr)`. Be aware
5388 that `soap_unlink(soap, ptr)` does not perform a deep unlinkage. If `ptr` is a
5389 struct, pointer members will become invalid when pointing to objects on the
5390 managed heap. Use `soap_unlink(soap, ptr->member)` to unlink `member` as well.
5392 Finally, when data is allocated in managed memory heap space, either explicitly
5393 with the allocation functions shown above or by the soapcpp2-generated
5394 deserializers, you can delegate the management and deletion of this data to
5395 another `soap` context. That context will be responsible to delete the data
5396 with `soap_end(soap)` later:
5398 - `void delegate_deletion(struct soap *soap_from, struct soap *soap_to)`
5400 This allows the `soap_from` context to be deleted with `soap_free(soap_from)`
5401 (assuming it is allocated with `soap_new()`, use `soap_done(soap_from)` when
5402 `soap_from` is stack-allocated) while the managed data remains intact. You
5403 can use this function any time, to delegate management and deletion to another
5404 context `soap_to` and then continue with the current context. You can also use
5405 different source `soap_from` contexts to delegate management and deletion to
5406 the other `soap_to` context. To mass delete all managed data, use
5407 `soap_end(soap_to)`.
5409 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5411 Memory management in C++ {#memory2}
5412 ------------------------
5414 When working with gSOAP in C++, the engine allocates data on a managed heap
5415 using `soap_new_T(soap)` to allocate a type with type name `T`. Managed heap
5416 allocation is tracked by the `soap` context for collective deletion with
5417 `soap_destroy(soap)` for structs, classes, and templates and with
5418 `soap_end(soap)` for everything else.
5420 You should only use `soap_malloc(struct soap*, size_t len)` to allocate
5421 primitive types, but `soap_new_T` is preferred. The auto-generated `T *
5422 soap_new_T(struct soap*)` returns data allocated on the managed heap for type
5423 `T`. The data is mass-deleted with `soap_destroy(soap)` followed by
5426 The `soap_new_T` functions return NULL when allocation fails. C++ exceptions
5427 are never raised by the engine and serializers when data is allocated, unless
5428 `SOAP_NOTHROW` (set to `(std::nothrow)`) is redefined to permit `new` to throw
5431 There are four variations of `soap_new_T` functions to allocate data of type
5432 `T` that soapcpp2 auto-generates:
5434 - `T * soap_new_T(struct soap*)` returns a new instance of `T` that is default
5435 initialized. For classes, initialization is internally performed using the
5436 soapcpp2 auto-generated `void T::soap_default(struct soap*)` method of the
5437 class, but ONLY IF the soapcpp2 auto-generated default constructor is used
5438 that invokes `soap_default()` and was not replaced by a user-defined default
5441 - `T * soap_new_T(struct soap*, int n)` returns an array of `n` new instances of
5442 `T`. The instances in the array are default initialized as described above.
5444 - `T * soap_new_req_T(struct soap*, ...)` (structs and classes only) returns a
5445 new instance of `T` and sets the required data members to the values
5446 specified in `...`. The required data members are those with nonzero
5447 minOccurs, see the subsections on
5448 [(smart) pointer members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-8) and
5449 [container and array members and their occurrence constraints](#toxsd9-9).
5451 - `T * soap_new_set_T(struct soap*, ...)` (structs and classes only) returns a
5452 new instance of `T` and sets the public/serializable data members to the values
5455 The above functions can be invoked with a NULL `soap` context, but you are then
5456 responsible to use `delete T` to remove this instance from the unmanaged heap.
5458 For example, to allocate a managed `std::string` you can use:
5461 std::string *s = soap_new_std__string(soap);
5464 Primitive types and arrays of these are allocated with `soap_malloc`
5465 (`soap_new_T` calls `soap_malloc` for primitive type `T`). All primitive types
5466 (i.e. no classes, structs, class templates, containers, and smart pointers) are
5467 allocated with `soap_malloc` for reasons of efficiency.
5469 You can use a C++ template to simplify the managed allocation and initialization
5470 of primitive values as follows (this is for primitive types only):
5474 T * soap_make(struct soap *soap, T val) throw (std::bad_alloc)
5476 T *p = (T*)soap_malloc(soap, sizeof(T));
5478 throw std::bad_alloc();
5484 For example, assuming we have the following class:
5489 std::string name; // required (non-pointer means minOccurs=1)
5490 uint64_t *SSN; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
5491 ns__record *spouse; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=0)
5495 You can instantiate a record by using the auto-generated
5496 `soap_new_set_ns__record` and use `soap_make` to create a SSN value on the
5497 managed heap as follows:
5500 soap *soap = soap_new(); // new context
5502 ns__record *record = soap_new_set_ns__record(
5505 soap_make<uint64_t>(soap, 1234567890UL),
5508 soap_destroy(soap); // delete record and all other managed instances
5509 soap_end(soap); // delete managed soap_malloc'ed heap data
5510 soap_free(soap); // delete context
5513 All data on the managed heap is mass-deleted with `soap_end(soap)` which must
5514 be called before `soap_done(soap)` or `soap_free(soap)`, which end the use of
5515 the `soap` context and free the context, respectively. Use
5516 `soap_free(soap)` only when the context is allocated with `soap_new()`. Use
5517 `soap_done(soap)` only when the context is stack allocated (so cannot be
5518 deleted from the heap).
5520 The managed heap is checked for memory leaks at run time when the source code
5521 is compiled with option <b>`-DDEBUG`</b>.
5523 However, the serializer can serialize any heap, stack, or static allocated
5524 data. So we can also create a new record as follows:
5527 uint64_t SSN = 1234567890UL;
5528 ns__record *record = soap_new_set_ns__record(soap, "Joe", &SSN, NULL);
5531 which will be fine to serialize this record as long as the local `SSN`
5532 stack-allocated value remains in scope when invoking the serializer and/or
5533 using `record`. It does not matter if `soap_destroy` and `soap_end` are called
5534 beyond the scope of `SSN`.
5536 To facilitate class methods to access the managing context, we can add a soap
5537 context pointer to a class/struct:
5543 void create_more(); // needs a context to create more internal data
5545 struct soap *soap; // the context that manages this instance, or NULL
5549 The `soap` context pointer member of the class is set when invoking
5550 `soap_new_T` (and similar) with a non-NULL context argument that will be
5551 assigned to the `soap` member of the class.
5553 You can also use a template when an array of pointers to values is required.
5554 To create an array of pointers to values, define the following template:
5558 T **soap_make_array(struct soap *soap, T* array, int n) throw (std::bad_alloc)
5560 T **p = (T**)soap_malloc(soap, n * sizeof(T*));
5562 throw std::bad_alloc();
5563 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
5569 The `array` parameter is a pointer to an array of `n` values. The template
5570 returns an array of `n` pointers that point to the values in that array:
5573 // create an array of 100 pointers to 100 records
5575 ns__record **precords = soap_make_array(soap, soap_new_ns__record(soap, n), n);
5576 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
5578 precords[i]->name = "...";
5579 precords[i]->SSN = soap_make<uint64_t>(1234567890UL + i);
5583 Note that `soap_new_ns__record(soap, n)` returns a pointer to an array of `n`
5584 records, which is then used to create an array of `n` pointers to these records.
5586 Use the soapcpp2 auto-generated `soap_dup_T` functions to duplicate data into
5587 another `soap` context (this requires <b>`soapcpp2 -Ec`</b> option <b>`-Ec`</b> to generate), here shown
5588 for C++ with the second argument `dst` NULL to allocate a new managed object:
5591 soap *other_soap = soap_new(); // another context
5592 ns__record *other_record = soap_dup_ns__record(other_soap, NULL, record);
5594 soap_destroy(other_soap); // delete record and other managed instances
5595 soap_end(other_soap); // delete other data (the SSNs on the heap)
5596 soap_free(other_soap); // delete context
5599 To duplicate base and derived instances when a base class pointer or reference
5600 is provided, use the auto-generated method `T * T::soap_dup(struct soap*)`:
5603 soap *other_soap = soap_new(); // another context
5604 ns__record *other_record = record->soap_dup(other_soap);
5606 soap_destroy(other_soap); // delete record and other managed instances
5607 soap_end(other_soap); // delete other data (the SSNs on the heap)
5608 soap_free(other_soap); // delete context
5611 The only reason to use another context and not to use the primary `soap`
5612 context is when the primary context must be destroyed together with all of the
5613 objects it manages while some of the objects must be kept alive. If the
5614 objects that are kept alive contain deep cycles then this is the only option we
5615 have, because deep copy with a managing `soap` context detects and preserves
5616 these cycles unless the `SOAP_XML_TREE` flag is used with the context:
5619 soap *other_soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_TREE); // another context
5620 ns__record *other_record = record->soap_dup(other_soap); // deep tree copy
5623 The resulting deep copy will be a full copy of the source data structure as a
5624 tree without co-referenced data (i.e. no digraph) and without cycles. Cycles
5625 are pruned and (one of the) pointers that forms a cycle is repaced by NULL.
5627 You can also deep copy into unmanaged space and use the auto-generated
5628 `soap_del_T()` function or the `T::soap_del()` method (requires
5629 <b>`soapcpp2 -Ec`</b> option <b>`-Ec`</b> to generate) to delete it later,
5630 but we should not do this for any data that has deep cycles in its runtime data
5634 ns__record *other_record = record->soap_dup(NULL);
5636 other_record->soap_del(); // deep delete record data members
5637 delete other_record; // delete the record
5640 Cycles in the data structure will lead to non-termination when making unmanaged
5641 deep copies. Consider for example:
5646 const char *name 1; // required (minOccurs=1)
5647 uint64_t SSN; // required (non-pointer means minOccurs=1)
5648 ns__record *spouse; // optional (pointer means minOccurs=1)
5652 The code to populate a structure with a mutual spouse relationship:
5655 soap *soap = soap_new();
5657 ns__record pers1, pers2;
5659 pers1.SSN = 1234567890;
5660 pers1.spouse = &pers2;
5661 pers2.name = "Jane";
5662 pers2.SSN = 1987654320;
5663 pers2.spouse = &pers1;
5665 ns__record *pers3 = soap_dup_ns__record(NULL, NULL, &pers1); // BAD
5666 ns__record *pers4 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5667 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE);
5668 ns__record *pers5 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5671 The serializer can serialize any heap, stack, or static allocated data, such as
5672 shown in the code shown above. So we can serialize the stack-allocated `pers1`
5676 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "w");
5679 soap->sendfd = fileno(fp); // file descriptor to write to
5680 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_GRAPH); // support id-ref w/o requiring SOAP
5681 soap_clr_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE); // if set, clear
5682 if (soap_write_ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5683 ... // handle IO error
5685 soap->sendfd = -1; // block further writing
5689 which produces an XML document record.xml that is similar to:
5693 <ns:record xmlns:ns="urn:types" id="Joe">
5695 <SSN>1234567890</SSN>
5698 <SSN>1987654320</SSN>
5699 <spouse ref="#Joe"/>
5705 Deserialization of an XML document with a SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoded id-ref graph
5706 leads to the same non-termination problem when we later try to copy the data
5707 into unmanaged space:
5710 soap *soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_GRAPH); // support id-ref w/o SOAP
5713 FILE *fp = fopen("record.xml", "r");
5716 soap->recvfd = fileno(fp); // file descriptor to read from
5717 if (soap_read_ns__record(soap, &pers1))
5718 ... // handle IO error
5720 soap->recvfd = -1; // block further reading
5723 ns__record *pers3 = soap_dup_ns__record(NULL, NULL, &pers1); // BAD
5724 ns__record *pers4 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5725 soap_set_mode(soap, SOAP_XML_TREE);
5726 ns__record *pers5 = soap_dup_ns__record(soap, NULL, &pers1); // OK
5729 Copying data with `soap_dup_T(soap)` into managed space is always safe. Copying
5730 into unmanaged space requires diligence. But deleting unmanaged data is easy
5731 with `soap_del_T()`.
5733 You can also use `soap_del_T()` to delete structures in C++, but only if these
5734 structures are created with `new` (and `new []` for arrays when applicable) for
5735 classes, structs, and class templates and with `malloc` for anything else, and
5736 the structures do NOT contain pointers to stack and static data.
5738 You can unlink one or more allocated objects from the managed heap to allow the
5739 object to live after `soap_destroy(soap)` and `soap_end(soap)` by using:
5741 - `void soap_unlink(struct soap *soap, void *ptr)`
5743 The unlinked heap-allocated data pointed to by `ptr` can be accessed after
5744 `soap_destroy(soap)` and `soap_end(soap)`. Do not forget to free the data with
5745 `delete ptr` (C++ class instance only) or with `free(ptr)` (non-class data).
5746 Be aware that `soap_unlink(soap, ptr)` does not perform a deep unlinkage. If
5747 `ptr` is a struct or class, pointer members will become invalid when pointing
5748 to objects on the managed heap. Use `soap_unlink(soap, ptr->member)` to unlink
5751 Finally, when data is allocated in managed memory heap space, either explicitly
5752 with the allocation functions shown above or by the soapcpp2-generated
5753 deserializers, you can delegate the management and deletion of this data to
5754 another `soap` context. That context will be responsible to delete the data
5755 with `soap_destroy(soap)` and `soap_end(soap)` later:
5757 - `void delegate_deletion(struct soap *soap_from, struct soap *soap_to)`
5759 This allows the `soap_from` context to be deleted with `soap_free(soap_from)`
5760 (assuming it is allocated with `soap_new()`, use `soap_done(soap_from)` when
5761 `soap_from` is stack-allocated) while the managed data remains intact. You
5762 can use this function any time, to delegate management and deletion to another
5763 context `soap_to` and then continue with the current context. You can also use
5764 different source `soap_from` contexts to delegate management and deletion to
5765 the other `soap_to` context. To mass delete all managed data, use
5766 `soap_destroy(soap_to)` followed by `soap_end(soap_to)`.
5768 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5770 Context flags to initialize the soap struct {#flags}
5771 ===========================================
5773 There are several `soap` context initialization flags and context mode flags to
5774 control XML serialization at runtime. The flags are set with `soap_new1()` to
5775 allocate and initialize a new context:
5778 struct soap *soap = soap_new1(flag1 | flag2 | ... | flagn);
5780 soap_destroy(soap); // delete objects
5781 soap_end(soap); // delete other data and temp data
5782 soap_free(soap); // free context
5785 and with `soap_init1()` for stack-allocated contexts:
5789 soap_init1(&soap, flag1 | flag2 | ... | flagn);
5791 soap_destroy(&soap); // delete objects
5792 soap_end(&soap); // delete other data and temp data
5793 soap_done(&soap); // clear context
5796 where `flag1`, `flag2`, ..., `flagn` is one of:
5798 - `SOAP_C_UTFSTRING`: enables all `std::string` and `char*` strings to
5799 contain UTF-8 content. This option is recommended.
5801 - `SOAP_C_NILSTRING`: treat empty strings as if they were NULL pointers, i.e.
5802 omits elements and attributes when empty.
5804 - `SOAP_XML_STRICT`: strictly validates XML while deserializing. Should not be
5805 used together with SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoding style of messaging. Use
5806 <b>`soapcpp2 -s`</b> option <b>`-s`</b> to hard code `SOAP_XML_STRICT` in the
5807 generated serializers. Not recommended with SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoding style
5810 - `SOAP_XML_INDENT`: produces indented XML.
5812 - `SOAP_XML_CANONICAL`: c14n canonocalization, removes unused `xmlns` bindings
5813 and adds them to appropriate places by applying c14n normalization rules.
5814 Should not be used together with SOAP 1.1/1.2 encoding style messaging.
5816 - `SOAP_XML_TREE`: write tree XML without id-ref, while pruning data structure
5817 cycles to prevent nontermination of the serializer for cyclic structures.
5819 - `SOAP_XML_GRAPH`: write graph (digraph and cyclic graphs with shared pointers
5820 to objects) using id-ref attributes. That is, XML with SOAP multi-ref
5821 encoded id-ref elements. This is a structure-preserving serialization format,
5822 because co-referenced data and also cyclic relations are accurately represented.
5824 - `SOAP_XML_DEFAULTNS`: uses xmlns default namespace declarations, assuming
5825 that the schema attribute form is "qualified" by default (be warned if it is
5826 not, since attributes in the null namespace will get bound to namespaces!).
5828 - `SOAP_XML_NIL`: emit empty element with <i>`xsi:nil`</i> for all NULL pointers
5831 - `SOAP_XML_IGNORENS`: the XML parser ignores XML namespaces, i.e. element and
5832 attribute tag names match independent of their namespace.
5834 - `SOAP_XML_NOTYPE`: removes all <i>`xsi:type`</i> attribuation. This option is usually
5835 not needed unless the receiver rejects all <i>`xsi:type`</i> attributes. This option
5836 may affect the quality of the deserializer, which relies on <i>`xsi:type`</i>
5837 attributes to distinguish base class instances from derived class instances
5838 transported in the XML payloads.
5840 - `SOAP_IO_CHUNK`: to enable HTTP chunked transfers.
5842 - `SOAP_IO_STORE`: full buffering of outbound messages.
5844 - `SOAP_ENC_ZLIB`: compress messages, requires compiling with option <b>`-DWITH_GZIP`</b> and
5845 linking with zlib using option <b>`-lz`</b>.
5847 - `SOAP_ENC_MIME`: enable MIME attachments, see
5848 [DIME/MIME/MTOM attachment binary types](#toxsd10-3).
5850 - `SOAP_ENC_MTOM`: enable MTOM attachments, see
5851 [DIME/MIME/MTOM attachment binary types](#toxsd10-3).
5853 @note C++ Web service proxy and service classes have their own `soap` context, either
5854 as a base class (with <b>`soapcpp2 -i`</b> option <b>`-i`</b>) or as a pointer member `soap` that points to
5855 a context (with <b>`soapcpp2 -j`</b> option <b>`-j`</b>). These contexts are allocated when the proxy or
5856 service is instantiated with context flags that are passed to the constructor.
5858 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5860 Context parameter settings {#params}
5861 ==========================
5863 After allocation and initializtion of a `soap` context, several context
5864 parameters can be set (some parameters may require 2.8.31 or greater):
5866 - `unsigned int soap::maxlevel` is the maximum XML nesting depth levels that
5867 the parser permits. Default initialized to `SOAP_MAXLEVEL` (10000), which is
5868 a redefinable macro in <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.h`</i>. Set `soap::maxlevel` to a
5869 lower value to restrict XML parsing nesting depth.
5871 - `long soap::maxlength` is the maximum string content length if not already
5872 constrained by an XML schema validation `maxLength` constraint. Zero means
5873 unlimited string lengths are permitted (unless restricted by XML schema
5874 `maxLength`). Default initialized to `SOAP_MAXLENGTH` (0), which is a
5875 redefinable macro in <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.h`</i>. Set `soap::maxlength` to a
5876 positive value to restrict the number of (wide) characters in strings parsed,
5877 restrict hexBinary byte length, and restrict base64Binary byte length.
5879 - `size_t soap::maxoccurs` is the maximum number of array or container elements
5880 permitted by the parser. Must be greater than zero (0). Default initialized
5881 to `SOAP_MAXOCCURS` (100000), which is a redefinable macro in
5882 <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.h`</i>. Set `soap::maxoccurs` to a positive value to
5883 restrict the number of array and container elements that can be parsed.
5885 - `soap::version` is the SOAP version used, with 0 for non-SOAP, 1 for SOAP1.1,
5886 and 2 for SOAP1.2. This value is normally set by web service operations, and
5887 is otherwise 0 (non-SOAP). Use `soap_set_version(struct soap*, short)` to
5888 set the value. This controls XML namespaces and SOAP id-ref serialization
5889 when applicable with an encodingStyle (see below).
5891 - `const char *soap::encodingStyle` is a string that is used with SOAP
5892 encoding, normally NULL for non-SOAP XML. Set this string to "" (empty
5893 string) to enable SOAP encoding style, which supports id-ref graph
5894 serialization (see also the `SOAP_XML_GRAPH` [context flag](#flags)).
5896 - `int soap::recvfd` is the file descriptor to read and parse source data from.
5897 Default initialized to 0 (stdin). See also [input and output](#io).
5899 - `int soap::sendfd` is the file descriptor to write data to. Default
5900 initialized to 1 (stdout). See also [input and output](#io).
5902 - `const char *is` for C: string to read and parse source data from, overriding
5903 the `recvfd` source. Normally NULL. This value must be reset to NULL or
5904 the parser will continue to read from this string content until the NUL
5905 character. See also [input and output](#io).
5907 - `std::istream *is` for C++: an input stream to read and parse source data
5908 from, overriding the `recvfd` source. Normally NULL. This value must be
5909 reset to NULL or the parser will continue to read from this stream until EOF.
5910 See also [input and output](#io).
5912 - `const char **os` for C: points to a string (a `const char *`) that will be
5913 set to point to the string output. Normally NULL. This value must be reset
5914 to NULL or the next output will result in reassigning the pointer to point to
5915 the next string that is output. The strings are automatically deallocated by
5916 `soap_end(soap)`. See also [input and output](#io).
5918 - `std::ostream *os` for C++: an output stream to write output to. Normally
5919 NULL. This value must be reste to NULL or the next output will be send to
5920 this stream. See also [input and output](#io).
5922 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
5924 Error handling and reporting {#errors}
5925 ============================
5927 The gSOAP API functions return `SOAP_OK` (zero) or a non-zero error code. The
5928 error code is stored in `int soap::error` of the current `soap` context.
5929 Error messages can be displayed with:
5931 - `void soap_stream_fault(struct soap*, std::ostream &os)` for C++ only, prints
5932 the error message to an output stream.
5934 - `void soap_print_fault(struct soap*, FILE *fd)` prints the error message to a
5937 - `void soap_sprint_fault(struct soap*, char *buf, size_t len)` saves the error
5938 message to a fixed-size buffer allocated with a maximum length.
5940 - `void soap_print_fault_location(struct soap*, FILE *fd)` prints the location
5941 and part of the XML where the parser encountered an error.
5943 C++ exceptions are never raised by the engine or serializers, even when data is
5944 allocated. (That is unless the `SOAP_NOTHROW` macro (set to `(std::nothrow)`
5945 by default) is redefined to permit `new` to throw exceptions.)
5947 A `SOAP_EOM` error code is returned when memory was exhausted during
5948 processing of input and/or output of data.
5950 An EOF (`SOAP_EOF` or -1) error code is returned when the parser has hit EOF
5951 but expected more input, or when socket communications timed out. In addition
5952 to the `SOAP_EOF` error, the `int soap::errnum` of the `soap` context is
5953 set to the `errno` value of the operation that failed. For timeouts, the
5954 `soap::ernum` value is always 0 instead of an `errno` error code.
5956 Use `soap_xml_error_check(soap->error)` to check for XML errors. This returns
5957 true (non-zero) when a parsing and validation error has occurred.
5964 struct soap *soap = soap_new1(SOAP_XML_INDENT | SOAP_XML_STRICT | SOAP_XML_TREE);
5965 struct ns__record person;
5966 std::stringstream ss;
5967 ss.str("..."); // XML to parse
5969 if (soap_read__ns__record(soap, &person))
5971 if (soap_xml_error_check(soap->error))
5972 std::cerr << "XML parsing error!" << std::endl;
5974 soap_stream_fault(soap, std::cerr);
5978 ... // all OK, use person record
5980 soap_destroy(soap); // delete objects
5981 soap_end(soap); // delete other data and temp data
5982 soap_free(soap); // free context
5985 When deploying your application on UNIX and Linux systems, UNIX signal handlers
5986 should be added to your code handle signals, in particular `SIGPIPE`:
5989 signal(SIGPIPE, sigpipe_handler);
5992 where the `sigpipe_handler` is a function:
5995 void sigpipe_handler(int x) { }
5998 Other UNIX signals may have to be handled as well.
6000 The engine is designed for easy memory cleanup after being interrupted. Use
6001 `soap_destroy(soap)` and `soap_end(soap)`, after which the `soap` context can
6004 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6006 Features and limitations {#features}
6007 ========================
6009 In general, to use the generated code:
6011 - Make sure to `#include "soapH.h"` in your code and also define a namespace
6012 table or `#include "ns.nsmap"` with the generated table, where `ns` is the
6013 namespace prefix for services.
6015 - Use <b>`soapcpp2 -j`</b> option <b>`-j`</b> (C++ only) to generate C++ proxy and service objects.
6016 The auto-generated files include documented inferfaces. Compile with
6017 <i>`soapC.cpp`</i> and link with <b>`-lgsoap++`</b>, or alternatively compile
6018 <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.cpp`</i>.
6020 - Without <b>`soapcpp2 -j`</b> option <b>`-j`</b>: client-side uses the auto-generated
6021 <i>`soapClient.cpp`</i> and <i>`soapC.cpp`</i> (or C versions of those).
6022 Compile and link with <b>`-lgsoap++`</b> (<b>`-lgsoap`</b> for C), or
6023 alternatively compile <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.cpp`</i> (<i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.c`</i>
6026 - Without <b>`soapcpp2 -j`</b> option <b>`-j`</b>: server-side uses the
6027 auto-generated <i>`soapServer.cpp`</i> and <i>`soapC.cpp`</i> (or C versions
6028 of those). Compile and link with <b>`-lgsoap++`</b> (<b>`-lgsoap`</b> for
6029 C), or alternatively compile <i>`gsoap/stdsoap2.cpp`</i> (<i>`stdsoap2.c`</i>
6032 - Use `soap_new()` or `soap_new1(int flags)` to allocate and initialize a
6033 heap-allocated `soap` context with or without flags. Delete this `soap` context with
6034 `soap_free(struct soap*)`, but only after `soap_destroy(struct soap*)` and
6035 `soap_end(struct soap*)`.
6037 - Use `soap_init(struct *soap)` or `soap_init1(struct soap*, int flags)` to
6038 initialize a stack-allocated `soap` context with or without flags. End the use of
6039 this context with `soap_done(struct soap*)`, but only after
6040 `soap_destroy(struct soap*)` and `soap_end(struct soap*)`.
6042 Additional notes with respect to the wsdl2h and soapcpp2 tools:
6044 - Nested classes, structs, and unions in a interface header file are unnested
6047 - Use `#import "file.h"` instead of `#include` to import other header files in
6048 a interface header file for soapcpp2. The `#include`, `#define`, and
6049 `#pragma` are accepted by soapcpp2, but are moved to the very start of the
6050 generated code for the C/C++ compiler to include before all generated
6051 definitions. Often it is useful to add an `#include` with a
6052 [volatile type](#toxsd9-2) that includes the actual type declaration, and to
6053 ensure transient types are declared when these are used in a data binding
6054 interface declared in a interface header file for soapcpp2.
6056 - To remove any SOAP-specific bindings, use <b>`soapcpp2 -0`</b> option <b>`-0`</b>.
6058 - A interface header file for soapcpp2 should not include any code statements,
6059 only data type declarations. This includes constructor initialization lists
6060 that are not permitted. Use member initializations instead.
6062 - C++ namespaces are supported. Use <b>`wsdl2h -qname`</b> option
6063 <b>`-qname`</b> to add C++ namespace `name`. Or add a `namespace name { ... }`
6064 to the header file, but the `{ ... }` must cover the entire
6065 header file content from begin to end.
6067 - Optional XML DOM support can be used to store mixed content or literal XML
6068 content. Otherwise, mixed content may be lost. Use <b>`wsdl2h -d`</b>
6069 option <b>`-d`</b> for XML DOM support and compile and link with
6070 <i>`gsoap/dom.c`</i> or <i>`gsoap/dom.cpp`</i>. For details,
6071 see [XML DOM and XPath](http://www.genivia.com/doc/dom/html).
6073 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6075 Removing SOAP namespaces from XML payloads {#nsmap}
6076 ==========================================
6078 The soapcpp2 tool generates a <i>`.nsmap`</i> file that includes two bindings for SOAP
6079 namespaces. We can remove all SOAP namespaces (and SOAP processing logic) with
6080 <b>`soapcpp2 -0`</b> option <b>`-0`</b> or by simply setting the two entries to NULL:
6083 struct Namespace namespaces[] =
6085 {"SOAP-ENV", NULL, NULL, NULL},
6086 {"SOAP-ENC", NULL, NULL, NULL},
6091 Once the <i>`.nsmap`</i> is generated, you can copy-paste the content into your
6092 project code. However, if we rerun wsdl2h on updated WSDL/XSD files or
6093 <i>`typemap.dat`</i> declarations then we need to use the updated table.
6095 In cases that no XML namespaces are used at all, for example with
6096 [XML-RPC](http://www.genivia.com/doc/xml-rpc-json/html), you may use an empty
6100 struct Namespace namespaces[] = {{NULL,NULL,NULL,NULL}};
6103 However, beware that any built-in xsi attributes that are rendered will lack
6104 the proper namespace binding. At least we suggest to use `SOAP_XML_NOTYPE` for
6107 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6109 Examples {#examples}
6112 Select the project files below to peruse the source code examples.
6114 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6119 - <i>`address.xsd`</i> Address book schema
6120 - <i>`address.cpp`</i> Address book app (reads/writes address.xml file)
6121 - <i>`addresstypemap.dat`</i> Schema namespace prefix name preference for wsdl2h
6122 - <i>`graph.h`</i> Graph data binding (tree, digraph, cyclic graph)
6123 - <i>`graph.cpp`</i> Test graph serialization as tree, digraph, and cyclic
6125 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6130 - <i>`address.h`</i> data binding interface generated from address.xsd
6131 - <i>`addressStub.h`</i> C++ data binding definitions
6132 - <i>`addressH.h`</i> Serializers
6133 - <i>`addressC.cpp`</i> Serializers
6134 - <i>`address.xml`</i> Address book data generated by address app
6135 - <i>`graphStub.h`</i> C++ data binding definitions
6136 - <i>`graphH.h`</i> Serializers
6137 - <i>`graphC.cpp`</i> Serializers
6138 - <i>`g.xsd`</i> XSD schema with <i>`g:Graph`</i> complexType
6139 - <i>`g.nsmap`</i> xmlns bindings namespace mapping table
6141 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6146 Building the AddressBook example:
6148 wsdl2h -g -taddresstypemap.dat address.xsd
6149 soapcpp2 -0 -C -S -paddress -I../../import address.h
6150 c++ -I../.. address.cpp addressC.cpp -o address -lgsoap++
6152 Using <b>`wsdl2h -g -taddresstypemap.dat`</b> option <b>`-g`</b> produces
6153 bindings for global (root) elements in addition to types and option
6154 <b>`-taddresstypemap.dat`</b> specifies a mapping file, see further below.
6156 In this case the root element <i>`a:address-book`</i> is bound to `_a__address_book`.
6157 The complexType <i>`a:address`</i> is bound to class `a__address`, which is also the
6158 type of `_a__address_book`. This option is not required, but allows you to use
6159 global element tag names when referring to their serializers, instead of their
6160 type name. Using <b>`soapcpp2 -0 -C -S -paddress`</b> option <b>`-0`</b> removes the
6161 SOAP protocol and the combination of the two options <b>`-C`</b> and
6162 <b>`-S`</b> removes client and server code generation (using option <b>`-C`</b>
6163 alone generates client code and using option <b>`-S`</b> alone generates server
6164 code). Option <b>`-paddress`</b> renames the output <i>`soap`</i>-prefixed files to
6165 <i>`address`</i>-prefixed files.
6167 See the <i>`address.cpp`</i> implementation and [related pages](pages.html).
6169 The <i>`addresstypemap.dat`</i> file specifies the XML namespace prefix for the
6172 # Bind the address book schema namespace to prefix 'a'
6174 a = "urn:address-book-example"
6176 # By default the xsd:dateTime schema type is translated to time_t
6177 # To map xsd:dateTime to struct tm, enable the following line:
6179 # xsd__dateTime = #import "../../custom/struct_tm.h"
6181 # ... and compile/link with custom/struct_tm.c
6183 The DOB field is a <i>`xsd:dateTime`</i>, which is bound to `time_t` by default. To
6184 change this to `struct tm`, enable the import of the `xsd__dateTime` custom
6185 serializer by uncommenting the definition of `xsd__dateTime` in
6186 <i>`addresstypemap.dat`</i>. Then change `soap_dateTime2s` to `soap_xsd__dateTime2s`
6189 Building the graph serialization example:
6191 soapcpp2 -C -S -pgraph -I../../import graph.h
6192 c++ -I../.. graph.cpp graphC.cpp -o graph -lgsoap++
6194 To compile without using the <b>`-lgsoap++`</b> library: simply compile
6195 <i>`stdsoap2.cpp`</i> together with the above.
6197 🔝 [Back to table of contents](#)
6202 To execute the AddressBook example:
6206 To execute the Graph serialization example: