12
votes

I've trouble setting jax-ws timeout. My code is:

@WebServiceClient(name = "VoipDBJDBCService", targetNamespace = "http://db.server.voipmeter.jextreme.eu/", wsdlLocation = "http://trace0.nyc.blinkmind.com:8080/voipdb?wsdl")
public class VoipDBJDBCService extends Service {
    public VoipDBJDBCService(URL wsdlLocation) {
        super(wsdlLocation, new QName("http://db.server.voipmeter.jextreme.eu/", "VoipDBJDBCService"));
    }

    @WebEndpoint(name = "VoipDBJDBCPort")
    public VoipDB getVoipDBJDBCPort() {
        return super.getPort(new QName("http://db.server.voipmeter.jextreme.eu/", "VoipDBJDBCPort"), VoipDB.class);
    }
}

And the usage:

VoipDB db = new VoipDBJDBCService(new URL(url)).getVoipDBJDBCPort();

How do i Hook in timeouts ? I've found "solution" here: https://jax-ws.dev.java.net/guide/HTTP_Timeouts.html but I don't know where I shall hook it in. How to obtain proxy ? When I call getPort client tries to connect and then hangs forever if server is not responding.

UPDATE: This code is invoked from within applets init() method if that makes any difference.

5

5 Answers

6
votes

With Metro/Glassfish...

//1 minute for connection
((BindingProvider) wsPort).getRequestContext().put("com.sun.xml.ws.connect.timeout", 1 * 60 * 1000); 

//3 minutos for request
((BindingProvider) wsPort).getRequestContext().put("com.sun.xml.ws.request.timeout", 3 * 60 * 1000); 
1
votes
ProxyWs proxy = (ProxyWs) factory.create();
Client client = ClientProxy.getClient(proxy);
HTTPConduit http = (HTTPConduit) client.getConduit();
HTTPClientPolicy httpClientPolicy = new HTTPClientPolicy();
httpClientPolicy.setConnectionTimeout(0);
httpClientPolicy.setReceiveTimeout(0);
http.setClient(httpClientPolicy);

This worked for me.

1
votes

If you are using a Sun JRE, you can set the following system properties for default network connect and read timeouts (in milliseconds). I haven't tried these with the JAX-WS client, but they ought work there as well:

sun.net.client.defaultConnectTimeout
sun.net.client.defaultReadTimeout

Addition: I missed your last part of the question where you said that you are doing this in an applet. If the applet is running with default permissions, you are probably not allowed to set the system properties.

0
votes

You can cast your VoipDB object to BindingProvider. So in the example in the link you've given just replace proxy by db and you're good to go.

0
votes

Here is one example

public void testConfigureTimeout() throws Exception
{
   //Set timeout until a connection is established
   ((BindingProvider)port).getRequestContext()
   .put("javax.xml.ws.client.connectionTimeout", "6000");

   //Set timeout until the response is received
   ((BindingProvider) port).getRequestContext()
   .put("javax.xml.ws.client.receiveTimeout", "1000");

    port.echo("testTimeout");
}