Is there anybody who has successfully accessed a Web service from an Oracle stored procedure? If so, was it a Java stored procedure? A PL/SQL stored procedure?
Is there any reason why I should not be trying to access a WS from a stored proc?
Here are a couple refs that I found so far
..Just to clarify, this is for SOAP calls
You can call Oracle LSH APIs from source code in a defined Program in Oracle LSH. In this case, no additional security or setup is required.
These processes involve programs, messages, documents, and/or objects. A key feature of web services is that applications can be written in various languages and are still able to communicate by exchanging data with one another via a web service between clients and servers.
Oracle Application Server Web Services provides a tool to generate a WSDL file that can be packaged with a Web Service at assembly time, (if you do not package the WSDL file, it can be generated at runtime). This tool also supports generating client-side proxy stubs, given a WSDL file.
First off, what sort of web service are you calling? I am assuming either SOAP or REST.
For REST web services, UTL_HTTP is often more than sufficient, combined with a bit of XPath in a simple PL/SQL stored procedure.
For SOAP web services, it depends on how sophisticated you need (or want) to be. You can certainly use XQuery to create an XML document that meets the spec for the web service, use UTL_HTTP to post the document and get the response, and then use some XPath to parse the response all in PL/SQL. This is a relatively manual and relatively brute-force solution, but if you are talking about a handful of web services, it involves a minimum of infrastructure and the calls can get knocked together pretty quickly.
If you expect the calls to evolve over time or you expect there to be a number of procedures calling a number of web services, it probably makes sense to invest time in something like UTL_DBWS (this isn't something, though, that you generally get working in a couple hours).
It's fairly simple to wrap UTL_HTTP in a convenience function:
FUNCTION post
(
p_url IN VARCHAR2,
p_data IN CLOB,
p_timeout IN BINARY_INTEGER DEFAULT 60
)
RETURN CLOB
IS
--
v_request utl_http.req;
v_response utl_http.resp;
v_buffer CLOB;
v_chunk VARCHAR2(4000);
v_length NUMBER;
v_index NUMBER;
BEGIN
v_index := 1;
v_length := nvl(length(p_data), 0);
-- configure HTTP
utl_http.set_response_error_check(enable => FALSE);
utl_http.set_detailed_excp_support(enable => FALSE);
utl_http.set_transfer_timeout(p_timeout);
-- send request
v_request := utl_http.begin_request(p_url, 'POST','HTTP/1.0');
utl_http.set_header(v_request, 'Content-Type', 'text/xml');
utl_http.set_header(v_request, 'Content-Length', v_length);
WHILE v_index <= v_length LOOP
utl_http.write_text(v_request, substr(p_data, v_index, 4000));
v_index := v_index + 4000;
END LOOP;
-- check HTTP status code for error
IF v_response.status_code <> utl_http.http_ok THEN
raise_application_error(
cn_http_error,
v_response.status_code || ' - ' || v_response.reason_phrase
);
END IF;
-- get response
dbms_lob.createtemporary(v_buffer, FALSE);
v_response := utl_http.get_response(v_request);
BEGIN
LOOP
utl_http.read_text(v_response, v_chunk, 4000);
dbms_lob.writeappend(v_buffer, length(v_chunk), v_chunk);
END LOOP;
EXCEPTION
WHEN utl_http.end_of_body THEN NULL;
END;
utl_http.end_response(v_response);
RETURN v_buffer;
END;
Then you just need something to POST a SOAP envelope:
FUNCTION invoke
(
p_url IN VARCHAR2,
p_method IN XMLTYPE,
p_timeout IN NUMBER := 60
)
RETURN XMLTYPE
IS
-- calls the given SOAP service
cn_procedure_name CONSTANT VARCHAR2(30) := 'invoke';
--
v_envelope XMLTYPE;
v_response CLOB;
v_fault XMLTYPE;
v_sqlerrm VARCHAR2(2000);
BEGIN
-- wrap method in SOAP envelope
SELECT
XMLElement(
"soap:Envelope",
XMLAttributes(
'http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/' AS "xmlns:soap"
),
XMLElement(
"soap:Body",
p_method
)
)
INTO
v_envelope
FROM
dual;
-- POST request
v_response := post(
p_url,
'<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>' || chr(10) || v_envelope.getClobVal(),
p_timeout
);
IF v_response IS NULL THEN
RAISE null_response;
END IF;
-- parse response
BEGIN
v_envelope := XMLType(v_response);
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS THEN
v_sqlerrm := SQLERRM;
RAISE xml_parse_error;
END;
-- check for a fault
v_fault := v_envelope.extract(
'/soap:Envelope/soap:Body/soap:Fault',
'xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"'
);
IF v_fault IS NOT NULL THEN
v_sqlerrm := v_fault.extract('.//faultstring/text()').getStringVal();
RAISE soap_fault;
END IF;
-- the actual response is the child of the <soap:Body /> element
RETURN v_envelope.extract(
'/soap:Envelope/soap:Body/*[position() = 1]',
'xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"'
);
END;
Note that I removed our exception handling block as it's not particularly relevant to the example.
With that, you can have any other procedure generate the XML necessary to call a service, pass it through invoke, and parse the return value.
We developed this solution on a 9i database so we haven't looked into UTL_DBWS yet. It works great, though.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With