The question: Is there a way to view the XML that would be created with a PHP SoapClient function call BEFORE you actually send the request?
background:
I am new to WSDL communication, and I have a client who wants me to develop in PHP, a way to communicate with a WSDL service written in ASP.NET. I have gotten pretty far, but am running into an issue when it comes to passing a complex type. I have tried a couple of different things so far.
1) Setting up a single array such as $params->Person->name
$params->Person->address
2) Setting up a single array $Person = array('name'=>"joe",'address' = "123");
then passing into the call as a param "Person" => $Person; and a few others. But every time I get the error
SoapException: Server was unable to process request ---> System.Exception: Person is Required. at service name.
In order to further the troubleshooting, I would like to see the XML document that is being sent to see if it is creating a complex type in the way I am expecting it to. I am creating the service using $client = new SoapClient('wsdldoc.asmx?WSDL');
calling it with $client->CreateUser($params);
and then trying to see it using the function $client->__getLastRequest();
but it never makes it to the __getLastRequest because it hits a fatal error when calling CreateUser($params).
The question again: Is there any way to view the XML created by the CreateUser($params) call WITHOUT actually sending it and causing a fatal error
Upfront remark: In order to use the __getLastRequest()
method successfully, you have to set the 'trace' option to true on client construction:
$client = new SoapClient('wsdldoc.asmx?WSDL', array('trace' => TRUE));
This way, your request will still be sent (and therefore still fail), but you can inspect the sent xml afterwards by calling $client->__getLastRequest()
.
Main answer:
To get access to the generated XML before/without sending the request, you'd need to subclass the SoapClient in order to override the __doRequest()
method:
class SoapClientDebug extends SoapClient { public function __doRequest($request, $location, $action, $version, $one_way = 0) { // Add code to inspect/dissect/debug/adjust the XML given in $request here // Uncomment the following line, if you actually want to do the request // return parent::__doRequest($request, $location, $action, $version, $one_way); } }
You'd then use this extended class instead of the original SoapClient while debugging your problem.
I found this thread while working on the same problem, and was bummed because I was using classes that already extended the SoapClient()
class and didn't want to screw around with it too much.
However if you add the "exceptions"=>0
tag when you initiate the class, it won't throw a Fatal Error (though it will print an exception):
SoapClient($soapURL, array("trace" => 1, "exceptions" => 0));
Doing that allowed me to run __getLastRequest()
and analyze the XML I was sending.
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