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BPEL and Java Cookbook

You're reading from   BPEL and Java Cookbook Written by an SOA guru to help you orchestrate web services, the 100 recipes in this book will make integrating Java and BPEL a smooth process. Using the examples you'll avoid common problems and learn sophisticated techniques.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849689205
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Jurij Laznik Jurij Laznik
Author Profile Icon Jurij Laznik
Jurij Laznik
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Calling BPEL from Java FREE CHAPTER 2. Calling Services from BPEL 3. Advanced Tracing and Logging 4. Custom Logging in the Oracle SOA Suite 5. Transforming and Validating the BPEL Services 6. Embedding Third-party Java Libraries 7. Accessing and Updating the Variables 8. Exposing Java Code as a SOAP Service 9. Embedding Java Code Snippets 10. Using XML Facade for DOM 11. Exposing Java Code as a Web Service Index

Generating the XSLT map with the XSLT mapper


This recipe will explore how to configure the Transform activity. We will create an XSLT transformation file and use it to map the output variable of a web service to the response variable of the BPEL process. In this recipe, we will convert the semicolon delimited result text into an XML-formatted result.

Getting ready

If we now run the BPEL process we created in the previous recipe without the Transform activity, we will get a simple string response as shown in the following screenshot:

The response can be read well from the screen; however, if we need to process the response any further, we need to split the response by the delimiter and process the result. A more applicable solution is to use the XML format, which is easy to process.

We will extend the example from the previous recipe by adding additional elements to the response message. We open the XML_Mapping.xsd file and add the following lines to the processResponse element as follows:

&lt...
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