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(PHP 5 >= 5.0.1)
Represents a SOAP fault.
$faultcode
, string $faultstring
[, string $faultactor
[, string $detail
[, string $faultname
[, string $headerfault
]]]] )$faultcode
, string $faultstring
[, string $faultactor
[, string $detail
[, string $faultname
[, string $headerfault
]]]] )[#1] fbernoldi at gmail dot com [2012-10-03 17:46:31]
Hi all,
I've decided to post this since it may be helpful, I've spend a couple of days trying to do this.
In order to use wsdl's specified faults with complex types, i.e:
WSDL definitions:
(xsd:schema namespace, ns1 = target namespace)
<xsd:element name="doubleFault">
<xsd:complexType>
<xsd:sequence>
<xsd:element name="detail1" type="xsd:string"/>
<xsd:element name="detail2" type="xsd:string"/>
</xsd:sequence>
</xsd:complexType>
</xsd:element>
WSDL messages:
<message name="fault_specified">
<part name="relevant_name" element="ns1:doubleFault"/>
</message>
WSDL port type:
<portType name="test">
<operation name="operationTest">
<input message="ns1:not_relevant_request"/>
<output message="ns1:not_relevant_response"/>
<fault name="FaultSpecified" message="ns1:fault_specified"/>
....
</portType>
You have to specify the response in the detail parameter as an array corresponding the tag names.
PHP Code:
<?php
function operationTest($request_param ...) {
// ...
$array_details = array("detail1" => "Explanation 1", "detail2" => "Explanation 2");
return new SoapFault("Server", "example fault string", null, $array_details, "FaultSpecified");
}
$server = new SOAPServer("handmade.wsdl");
$server->addFunction("operationTest");
$server->handle();
?>
that should respond something like this:
<SOAP-ENV:Envelope xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:ns1="http://mynamespace">
<SOAP-ENV:Body>
<SOAP-ENV:Fault>
<faultcode>SOAP-ENV:Server</faultcode>
<faultstring>example fault string</faultstring>
<detail>
<ns1:doubleFault>
<detail1>Explanation 1</detail1>
<detail2>Explanation 2</detail2>
</ns1:doubleFault>
</detail>
</SOAP-ENV:Fault>
</SOAP-ENV:Body>
</SOAP-ENV:Envelope>
I Hope it helps,
Federico.
[#2] chris AT cmbuckley DOT co DOT uk [2010-05-13 03:53:12]
A bit more digging in ext/soap/soap.c and the set_soap_fault function reveals the other undocumented properties from the constructor:
<?php
try {
throw new SoapFault('code', 'string', 'actor', 'detail', 'name', 'header');
} catch (Exception $ex) {
var_dump($ex->faultcode, $ex->faultstring, $ex->faultactor, $ex->detail, $ex->_name, $ex->headerfault);
}
?>
[#3] dmitry dot koterov at gmail dot com [2009-10-29 14:21:00]
You may use undocumented and invisible property $e->faultcode to access string version of $code. Because standard $e->getCode() does not work:
<?php
$e = new SoapFault("test", "msg");
var_dump($e->getCode()); // prints "0"
var_dump($e->faultcode); // prints "test"
?>
Also you may use namespaced fault codes:
<?php
$e = new SoapFault(array("namespace", "test"), "msg");
?>
- see ext/soap/soap.php, PHP_METHOD(SoapFault, SoapFault). To access the namespace, use $e->faultcodens