= XMLRPC for Ruby == Author and Copyright Copyright (C) 2001-2004 by Michael Neumann (mailto:mneumann@ntecs.de) Released under the same term of license as Ruby. == Overview XMLRPC is a lightweight protocol that enables remote procedure calls over HTTP. It is defined at http://www.xmlrpc.com. XMLRPC allows you to create simple distributed computing solutions that span computer languages. Its distinctive feature is its simplicity compared to other approaches like SOAP and CORBA. The Ruby standard library package 'xmlrpc' enables you to create a server that implements remote procedures and a client that calls them. Very little code is required to achieve either of these. == Example Try the following code. It calls a standard demonstration remote procedure. require 'xmlrpc/client' require 'pp' server = XMLRPC::Client.new2("http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/api/sample.php") result = server.call("sample.sumAndDifference", 5, 3) pp result == Documentation See http://www.ntecs.de/projects/xmlrpc4r. There is plenty of detail there to use the client and implement a server. == Features of XMLRPC for Ruby * Extensions * Introspection * multiCall * optionally nil values and integers larger than 32 Bit * Server * Standalone XML-RPC server * CGI-based (works with FastCGI) * Apache mod_ruby server * WEBrick servlet * Client * synchronous/asynchronous calls * Basic HTTP-401 Authentification * HTTPS protocol (SSL) * Parsers * NQXML (NQXMLStreamParser, NQXMLTreeParser) * Expat (XMLStreamParser, XMLTreeParser) * REXML (REXMLStreamParser) * xml-scan (XMLScanStreamParser) * Fastest parser is Expat's XMLStreamParser! * General * possible to choose between XMLParser module (Expat wrapper) and REXML/NQXML (pure Ruby) parsers * Marshalling Ruby objects to Hashs and reconstruct them later from a Hash * SandStorm component architecture Client interface == Howto === Client require "xmlrpc/client" # Make an object to represent the XML-RPC server. server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net", "/api/sample.php") # Call the remote server and get our result result = server.call("sample.sumAndDifference", 5, 3) sum = result["sum"] difference = result["difference"] puts "Sum: #{sum}, Difference: #{difference}" === Client with XML-RPC fault-structure handling There are two possible ways, of handling a fault-structure: ==== by catching a XMLRPC::FaultException exception require "xmlrpc/client" # Make an object to represent the XML-RPC server. server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net", "/api/sample.php") begin # Call the remote server and get our result result = server.call("sample.sumAndDifference", 5, 3) sum = result["sum"] difference = result["difference"] puts "Sum: #{sum}, Difference: #{difference}" rescue XMLRPC::FaultException => e puts "Error: " puts e.faultCode puts e.faultString end ==== by calling "call2" which returns a boolean require "xmlrpc/client" # Make an object to represent the XML-RPC server. server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net", "/api/sample.php") # Call the remote server and get our result ok, result = server.call2("sample.sumAndDifference", 5, 3) if ok sum = result["sum"] difference = result["difference"] puts "Sum: #{sum}, Difference: #{difference}" else puts "Error: " puts result.faultCode puts result.faultString end === Client using Proxy You can create a +Proxy+ object onto which you can call methods. This way it looks nicer. Both forms, _call_ and _call2_ are supported through _proxy_ and proxy2. You can additionally give arguments to the Proxy, which will be given to each XML-RPC call using that Proxy. require "xmlrpc/client" # Make an object to represent the XML-RPC server. server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net", "/api/sample.php") # Create a Proxy object sample = server.proxy("sample") # Call the remote server and get our result result = sample.sumAndDifference(5,3) sum = result["sum"] difference = result["difference"] puts "Sum: #{sum}, Difference: #{difference}" === CGI-based Server There are also two ways to define handler, the first is like C/PHP, the second like Java, of course both ways can be mixed: ==== C/PHP-like (handler functions) require "xmlrpc/server" s = XMLRPC::CGIServer.new s.add_handler("sample.sumAndDifference") do |a,b| { "sum" => a + b, "difference" => a - b } end s.serve ==== Java-like (handler classes) require "xmlrpc/server" s = XMLRPC::CGIServer.new class MyHandler def sumAndDifference(a, b) { "sum" => a + b, "difference" => a - b } end end # NOTE: Security Hole (read below)!!! s.add_handler("sample", MyHandler.new) s.serve To return a fault-structure you have to raise an FaultException e.g.: raise XMLRPC::FaultException.new(3, "division by Zero") ===== Security Note From Brian Candler: Above code sample has an extremely nasty security hole, in that you can now call any method of 'MyHandler' remotely, including methods inherited from Object and Kernel! For example, in the client code, you can use puts server.call("sample.send","`","ls") (backtick being the method name for running system processes). Needless to say, 'ls' can be replaced with something else. The version which binds proc objects (or the version presented below in the next section) doesn't have this problem, but people may be tempted to use the second version because it's so nice and 'Rubyesque'. I think it needs a big red disclaimer. From Michael: A solution is to undef insecure methods or to use (({XMLRPC::iPIMethods})) as shown below: class MyHandler def sumAndDifference(a, b) { "sum" => a + b, "difference" => a - b } end end # ... server initialization ... s.add_handler(XMLRPC::iPIMethods("sample"), MyHandler.new) # ... This adds only public instance methods explicitly declared in class MyHandler (and not those inherited from any other class). ==== With interface declarations Code sample from the book Ruby Developer's Guide: require "xmlrpc/server" class Num INTERFACE = XMLRPC::interface("num") { meth 'int add(int, int)', 'Add two numbers', 'add' meth 'int div(int, int)', 'Divide two numbers' } def add(a, b) a + b end def div(a, b) a / b end end s = XMLRPC::CGIServer.new s.add_handler(Num::INTERFACE, Num.new) s.serve === Standalone server Same as CGI-based server, only that the line server = XMLRPC::CGIServer.new must be changed to server = XMLRPC::Server.new(8080) if you want a server listening on port 8080. The rest is the same. === Choosing a different XML Parser or XML Writer The examples above all use the default parser (which is now since 1.8 REXMLStreamParser) and a default XML writer. If you want to use a different XML parser, then you have to call the set_parser method of XMLRPC::Client instances or instances of subclasses of XMLRPC::BasicServer or by editing xmlrpc/config.rb. Client Example: # ... server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net", "/api/sample.php") server.set_parser(XMLRPC::XMLParser::XMLParser.new) # ... Server Example: # ... s = XMLRPC::CGIServer.new s.set_parser(XMLRPC::XMLParser::XMLStreamParser.new) # ... or: # ... server = XMLRPC::Server.new(8080) server.set_parser(XMLRPC::XMLParser::NQXMLParser.new) # ... Note that XMLStreamParser is incredible faster (and uses less memory) than any other parser and scales well for large documents. For example for a 0.5 MB XML document with many tags, XMLStreamParser is ~350 (!) times faster than NQXMLTreeParser and still ~18 times as fast as XMLTreeParser. You can change the XML-writer by calling method set_writer.