/usr/bin/SOAPsh is in libsoap-lite-perl 0.714-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o755.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 | #!/usr/bin/perl
#!d:\perl\bin\perl.exe
# -- SOAP::Lite -- soaplite.com -- Copyright (C) 2001 Paul Kulchenko --
use strict;
use SOAP::Lite;
use Data::Dumper; $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1; $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1;
@ARGV or die "Usage: $0 proxy [uri [commands...]]\n";
my($proxy, $uri) = (shift, shift);
my %can;
my $soap = SOAP::Lite->proxy($proxy)->on_fault(sub{});
$soap->uri($uri) if $uri;
print STDERR "Usage: method[(parameters)]\n> ";
while (defined($_ = shift || <>)) {
next unless /\w/;
my($method) = /\s*(\w+)/;
$can{$method} = $soap->can($method) unless exists $can{$method};
my $res = eval "\$soap->$_";
$@ ? print(STDERR join "\n", "--- SYNTAX ERROR ---", $@, '') :
$can{$method} && !UNIVERSAL::isa($res => 'SOAP::SOM')
? print(STDERR join "\n", "--- METHOD RESULT ---", $res || '', '') :
defined($res) && $res->fault ? print(STDERR join "\n", "--- SOAP FAULT ---", $res->faultcode, $res->faultstring, '') :
!$soap->transport->is_success ? print(STDERR join "\n", "--- TRANSPORT ERROR ---", $soap->transport->status, '') :
print(STDERR join "\n", "--- SOAP RESULT ---", Dumper($res->paramsall), '')
} continue {
print STDERR "\n> ";
}
__END__
=head1 NAME
SOAPsh - Interactive shell for SOAP calls
=head1 SYNOPSIS
perl SOAPsh http://services.soaplite.com/examples.cgi http://www.soaplite.com/My/Examples
> getStateName(2)
> getStateNames(1,2,3,7)
> getStateList([1,9])
> getStateStruct({a=>1, b=>24})
> Ctrl-D (Ctrl-Z on Windows)
or
# all parameters after uri will be executed as methods
perl SOAPsh http://soap.4s4c.com/ssss4c/soap.asp http://simon.fell.com/calc doubler([10,20,30])
> Ctrl-D (Ctrl-Z on Windows)
=head1 DESCRIPTION
SOAPsh is a shell for making SOAP calls. It takes two parameters:
mandatory endpoint and optional uri (actually it will tell you about it
if you try to run it). Additional commands can follow.
After that you'll be able to run any methods of SOAP::Lite, like autotype,
readable, encoding, etc. You can run it the same way as you do it in
your Perl script. You'll see output from method, result of SOAP call,
detailed info on SOAP faulure or transport error.
For full list of available methods see documentation for SOAP::Lite.
Along with methods of SOAP::Lite you'll be able (and that's much more
interesting) run any SOAP methods you know about on remote server and
see processed results. You can even switch on debugging (with call
something like: C<on_debug(sub{print@_})>) and see SOAP code with
headers sent and received.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000 Paul Kulchenko. All rights reserved.
=head1 AUTHOR
Paul Kulchenko (paulclinger@yahoo.com)
=cut
|