Use Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) schemagen tooling to generate an XML schema file from Java classes.
Use JAXB APIs and tools to establish mappings between Java classes and XML schema. XML schema documents describe the data elements and relationships in an XML document. After a data mapping or binding exists, you can convert XML documents to and from Java objects. You can now access data stored in an XML document without the need to understand the data structure.
To develop web services using a bottom-up development approach starting from existing JavaBeans or enterprise beans, use the wsgen tool to generate the artifacts for Java API for XML-Based Web Services (JAX-WS) applications. After the Java artifacts for your application are generated, you can create an XML schema document from an existing Java application that represents the data elements of a Java application by using the JAXB schema generator, schemagen command-line tool. The JAXB schema generator processes either Java source files or class files. Java class annotations provide the capability to customize the default mappings from existing Java classes to the generated schema components. The XML schema file along with the annotated Java class files contain all the necessary information that the JAXB runtime requires to parse the XML documents for marshaling and unmarshaling.
You can create an XML schema document from an existing Java application that represents the data elements of a Java application by using the JAXB schema generator, schemagen command-line tool. The JAXB schema generator processes either Java source files or class files. Java class annotations provide the capability to customize the default mappings from existing Java classes to the generated schema components. The XML schema file along with the annotated Java class files contain all the necessary information that the JAXB runtime requires to parse the XML documents for marshaling and unmarshaling.
JAXB provides compilation support to enable you to configure the schemagen schema generator so that it does not automatically generate a new schema. This is helpful if you are using a common schema such as the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), XML Schema, Web Services Description Language (WSDL), or WS-Addressing and you do not want a new schema generated for a particular package that is referenced. The location attribute on the @XmlSchema annotation causes the schemagen generator to refer to the URI of the existing schema instead of generating a new one.
In addition to using the schemagen tool from the command-line, you can invoke this JAXB tool from within the Ant build environments. Use the com.sun.tools.jxc.SchemaGenTask Ant task from within the Ant build environment to invoke the schemagen schema generator tool. To function properly, this Ant task requires that you invoke Ant using the ws_ant script.
schemagen sample.Address sample\package-info.java
@XmlType(namespace="http://myNameSpace")
Now that you have generated an XML schema file from Java classes, you are ready to marshal and unmarshal the Java objects as XML instance documents.
Error: Two classes have the same XML type name ....
Use @XmlType.name and @XmlType.namespace to assign different names to them...
This
error indicates you have class names or @XMLType.name values that
have the same name, but exist within different Java packages. To prevent this error, add the
@XML.Type.namespace class to the existing @XMLType annotation to differentiate
between the XML types.gotchapackage generated;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAccessType;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAccessorType;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlAttribute;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlElement;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlType;
import javax.xml.datatype.XMLGregorianCalendar;
@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
@XmlType(name = "bookdata", propOrder = {
"author",
"title",
"genre",
"price",
"publishDate",
"description"
})
public class Bookdata {
@XmlElement(required = true)
protected String author;
@XmlElement(required = true)
protected String title;
@XmlElement(required = true)
protected String genre;
protected float price;
@XmlElement(name = "publish_date", required = true)
protected XMLGregorianCalendar publishDate;
@XmlElement(required = true)
protected String description;
@XmlAttribute
protected String id;
public String getAuthor() {
return author;
}
public void setAuthor(String value) {
this.author = value;
}
public String getTitle() {
return title;
}
public void setTitle(String value) {
this.title = value;
}
public String getGenre() {
return genre;
}
public void setGenre(String value) {
this.genre = value;
}
public float getPrice() {
return price;
}
public void setPrice(float value) {
this.price = value;
}
public XMLGregorianCalendar getPublishDate() {
return publishDate;
}
public void setPublishDate(XMLGregorianCalendar value) {
this.publishDate = value;
}
public String getDescription() {
return description;
}
public void setDescription(String value) {
this.description = value;
}
public String getId() {
return id;
}
public void setId(String value) {
this.id = value;
}
}
app_server_root\bin\schemagen.bat Bookdata.java
app_server_root/bin/schemagen.sh Bookdata.java
app_server_root/bin/schemagen Bookdata.java
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<xs:schema version="1.0" xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<xs:complexType name="bookdata">
<xs:sequence>
<xs:element name="author" type="xs:string"/>
<xs:element name="title" type="xs:string"/>
<xs:element name="genre" type="xs:string"/>
<xs:element name="price" type="xs:float"/>
<xs:element name="publish_date" type="xs:anySimpleType"/>
<xs:element name="description" type="xs:string"/>
</xs:sequence>
<xs:attribute name="id" type="xs:string"/>
</xs:complexType>
</xs:schema>
Refer to the JAXB Reference implementation documentation for additional information about the schemagen command.