Accessing a Windows Share using VFS

This example demonstrates how the VFS transport in WSO2 Micro Integrator can be used to access a windows share.

Synapse configuration

Following are the integration artifacts (proxy service) that we can used to implement this scenario.

<proxy xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse" name="StockQuoteProxy" transports="vfs">
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.FileURI">vfs:smb://host/test/in</parameter> 
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.ContentType">text/xml</parameter>
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.FileNamePattern">.*\.xml</parameter>
    <parameter name="transport.PollInterval">15</parameter>
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.MoveAfterProcess">vfs:smb://host/test/original</parameter> 
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.MoveAfterFailure">vfs:smb://host/test/failed</parameter>
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.ActionAfterProcess">MOVE</parameter>
    <parameter name="transport.vfs.ActionAfterFailure">MOVE</parameter>

    <target>
        <inSequence>=
            <header name="Action" value="urn:getQuote"/>
            <send>
                <endpoint>
                    <address uri="http://localhost:9000/services/SimpleStockQuoteService"/>
                </endpoint>
            </send>
        </inSequence>
        <outSequence>
            <property name="transport.vfs.ReplyFileName"
                      expression="fn:concat(fn:substring-after(get-property('MessageID'), 'urn:uuid:'), '.xml')" scope="transport"/>
            <property action="set" name="OUT_ONLY" value="true"/>
            <send>
                <endpoint>
                    <address uri="vfs:smb://host/test/out"/>
                </endpoint>
            </send>
        </outSequence>
    </target>
    <publishWSDL key="conf:custom/sample_proxy_1.wsdl"/>
</proxy>

Build and run

To test this sample, the following files and directories should be created: 1. Download the provider jar and place it in /lib directory and continue with the feature. Please note that, since the above library is licensed under LGPL version 2.1 and by downloading and installing the library you will have to comply with the terms of LGPL version 2.1 and its restrictions as found in https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.en.html."

  1. Create the file directories:

    • Create a directory named test on a windows machine and create three sub directories named in , out and original within the test directory.
    • Grant permission to the network users to read from and write to the test directory and sub directories.
    • Be sure to update the in, original, and original directory locations with the values given as the transport.vfs.FileURI, transport.vfs.MoveAfterProcess, transport.vfs.MoveAfterFailure parameter values in your synapse configuration.
    • You need to set both transport.vfs.MoveAfterProcess and transport.vfs.MoveAfterFailure parameter values to point to the original directory location.
    • Be sure that the endpoint in the <outSequence> points to the out directory location. Make sure that the prefix vfs: in the endpoint URL is not removed or changed.
  2. Add sample_proxy_1.wsdl as a registry resource. Change the registry path of the proxy accordingly.

  3. Set up the back-end service.

    • Download the back-end service
    • Extract the downloaded zip file.
    • Open a terminal, navigate to the axis2Server/bin/ directory inside the extracted folder.
    • Execute the following command to start the axis2server with the SimpleStockQuote back-end service:

      sh axis2server.sh
      axis2server.bat
  4. Create the test.xml file shown below and copy it to the location specified by transport.vfs.FileURI in the configuration (i.e., the in directory). This contains a simple stock quote request in XML/SOAP format.

    <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
    <soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:wsa="http://www.w3.org/2005/08/addressing">
        <soapenv:Body>
            <m0:getQuote xmlns:m0="http://services.samples">
                <m0:request>
                    <m0:symbol>IBM</m0:symbol>
                </m0:request>
            </m0:getQuote>
        </soapenv:Body>
    </soapenv:Envelope>
    When the sample is executed, the VFS transport listener picks the file from the in directory and sends it to the back service over HTTP. Then the request XML file is moved to the original directory and the response is saved to the out directory.

Using SMB2 for VFS transport

Windows share URI format for SMB v⅔ use cases is shown below.

vfs:smb2://[username]:[password]@[hostname]:[port]/[absolute-path]
You can use the proxy given below to test the SMB2 functionality.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<proxy xmlns="http://ws.apache.org/ns/synapse"
       name="smb2proxy"
       transports="vfs"
       startOnLoad="true">
   <description/>
   <target>
      <inSequence>
         <property name="transport.vfs.ReplyFileName"
                   expression="fn:concat(fn:substring-after(get-property('MessageID'), 'urn:uuid:'), '.xml')"
                   scope="transport"/>
         <property name="OUT_ONLY" value="true"/>
         <send>
            <endpoint>
               <address uri="vfs:smb2://username:password@host/SMBFileShare/out"/>
            </endpoint>
         </send>
      </inSequence>
   </target>
   <parameter name="transport.PollInterval">15</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.FileURI">vfs:smb2://username:password@host/SMBFileShare/in</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.ContentType">text/plain</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.ActionAfterProcess">MOVE</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.MoveAfterFailure">vfs:smb2://username:password@host/SMBFileShare/fail</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.ActionAfterFailure">MOVE</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.FileNamePattern">.*\.txt</parameter>
   <parameter name="transport.vfs.MoveAfterProcess">vfs:smb2://username:password@host/SMBFileShare/original</parameter>
</proxy>
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