Open-Xchange Provisioning using SOAP: Difference between revisions
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Nothing to be done once the package open-xchange-admin-soap has been installed. After restarting the Open-Xchange server, | Nothing to be done once the package open-xchange-admin-soap has been installed. After restarting the Open-Xchange server, | ||
you can check for the SOAP services in accessing the URL http://yourox.example.com/webservices | you can check for the SOAP services in accessing the URL http://yourox.example.com/webservices | ||
Beginning with Open-Xchange version 6.22, the [http://axis.apache.org/axis2/java/core/ Axis2] engine has been replaced | |||
by the [http://cxf.apache.org/ CXF] engine. The corresponding package ''open-xchange-soap-cxf'' will be installed as a dependency | |||
when installing one of the admin soap packages as described above. | |||
== Example code == | == Example code == |
Revision as of 11:28, 27 August 2013
Provision Open-Xchange using SOAP
Beneath RMI and commandline, Open-Xchange can be provisioned using SOAP.
PHP users, please read the PHP warning below!
Install on OX 6.22 or newer
Debian GNU/Linux 11.0
Add the following entry to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/open-xchange.list if not already present:
deb https://software.open-xchange.com/products/appsuite/stable/backend/DebianBullseye/ /
# if you have a valid maintenance subscription, please uncomment the
# following and add the ldb account data to the url so that the most recent
# packages get installed
# deb https://[CUSTOMERID:PASSWORD]@software.open-xchange.com/products/appsuite/stable/backend/updates/DebianBullseye/ /
and run
$ apt-get update $ apt-get install open-xchange-admin-soap
Debian GNU/Linux 12.0
Add the following entry to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/open-xchange.list if not already present:
deb https://software.open-xchange.com/products/appsuite/stable/backend/DebianBookworm/ /
# if you have a valid maintenance subscription, please uncomment the
# following and add the ldb account data to the url so that the most recent
# packages get installed
# deb https://[CUSTOMERID:PASSWORD]@software.open-xchange.com/products/appsuite/stable/backend/updates/DebianBookworm/ /
and run
$ apt-get update $ apt-get install open-xchange-admin-soap
Setup SOAP services on Open-Xchange
Nothing to be done once the package open-xchange-admin-soap has been installed. After restarting the Open-Xchange server, you can check for the SOAP services in accessing the URL http://yourox.example.com/webservices
Beginning with Open-Xchange version 6.22, the Axis2 engine has been replaced by the CXF engine. The corresponding package open-xchange-soap-cxf will be installed as a dependency when installing one of the admin soap packages as described above.
Example code
SOAP API documentation can be found in this document.
You can find Perl and PHP example code in the git repository wd/backend/com.openexchange.admin.soap. Please follow the SourceCodeAccess guide on how to access the source code.
once checked out, find examples in
com.openexchange.admin.soap/test/perl com.openexchange.admin.soap/test/php
Further documentation and examples:
- SOAP API documentation including examples in perl: http://software.open-xchange.com/OX6/doc/SOAP/admin/OX-Admin-SOAP.html
- The OX APS Package for Parallels contains some more examples in php.
- The OX Cloud Service APS Package for Parallels contains examples in perl.
- The cPanel OXtender is also using SOAP via perl
- Provision using C#
- Provisioning using Java
Short warning to PHP users
We do not recommend to use PHP when accessing our SOAP provisioning API. This is because PHP has trouble sending simple arrays in a way we can handle it. This applies to ALL Open-Xchange versions!
If you still want to use PHP, you might need this information:
instead of
#$ctx = new Context(); #$ctx->id = $random_id; #$ctx->maxQuota = 10; #$ctx->loginMappings = array( "mapping1", "mapping2", "mapping3");
in php you have to do
$mctx = array("id" => $random_id, "maxQuota" => 10); $mctx["loginMappings"] = "mapping1"; $mctx["loginMappings "] = "mapping2"; $mctx["loginMappings "] = "mapping3";
and then this:
$result = getContextClient($SOAPHOST)->create(new SoapVar($mctx,SOAP_ENC_OBJECT), $user, getCredentialsObject($OXMASTER_ADMIN, $OXMASTER_ADMIN_PASS));
instead of that:
#$result = getContextClient($SOAPHOST)->create($ctx, $user, getCredentialsObject($OXMASTER_ADMIN, $OXMASTER_ADMIN_PASS));
when using the examples from
com.openexchange.admin.soap/test/php
This information is based on this code
printo_stderr("Update context aliases list\n"); // XXX: OX requires all mappings entries on top level of context // PHP SOAP serializer can't accomplish such task // workaround problem naming keys in array with spaces: // - transparent for XML, different for PHP $map = array('id' => $ctx->id); $key = 'loginMappings'; for ($i = 0; $i < count($mappings); $i++) { $map[$key] = $mappings[$i]; $key .= ' '; }
as taken from the Parallels APS package (see above).