Now that you have generated your application artifacts, you need to assemble these artifacts to create an enterprise archive (EAR) file that is used in the Web services application.
You can assemble Java-based Web services modules with assembly tools provided with WebSphere Application Server.
Assemble the client code and artifacts that enable the application client to access a Web service with steps provided:
WEB-INF/MANIFEST.MF WEB-INF/web.xml WEB-INF/wsdl/AddressBook.wsdl WEB-INF/AddressBook_mapping.xml WEB-INF/ibm-webservicesclient-ext.xmi (optional) WEB-INF/ibm-webservicesclient-bnd.xmi com/ibm/websphere/samples/webservices/addr/Address.class com/ibm/websphere/samples/webservices/addr/AddressBook.class com/ibm/websphere/samples/webservices/addr/AddressBookClient.class com/ibm/websphere/samples/webservices/addr/AddressBookService.class ...other generated classes...
META-INF/MANIFEST.MF AddressBookWeb.war META-INF/application.xml
For Java API for XML-Based Web Services (JAX-WS) applications, you are ready to deploy the Web services client application. For Java API for XML-based RPC (JAX-RPC) applications, you need to configure the client deployment descriptor bindings so that the client can communicate with a Web service that is deployed on a server.
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