Nestjs module wrapper for soap npm package
For nestjs < v8.4.0 use v2 package.
For nestjs >= v8.4.0 use v3 package.
npm install nestjs-soap
Or, if you use yarn
yarn add nestjs-soap
After installing the package, just import the SoapModule on the module you want to use the soap client.
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { SoapModule } from 'nestjs-soap';
@Module({
imports: [
SoapModule.register(
{ clientName: 'MY_SOAP_CLIENT', uri: 'http://yourserver/yourservice.wso?wsdl' },
),
],
})
export class ExampleModule {}
The register
or forRoot
function receives a SoapModuleOptions object. You can register as many clients as you need, each with an unique clientName
.
Another way to import the SoapModule is using forRootAsync
or registerAsync
, like other factory provider. It receives a SoapModuleAsyncOptions object. Our factory function can be async
and can inject dependencies through inject
:
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { SoapModule, SoapModuleOptions } from 'nestjs-soap';
import { ConfigService, ConfigModule } from '@nestjs/config';
@Module({
imports: [
SoapModule.forRootAsync(
{
clientName: 'MY_SOAP_CLIENT',
imports: [ConfigModule],
inject: [ConfigService],
useFactory: async (
configService: ConfigService,
): Promise<SoapModuleOptions> => ({
uri: configService.get<string>('soap.uri'),
auth: {
type: 'basic',
username: configService.get<string>('soap.username'),
password: configService.get<string>('soap.password'),
},
}),
}
),
],
})
export class ExampleModule {}
Then, inject the client where you want to use it.
import { Inject, Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { Client } from 'nestjs-soap';
@Injectable()
export class ExampleService {
constructor(@Inject('MY_SOAP_CLIENT') private readonly mySoapClient: Client) {}
async exampleFunction() {
return await this.mySoapClient.YourFunctionAsync();
}
}
The injected Client is from the soap npm package. This example is using the soap method async from soap package. From here, please follow the Client use instructions on the soap repository.
You can also create your own factory implemeting SoapModuleOptionsFactory
import { Injectable, Inject } from '@nestjs/common';
import { ConfigService } from '@nestjs/config';
import { SoapModuleOptionsFactory, SoapModuleOptionsFactoryType } from 'nestjs-soap';
@Injectable()
export class ExampleSoapConfigService implements SoapModuleOptionsFactory {
constructor(
@Inject(ConfigService) private readonly configService: ConfigService
)
createSoapModuleOptions(): SoapModuleOptionsFactoryType {
return {
uri: configService.get<string>('soap.uri'),
auth: {
type: 'basic',
username: configService.get<string>('soap.username'),
password: configService.get<string>('soap.password'),
},
};
}
}
Then, import it using useClass
or useExisting
:
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { SoapModule, SoapModuleOptions } from 'nestjs-soap';
import { ExampleSoapConfigService } from './example-config'
@Module({
imports: [
SoapModule.forRootAsync(
{
clientName: 'MY_SOAP_CLIENT',
useClass: ExampleSoapConfigService
}
),
],
})
export class ExampleModule {}
Note: for the useExisting
provider you need to import the module containing the ExampleSoapConfigService
provider.
clientName
: The unique client name for class injection.
uri
: The SOAP service uri.
auth
(optional): Basic or WSSecurity authentication. Fields type
(basic or wssecurity), username
and password
are required. For the WSSecurity options
field, refer to soap-repository
clientOptions
(optional): The soap client options as in soap repository.
clientName
: The unique client name for class injection.
inject
: Array of dependencies to be injected.
useClass
: A class implementing SoapModuleOptionsFactory
.
useExisting
: An injectable class implementing SoapModuleOptionsFactory
.
useFactory
: A factory function returning a SoapModuleOptions object.
imports
: Array of modules containing the injected dependencies.
scope
: Injection scope of the injected provider.