SoapHeader.Actor Property

 

Gets or sets the recipient of the SOAP header.

Namespace:   System.Web.Services.Protocols
Assembly:  System.Web.Services (in System.Web.Services.dll)

Public Property Actor As String

Property Value

Type: System.String

The recipient of the SOAP header. The default is an empty string ("").

To set the recipient of a SOAP header, set the Actor property. Regardless of the version of the SOAP protocol used to communicate with an XML Web service, the .NET Framework automatically generates the SOAP message specific to the version of the SOAP protocol. Specifically, the XML element and XML namespace representing the recipient differ for the two versions.

XML Web services receiving the SOAP header can get the intended recipient by getting either the Role or Actor properties.

The recipient(s) for the Body element and each of the SOAP headers within the Header element of a SOAP message need not be the same. If a Header element exists in the SOAP message, it represents additional data that can be sent to and from the XML Web service method or an intermediary. The recipient of that data, known as the SOAP Actor in version 1.1, can be a different URI than the URI for the XML Web service method.

For more information on the SOAP actor attribute, see the SOAP specification at http://www.w3.org/TR/SOAP/.

The following XML Web service client calls the MyWebMethod XML Web service method after creating a custom SOAP header of type MyHeader and setting the Actor property to http://www.contoso.com/MySoapHeaderHandler.

Imports System

Public Class Sample

    Public Shared Sub Main()
        Dim ws As New MyWebService()

        Try
            Dim customHeader As New MyHeader1()

            customHeader.MyValue = "Header Value for MyValue"
            customHeader.Actor = "http://www.contoso.com/MySoapHeaderHandler"

            ws.myHeader = customHeader

	    Dim results As Integer

            results = ws.MyWebMethod(3,5)
        Catch e As Exception
            Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", e.ToString())
        End Try
    End Sub
End Class

.NET Framework
Available since 1.1
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