SOAPMessageValidation policy

This page applies to Apigee and Apigee hybrid.

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The SOAPMessageValidation policy does the following:

  • Validates any XML message against their XSD schemas
  • Validates SOAP messages against a WSDL definition
  • Determines well-formedness of JSON and XML messages

While the name of this policy in the UI is SOAPMessageValidation, the policy validates more than just SOAP messages. This section refers to the policy as the MessageValidation policy.

This policy is a Standard policy and can be deployed to any environment type. For information on policy types and availability with each environment type, see Policy types.

<MessageValidation> element

Defines the MessageValidation policy.

Default Value See Default Policy tab, below
Required? Optional
Type Complex object
Parent Element n/a
Child Elements <DisplayName>
<Element>
<ResourceURL>
<SOAPMessage>
<Source>

Syntax

The <MessageValidation> element uses the following syntax:

<MessageValidation
  continueOnError="[false|true]"
  enabled="[true|false]"
  name="policy_name"
>
    <!-- All MessageValidation child elements are optional -->
    <DisplayName>policy_display_name</DisplayName>
    <Element namespace="element_namespace">element_to_validate</Element>
    <SOAPMessage version="[ 1.1 | 1.2 | 1.1/1.2 ]"/>
    <Source>message_to_validate</Source>
    <ResourceURL>validation_WSDL_or_XSD</ResourceURL>

</MessageValidation>

Default Policy

The following example shows the default settings when you add a MessageValidation policy to your flow in the Apigee UI:

<MessageValidation continueOnError="false" enabled="true" name="SOAP-Message-Validation-1">
  <DisplayName>SOAP Message Validation-1</DisplayName>
  <Properties/>
  <Element namespace="http://sample.com">sampleObject</Element>
  <SOAPMessage/>
  <Source>request</Source>
  <ResourceURL>wsdl://SOAP-Message-Validation-1.wsdl</ResourceURL>
</MessageValidation>

This element has the following attributes that are common to all policies:

Attribute Default Required? Description
name N/A Required

The internal name of the policy. The value of the name attribute can contain letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, underscores, and periods. This value cannot exceed 255 characters.

Optionally, use the <DisplayName> element to label the policy in the management UI proxy editor with a different, natural-language name.

continueOnError false Optional Set to false to return an error when a policy fails. This is expected behavior for most policies. Set to true to have flow execution continue even after a policy fails. See also:
enabled true Optional Set to true to enforce the policy. Set to false to turn off the policy. The policy will not be enforced even if it remains attached to a flow.
async   false Deprecated This attribute is deprecated.

Examples

The following examples show some of the ways in which you can use the MessageValidation policy:

1: XSD Validation

You can use the Message Validation policy to validate an XML message request's payload against an XSD schema.

  1. Create a new XSD resource file. For example, note-schema.xsd:
    <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
      <xs:element name="note">
        <xs:complexType>
          <xs:sequence>
            <xs:element name="to" type="xs:string"/>
            <xs:element name="from" type="xs:string"/>
            <xs:element name="heading" type="xs:string"/>
            <xs:element name="body" type="xs:string"/>
          </xs:sequence>
        </xs:complexType>
      </xs:element>
    </xs:schema>
  2. Add the SOAP Message Validation policy to your proxy endpoint's pre-flow:
    1. Specify the location of your XSD resource file with the <ResourceURL> element. For example:
      ...
        <ResourceURL>xsd://note-schema.xsd</ResourceURL>
      ...
    2. Remove the <SOAPMessage> and <Element> elements from the policy definition.

    Your policy definition should look like the following:

    <MessageValidation continueOnError="false"
        enabled="true" name="validateXMLRequest">
      <DisplayName>My XML Validator</DisplayName>
      <Properties/>
      <Source>request</Source>
      <ResourceURL>xsd://note-schema.xsd</ResourceURL>
    </MessageValidation>
  3. Send a POST request to your API proxy with your XML as the message payload, as the following example shows:
    curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/xml' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
      -d '<note>
      <to>Fred Rogers</to>
      <from>Nick Danger</from>
      <heading>Greetings from my neighborhood</heading>
      <body>Just writing to say hello.</body>
    </note>'

    Notice that the Content-type header is set to application/xml.

    You can also create a data file for the payload and reference it with a command similar to the following:

    curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-type: application/xml' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
      --data '@../examples/note-payload.xml'

You should receive an HTTP 200 response. Depending on your target endpoint, you might receive addditional details about the request. For example, if you use http://httpbin.org/post as your target endpoint and specify -v (verbose) output, the response should be similar to the following:

< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Date: Wed, 16 May 2018 21:24:54 GMT
< Content-Type: application/xml
< Content-Length: 431
< Connection: keep-alive
< Server: gunicorn/19.8.1
< Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
< Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true
< Via: 1.1 vegur
{
  "args":{},
  "data":"<note><to>fred</to><from>nick</from><heading>hello</heading>
    <body>Just writing to say hello.</body></note>",
  "files":{},
  "form":{},
  "headers": {
    "Accept":"*/*",
    "Connection":"close",
    "Content-Length":"106",
    "Content-Type":"application/xml",
    "Host":"httpbin.org",
    "User-Agent":"curl/7.58.0"
  },
  "json":null,
  "origin":"10.1.1.1, 104.154.179.1",
  "url":"http://httpbin.org/post"
}

To verify that your XSD validation is working, try inserting another tag into the body of your request. For example:

curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/xml' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
  -d '<note>
  <to>Fred Rogers</to>
  <from>Nick Danger</from>
  <heading>Greetings from my neighborhood</heading>
  <body>Just writing to say hello.</body>
  <badTag>Not good</badTag>
</note>'

You should receive a validation error.

2: SOAP Validation

You can use the Message Validation policy to validate a SOAP message request's payload against a WSDL.

  1. Create a new WSDL resource file. For example, "example-wsdl.wsdl":
  2. Add the SOAP Message Validation policy to your proxy endpoint's pre-flow:
    1. Set the <SOAPMessage> element's version attribute to the version of the SOAP protocol that you want to validate against. For example, "1.1":
      ...
        <SOAPMessage version="1.1"/>
      ...
    2. Set the value of the <Element> element to the element that you want to validate:
      ...
        <Element namespace="https://example.com/gateway">getID</Element>
      ...

      <Element> specifies the first child under the <Body> element in the SOAP request's envelope.

      Set the namespace attribute to the namespace for that child.

    3. Specify the location of your WSDL resource file with the <ResourceURL> element. For example:
      ...
        <ResourceURL>wsdl://example-wsdl.wsdl</ResourceURL>
      ...

    Your policy definition should look like the following:

    <MessageValidation continueOnError="false"
        enabled="true" name="validateSOAPRequest">
      <DisplayName>My SOAP Validator</DisplayName>
      <Properties/>
      <Source>request</Source>
      <SOAPMessage version="1.1"/>
      <Element namespace="https://example.com/gateway">getID</Element>
      <ResourceURL>wsdl://example-wsdl.wsdl</ResourceURL>
    </MessageValidation>
  3. Send a POST request to your API proxy with the SOAP envelope as the message payload, as the following example shows:
    curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/xml' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
      -d '<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
        xmlns:prox="https://example.com/gateway" xmlns:typ="https://example.com/gateway/types">
      <soapenv:Header/>
      <soapenv:Body>
        <prox:getID>
          <typ:MyType>
            <typ:ID>42</typ:ID>
          </typ:MyType>
        </prox:getID>
      </soapenv:Body>
    </soapenv:Envelope>'

    Notice that the Content-type header is set to "application/xml".

    You can also create a data file for the payload and reference it with a command similar to the following:

    curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-type: application/xml' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
      --data '@../examples/soap-payload.xml'

You should receive an HTTP 200 response. Depending on your target endpoint, you might receive addditional details about the request. For example, if you use http://httpbin.org/post as your target endpoint, the response should be similar to the following:

< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Date: Wed, 16 May 2018 21:24:54 GMT
< Content-Type: application/xml
< Content-Length: 431
< Connection: keep-alive
< Server: gunicorn/19.8.1
< Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
< Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true
< Via: 1.1 vegur
{
  "args":{},
  "data":"<note><to>fred</to><from>nick</from><heading>hello</heading>
    <body>Just writing to say hello.</body></note>",
  "files":{},
  "form":{},
  "headers": {
    "Accept":"*/*",
    "Connection":"close",
    "Content-Length":"106",
    "Content-Type":"application/xml",
    "Host":"httpbin.org",
    "User-Agent":"curl/7.58.0"
  },
  "json":null,
  "origin":"10.1.1.1, 104.154.179.1",
  "url":"http://httpbin.org/post"
}

3: Well-formed XML/JSON

You can use the Message Validation policy to confirm that a JSON or XML message payload is well-formed (not the same as validation). The policy ensures that the structure and content meets accepted standards, including:

  • There is a single root element
  • There are no illegal characters in the content
  • Objects and tags are properly nested
  • Beginning and ending tags match

To check for a well-formed XML or JSON payload:

  1. Add the SOAP Message Validation policy to your proxy endpoint's pre-flow.
  2. Remove the <ResourceURL>, <SOAPMessage>, and <Element> elements from the policy definition.

    Your policy definition should look like the following:

    <MessageValidation async="false" continueOnError="false"
        enabled="true" name="validateXMLRequest">
      <DisplayName>My JSON Checker</DisplayName>
      <Properties/>
      <Source>request</Source>
    </MessageValidation>
  3. Send a POST request to your API proxy, as the following example shows:
    curl -v -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' http://my-test.apigee.net/v1/xsd-mock
      -d '{
    "note": {
      "to": "Fred Rogers",
      "from": "Nick Danger",
      "header": "Greetings from my neighborhood",
      "body": "Just writing to say hello."
      }
    }'

    Notice that the Content-type header is set to application/json.

    To check an XML file for well-formedness, use XML as the message payload and set Content-type to application/xml.

You should receive an HTTP 200 response. When you send a message payload that does not contain well-formed XML or JSON, you should receive a steps.messagevalidation.Failed error.

Child element reference

This section describes the child elements of <MessageValidation>.

<DisplayName>

Use in addition to the name attribute to label the policy in the management UI proxy editor with a different, more natural-sounding name.

The <DisplayName> element is common to all policies.

Default Value N/A
Required? Optional. If you omit <DisplayName>, the value of the policy's name attribute is used.
Type String
Parent Element <PolicyElement>
Child Elements None

The <DisplayName> element uses the following syntax:

Syntax

<PolicyElement>
  <DisplayName>POLICY_DISPLAY_NAME</DisplayName>
  ...
</PolicyElement>

Example

<PolicyElement>
  <DisplayName>My Validation Policy</DisplayName>
</PolicyElement>

The <DisplayName> element has no attributes or child elements.

<Element>

Specifies the element in the message to validate. This is the first child under the <Body> element in the SOAP request's envelope.

Default Value sampleObject
Required? Optional
Type String
Parent Element <MessageValidation>
Child Elements None

The <Element> element uses the following syntax:

Syntax

...
  <Element namespace="element_namespace">element_to_validate</Element>
...

Example 1

The following example defines a single element to be validated:

...
<Element namespace="https://example.com/gateway">getID</Element>
...

Example 2

You can specify more than one element to validate by adding multiple <Element> elements:

...
<Element namespace="https://example.com/gateway">getID</Element>
<Element namespace="https://example.com/gateway">getDetails</Element>
...

The <Element> element has the following attributes:

Attribute Default Required? Description
namespace "http://sample.com" Optional Defines the namespace of the element to be validated.

<ResourceURL>

Identifies the XSD schema or WSDL definition to be used to validate the source message.

Default Value wsdl://display_name.wsdl
Required? Optional
Type String
Parent Element <MessageValidation>
Child Elements None

The <ResourceURL> element uses the following syntax:

Syntax

...
  <ResourceURL>[wsdl|xsd]://validation_WSDL_or_XSD</ResourceURL>
...

Examples

For an XML file:

...
<ResourceURL>xsd://note-schema.xsd</ResourceURL>
...

For a WSDL:

...
<ResourceURL>wsdl://example-wsdl.wsdl</ResourceURL>
...

The value of <ResourceURL> must point to a resource file in your API proxy. It cannot refer to external resources over HTTP or HTTPS.

If you do not specify a value for <ResourceURL>, the message is checked for well-formed JSON or XML if the Content-type header is application/json or application/xml, respectively.

The <ResourceURL> element has no child elements or attributes.

Using XSDs for validation

If the XML payload that you validate with the MessageValidation policy references another schema, you must prefix the included XSD file with xsd in the schemaLocation attribute.

The following example schema is comprised of multiple XSDs:

<xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
    elementFormDefault="qualified" attributeFormDefault="unqualified">
  <xs:include schemaLocation="xsd://note-schema.xsd"/>
  <xs:include schemaLocation="xsd://letter-schema.xsd"/>
  <xs:include schemaLocation="xsd://user-schema.xsd"/>
</xs:schema>

Using WSDLs for validation

A WSDL must define at least one schema. If it does not reference at least one schema, the MessageValidation policy fails.

The maximum import depth for a schema is 10. If you exceed that number of nested imports, the MessageValidation policy fails.

<SOAPMessage>

Defines the SOAP version against which the MessageValidation policy validates.

Default Value n/a
Required? Optional
Type n/a
Parent Element <MessageValidation>
Child Elements None

The <SOAPMessage> element uses the following syntax:

Syntax

...
  <SOAPMessage version="[ 1.1 | 1.2 | 1.1/1.2 ]"/>
...

Example

...
<SOAPMessage version="1.1"/>
...

The <SOAPMessage> element has the following attributes:

Attribute Default Required? Description
version None Optional The SOAP version that this policy uses to validate SOAP messages.

Valid values are:

  • "1.1"
  • "1.2"
  • "1.1/1.2"

For more information, see From SOAP/1.1 to SOAP Version 1.2 in 9 points.

<Source>

Identifies the source message to be validated. The value of this element is the name of the message that you want to validate.

If you do not set <Source>, this policy defaults to message, which refers to the complete request message (in a request flow) or response message (in a response flow), including any payload. You can also explicitly set it to request or response to refer to the request or response.

Default Value request
Required? Optional
Type String
Parent Element <MessageValidation>
Child Elements None

The <Source> element uses the following syntax:

Syntax

...
  <Source>message_to_validate</Source>
...

Example

...
<Source>request</Source>
...

In addition to message, request, and response, you can set the value of <Source> to the name of any message in your flow. If you do this, though, you must create a custom message with that name in your flow before this policy executes. Otherwise, you will get an error.

If the value of <Source> cannot be resolved in the message flow or resolves to a non-message type, then one of the following occurs:

  • If a null value: Apigee throws a steps.messagevalidation.SourceMessageNotAvailable error.
  • If a non-message type: Apigee throws a steps.messagevalidation.NonMessageVariable error.

The <Source> element has no attributes or child elements.

Error codes

This section describes the fault codes and error messages that are returned and fault variables that are set by Apigee when this policy triggers an error. This information is important to know if you are developing fault rules to handle faults. To learn more, see What you need to know about policy errors and Handling faults.

Runtime errors

These errors can occur when the policy executes.

Fault code HTTP status Cause Fix
steps.messagevalidation.SourceMessageNotAvailable 500

This error occurs if a variable specified in the <Source> element of the policy is either:

  • out of scope (not available in the specific flow where the policy is being executed)
  • or
  • can't be resolved (is not defined)
steps.messagevalidation.NonMessageVariable 500

This error occurs if the <Source> element in the SOAPMessageValidation policy is set to a variable which is not of type message.

Message type variables represent entire HTTP requests and responses. The built-in Apigee flow variables request, response, and message are of type message. To learn more about message variables, see the Variables reference.

steps.messagevalidation.Failed 500 This error occurs if the SOAPMessageValidation policy fails to validate the input message payload against the XSD schema or WSDL definition. It will also occur if there is malformed JSON or XML in the payload message.

Deployment errors

These errors can occur when you deploy a proxy containing this policy.

Error name Cause Fix
InvalidResourceType The <ResourceURL> element in the SOAPMessageValidation policy is set to a resource type not supported by the policy.
ResourceCompileFailed The resource script referenced in the <ResourceURL> element of the SOAPMessageValidation policy contains an error that prevents it from compiling.
RootElementNameUnspecified The <Element> element in the SOAPMessageValidation policy does not contain the root element's name.
InvalidRootElementName The <Element> element in the SOAPMessageValidation policy contains a root element name that does not adhere to XML rules for valid element naming.

Schemas

Each policy type is defined by an XML schema (.xsd). For reference, policy schemas are available on GitHub.

Related topics