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Home/ Questions/Q 4535210
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 21, 20262026-05-21T14:22:37+00:00 2026-05-21T14:22:37+00:00

My question is similar to this. How To Pass Soap Header When WSDL Doesn't

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My question is similar to this. How To Pass Soap Header When WSDL Doesn't Define It? But is different.

For a web service I use, all methods need authentication which is sent in cleartext inside a SOAP header. However, my WSDL doesn’t include any soap header information. I have a custom platform tool which I must use to generate code from the WSDL. Since the header info is not available, am unable to use the generated class directly – I do not want to manually modify the code to accommodate the header.

I tried specifying the SOAP header in the WSDL but I failed to get the correct namespaces. The WSDL is here https://stage.totalcheck.sensis.com.au/service/webservice?wsdl and the SOAP header is as follows:

    <soapenv:Header>
        <wsse:Security>
            <wsse:UsernameToken>
                <wsse:Username>username</wsse:Username>
                <wsse:Password>password</wsse:Password>
            </wsse:UsernameToken>
        </wsse:Security>
   </soapenv:Header>

Can someone help me? Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-21T14:22:37+00:00Added an answer on May 21, 2026 at 2:22 pm

    From a conceptual point of view, WSDL is not supposed to define headers. WSDL is only for defining the functional aspects of a service, like operations, messages, binding and endpoints. Messages and bindings define how the payload of messages should be encoded and formatted.

    The headers of SOAP messages however do not belong to the payload. They are typically used for configuring non-functional properties of a SOAP processor. Security is such a non-functional property. The functional aspect of the payload is not affected. It is only assured that the communication is secured and the WS tool stack, not the service implementation, should take care of that.

    So the missing piece is now a standard that allows for attaching some non-functional requirements to WSDL services, so that code generators can automatically derive which headers need to be sent and/or understand in order to fulfill the non-functional property as desired — without having to manually deal with header fields. This standard exists and is called WS-Policy. A policy contains typically a set of alternatives that expose a set of requirements that both, provider and consumer should be able to fulfill. When two services are supposed to interact with each other, both policies are taken and a so called “effective policy” is calculated. It defines the common non-functional requirements. Using this information, provider and consumer can configure themselves to add required headers, like the WS-Security headers. WS-SecurityPolicy also defines a set of policies that can be used. WS-PolicyAttachment defines how such policies can be attached to a WSDL.

    There are code generators that can deal with WS-Policies, e.g. Metro or Axis2

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