How to pass "Null" (a real surname!) to a SOAP web service in ActionScript 3

@doc_180 had the right concept, except he is focused on numbers, whereas the original poster had issues with strings.

The solution is to change the mx.rpc.xml.XMLEncoder file. This is line 121:

    if (content != null)
        result += content;

(I looked at Flex 4.5.1 SDK; line numbers may differ in other versions.)

Basically, the validation fails because 'content is null' and therefore your argument is not added to the outgoing SOAP Packet; thus causing the missing parameter error.

You have to extend this class to remove the validation. Then there is a big snowball up the chain, modifying SOAPEncoder to use your modified XMLEncoder, and then modifying Operation to use your modified SOAPEncoder, and then moidfying WebService to use your alternate Operation class.

I spent a few hours on it, but I need to move on. It'll probably take a day or two.

You may be able to just fix the XMLEncoder line and do some monkey patching to use your own class.

I'll also add that if you switch to using RemoteObject/AMF with ColdFusion, the null is passed without problems.


11/16/2013 update:

I have one more recent addition to my last comment about RemoteObject/AMF. If you are using ColdFusion 10; then properties with a null value on an object are removed from the server-side object. So, you have to check for the properties existence before accessing it or you will get a runtime error.

Check like this:

<cfif (structKeyExists(arguments.myObject,'propertyName')>
 <!--- no property code --->
<cfelse>
 <!--- handle property  normally --->
</cfif>

This is a change in behavior from ColdFusion 9; where the null properties would turn into empty strings.


Edit 12/6/2013

Since there was a question about how nulls are treated, here is a quick sample application to demonstrate how a string "null" will relate to the reserved word null.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<s:Application xmlns:fx="http://ns.adobe.com/mxml/2009"
               xmlns:s="library://ns.adobe.com/flex/spark"
               xmlns:mx="library://ns.adobe.com/flex/mx" minWidth="955" minHeight="600" initialize="application1_initializeHandler(event)">
    <fx:Script>
        <![CDATA[
            import mx.events.FlexEvent;

            protected function application1_initializeHandler(event:FlexEvent):void
            {
                var s :String = "null";
                if(s != null){
                    trace('null string is not equal to null reserved word using the != condition');
                } else {
                    trace('null string is equal to null reserved word using the != condition');
                }

                if(s == null){
                    trace('null string is equal to null reserved word using the == condition');
                } else {
                    trace('null string is not equal to null reserved word using the == condition');
                }

                if(s === null){
                    trace('null string is equal to null reserved word using the === condition');
                } else {
                    trace('null string is not equal to null reserved word using the === condition');
                }
            }
        ]]>
    </fx:Script>
    <fx:Declarations>
        <!-- Place non-visual elements (e.g., services, value objects) here -->
    </fx:Declarations>
</s:Application>

The trace output is:

null string is not equal to null reserved word using the != condition

null string is not equal to null reserved word using the == condition

null string is not equal to null reserved word using the === condition


The problem could be in Flex's SOAP encoder. Try extending the SOAP encoder in your Flex application and debug the program to see how the null value is handled.

My guess is, it's passed as NaN (Not a Number). This will mess up the SOAP message unmarshalling process sometime (most notably in the JBoss 5 server...). I remember extending the SOAP encoder and performing an explicit check on how NaN is handled.


Tracking it down

At first I thought this was a coercion bug where null was getting coerced to "null" and a test of "null" == null was passing. It's not. I was close, but so very, very wrong. Sorry about that!

I've since done lots of fiddling on wonderfl.net and tracing through the code in mx.rpc.xml.*. At line 1795 of XMLEncoder (in the 3.5 source), in setValue, all of the XMLEncoding boils down to

currentChild.appendChild(xmlSpecialCharsFilter(Object(value)));

which is essentially the same as:

currentChild.appendChild("null");

This code, according to my original fiddle, returns an empty XML element. But why?

Cause

According to commenter Justin Mclean on bug report FLEX-33664, the following is the culprit (see last two tests in my fiddle which verify this):

var thisIsNotNull:XML = <root>null</root>;
if(thisIsNotNull == null){
    // always branches here, as (thisIsNotNull == null) strangely returns true
    // despite the fact that thisIsNotNull is a valid instance of type XML
}

When currentChild.appendChild is passed the string "null", it first converts it to a root XML element with text null, and then tests that element against the null literal. This is a weak equality test, so either the XML containing null is coerced to the null type, or the null type is coerced to a root xml element containing the string "null", and the test passes where it arguably should fail. One fix might be to always use strict equality tests when checking XML (or anything, really) for "nullness."

Solution

The only reasonable workaround I can think of, short of fixing this bug in every damn version of ActionScript, is to test fields for "null" and escape them as CDATA values.

CDATA values are the most appropriate way to mutate an entire text value that would otherwise cause encoding/decoding problems. Hex encoding, for instance, is meant for individual characters. CDATA values are preferred when you're escaping the entire text of an element. The biggest reason for this is that it maintains human readability.


On the xkcd note, the Bobby Tables website has good advice for avoiding the improper interpretation of user data (in this case, the string "Null") in SQL queries in various languages, including ColdFusion.

It is not clear from the question that this is the source of the problem, and given the solution noted in a comment to the first answer (embedding the parameters in a structure) it seems likely that it was something else.