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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-7491?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16156049#comment-16156049
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on CXF-7491:
-------------------------------------

Github user cchepelov commented on the issue:

    https://github.com/apache/cxf/pull/309
  
    Thanks for the feedback @sberyozkin 
    
    As noted in the JIRA ticket, I hesitated between simply updating the 
existing interceptors and forking/deprecating. The reason why I went with the 
latter is in order to avoid making a breaking interface change for users of 
_subclasses_ of these interceptors, which seemed to be an excessive surprise in 
a possible 3.1.(x+1) release. In the patch as it is now, the **features** are 
updated to use the new interceptors.
    
    Do you feel I overestimated the inconvenience to such subclassers, at the 
expense of leaving (effectively) dead/worse code around ? I'll gladly switch to 
the break-but-improve-in-place strategy if this is preferred.



> TransformInInterceptor / TransformOutInterceptor assume UTF-8, ignore 
> header-provided character set
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-7491
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-7491
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Soap Binding
>    Affects Versions: 3.1.11, 3.1.12
>         Environment: client Linux/Java/CXF (actually scala using 
> sbt-play-soap)  
> server IBMi AS/400
>            Reporter: Cyrille Chépélov
>
> When talking to a server using IBMi / RPG-based software and SOAP gateway:
> the returned SOAP message contains XML encoded as ISO-8859-1; the HTTP header 
> do specify a content type of xml+soap with character set ISO-8859-1; however 
> the XML message itself include no character set declaration.
> Due to discrepancies between the official WSDL for the SOAP message and the 
> remote implementation, a couple transforms had to be deployed. This works 
> fine as long as the exchanged messages actually conform to US-ASCII (no 
> diacritics), but whenever any character encoded differently between 
> ISO-8859-1 and UTF-8 is used, the TransformInInterceptor fails to parse the 
> text, as the XMLStreamReader is built to expect UTF-8 and actually receives 
> ISO-8859-1 input



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