Tutorial: Getting Started Using RMI-IIOP (original) (raw)
This tutorial shows you the steps to follow to create a distributed version of the classic "Hello World" program using Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI) over Internet Inter-ORB Protocol (IIOP). RMI-IIOP adds CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) capability to Java RMI, providing standards-based interoperability and connectivity to many other programming languages and platforms. RMI-IIOP enables distributed Web-enabled Java applications to transparently invoke operations on remote network services using the industry standard IIOP defined by the Object Management Group. Runtime components include a Java ORB for distributed computing using IIOP communication.
RMI-IIOP is for Java programmers who want to program to the RMI interfaces, but use IIOP as the underlying transport. RMI-IIOP provides interoperability with other CORBA objects implemented in various languages - but only if all the remote interfaces are originally defined as Java RMI interfaces. It is of particular interest to programmers using Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), since the remote object model for EJBs is RMI-based.
Other options for creating distributed applications are:
- Java Interface Definition Language (IDL)
Java IDL is for CORBA programmers who want to program in the Java programming language based on interfaces defined in CORBA Interface Definition Language (IDL). This is "business as usual" CORBA programming, supporting Java in exactly the same way as other languages like C++ or COBOL. - Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI).
The Java RMI system allows an object running in one Java Virtual Machine (VM) to invoke methods on an object running in another Java VM. RMI provides for remote communication between programs written in the Java programming language via the Java Remote Method Protocol (JRMP).
Tutorial: The Hello World Application
The distributed Hello World example uses a client application to make a remote method call via IIOP to a server running on the host from which the client was downloaded. When the client runs, "Hello from MARS!" is displayed.
This tutorial is organized as follows:
Each step in the tutorial is indicated by this symbol.
Write or Download the Source Files
There are three tasks to complete in this section:
- Define the functions of the remote class as an interface written in the Java programming language
- Write the implementation class
- Write the server class
- Write a client program that uses the remote service
The source files used in this tutorial are:
- HelloInterface.java - a remote interface
[HelloImpl.java](#a5192)
- a remote object implementation that implementsHelloInterface
[HelloServer.java](#helloserver)
- an RMI server that creates an instance of the remote object implementation and binds that instance to a name in the Naming Service[HelloClient.java](#a5235)
- a client application that invokes the remote method,sayHello()
Follow the steps below to create the source files or download and unzip <HelloRMIIIOP.zip>.
Define the functions of the remote class as an interface written in the Java programming language
In the Java programming language, a remote object is an instance of a class that implements a Remote
interface. Your remote interface will declare each of the methods that you would like to call from other machines. Remote interfaces have the following characteristics:
- The remote interface must be declared
public
. Otherwise, a client will get an error when attempting to load a remote object that implements the remote interface, unless that client is in the same package as the remote interface. - The remote interface extends the
java.rmi.Remote
interface. - Each method must declare
java.rmi.RemoteException
(or a superclass ofRemoteException
) in itsthrows
clause, in addition to any application-specific exceptions. - The data type of any remote object that is passed as an argument or return value (either directly or embedded within a local object) must be declared as the remote interface type(for example,
HelloInterface
) not the implementation class (HelloImpl
).
For this example, create all of the source files in the same directory, for example, $HOME/mysrc/helloWorld
.
Create the fileHelloInterface.java. The following code is the interface definition for the remote interface,
HelloInterface
, which contains just one method, sayHello
:
//HelloInterface.java import java.rmi.Remote;
public interface HelloInterface extends java.rmi.Remote { public void sayHello( String from ) throws java.rmi.RemoteException; }
Because remote method invocations can fail in very different ways from local method invocations (due to network-related communication problems and server problems), remote methods will report communication failures by throwing ajava.rmi.RemoteException
.
Write The Implementation Class
At a minimum, a remote object implementation class,HelloImpl.java
must:
- Declare that it implements at least one remote interface
- Define the constructor for the remote object
- Provide implementations for the methods that can be invoked remotely
Create the fileHelloImpl.java. The code for this file follows. An explanation of each of the preceding steps follows the source code:
//HelloImpl.java import javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject;
public class HelloImpl extends PortableRemoteObject implements HelloInterface { public HelloImpl() throws java.rmi.RemoteException { super(); // invoke rmi linking and remote object initialization }
public void sayHello( String from ) throws java.rmi.RemoteException { System.out.println( "Hello from " + from + "!!" ); System.out.flush(); } }
Implement a remote interface
In the Java programming language, when a class declares that it implements an interface, a contract is formed between the class and the compiler. By entering into this contract, the class is promising that it will provide method bodies, or definitions, for each of the method signatures declared in that interface. Interface methods are implicitly public
andabstract
, so if the implementation class doesn't fulfill its contract, it becomes by definition anabstract
class, and the compiler will point out this fact if the class was not declared abstract
.
The implementation class in this example isHelloImpl
. The implementation class declares which remote interface(s) it is implementing. Here is theHelloImpl
class declaration:
public class HelloImpl extends PortableRemoteObject implements HelloInterface{
As a convenience, the implementation class can extend a remote class, which in this example isjavax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject
. By extendingPortableRemoteObject
, the HelloImpl
class can be used to create a remote object that uses IIOP-based transport for communication.
Define the constructor for the remote object
The constructor for a remote class provides the same functionality as the constructor for a non-remote class: it initializes the variables of each newly created instance of the class, and returns an instance of the class to the program which called the constructor.
In addition, the remote object instance will need to be "exported". Exporting a remote object makes it available to accept incoming remote method requests, by listening for incoming calls to the remote object on an anonymous port. When you extendjavax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject
, your class will be exported automatically upon creation.
Because the object export could potentially throw ajava.rmi.RemoteException
, you must define a constructor that throws a RemoteException
, even if the constructor does nothing else. If you forget the constructor,javac
will produce the following error message:
HelloImpl.java:3: unreported exception java.rmi.RemoteException; must be
caught or declared to be thrown.
public class HelloImpl extends PortableRemoteObject implements HelloInterface{
^
1 error
To review: The implementation class for a remote object needs to:
- Implement a remote interface
- Export the object so that it can accept incoming remote method calls
- Declare its constructor(s) to throw at least a
java.rmi.RemoteException
Here is the constructor for the HelloImpl
class:
public HelloImpl() throws java.rmi.RemoteException { super(); }
Note the following:
- The
super
method call invokes the no-argument constructor ofjavax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject
, which exports the remote object. - The constructor must throw
java.rmi.RemoteException
, because RMI's attempt to export a remote object during construction might fail if communication resources are not available.
Although the call to the superclass's no-argument constructor,super()
, occurs by default (even if omitted), it is included in this example to make clear the fact that the superclass will be constructed before the class.
Provide an implementation for each remote method
The implementation class for a remote object contains the code that implements each of the remote methods specified in the remote interface. For example, here is the implementation for thesayHello()
method, which returns the string "Hello from MARS!!" to the caller:
public void sayHello( String from ) throws java.rmi.RemoteException { System.out.println( "Hello from " + from + "!!"); System.out.flush(); }
Arguments to, or return values from, remote methods can be any data type for the Java platform, including objects, as long as those objects implement the interface java.io.Serializable
. Most of the core classes in java.lang
andjava.util
implement the Serializable
interface. In RMI:
- By default, local objects are passed by copy, which means that all data members (or fields) of an object are copied, except those marked as
static
ortransient
. Please refer to the Java Object Serialization Specification for information on how to alter the default serialization behavior. - Remote objects are passed by reference. A reference to a remote object is actually a reference to a stub, which is a client-side proxy for the remote object. We'll create them later in this tutorial in the section: Use rmicto generate stubs and skeletons.
Write The Server Class
A server class is the class which has a main
method that creates an instance of the remote object implementation, and binds that instance to a name in the Naming Service. The class that contains this main
method could be the implementation class itself, or another class entirely.
In this example, the main
method is part ofHelloServer.java
, which does the following:
Create the fileHelloServer.java. The source code for this file follows. An explanation of each of the preceding steps follows the source code:
//HelloServer.java import javax.naming.InitialContext; import javax.naming.Context;
public class HelloServer { public static void main(String[] args) { try { // Step 1: Instantiate the Hello servant HelloImpl helloRef = new HelloImpl();
// Step 2: Publish the reference in the Naming Service
// using JNDI API
Context initialNamingContext = new InitialContext();
initialNamingContext.rebind("HelloService", helloRef );
System.out.println("Hello Server: Ready...");
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Trouble: " + e);
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Create an instance of a remote object
The main
method of the server needs to create an instance of the remote object implementation, or Servant. For example:
HelloImpl helloRef = new HelloImpl();
The constructor exports the remote object, which means that once created, the remote object is ready to accept incoming calls.
Publish the object reference
For a caller (client, peer, or client application) to be able to invoke a method on a remote object, that caller must first obtain a reference to the remote object.
Once a remote object is registered on the server, callers can look up the object by name (using a naming service), obtain a remote object reference, and then remotely invoke methods on the object. In this example, we use the Naming Service that is part of the Object Request Broker Daemon (orbd
for Solaris, Linux, or Mac OS X or Windows).
For example, the following code binds the name "HelloService" to a reference for the remote object:
// Step 2: Publish the reference in the Naming Service
// using JNDI API
Context initialNamingContext = new InitialContext();
initialNamingContext.rebind("HelloService", helloRef );
Note the following about the arguments to therebind
method call:
- The first argument,
"HelloService"
, is ajava.lang.String
, representing the name of the remote object to bind - The second argument,
helloRef
is the object id of the remote object to bind
Write a client program that uses the remote service
The client application in this example remotely invokes thesayHello
method in order to get the string "Hello from MARS!!" to display when the client application runs.
Create the fileHelloClient.java. Here is the source code for the client application:
//HelloClient.java import java.rmi.RemoteException; import java.net.MalformedURLException; import java.rmi.NotBoundException; import javax.rmi.*; import java.util.Vector; import javax.naming.NamingException; import javax.naming.InitialContext; import javax.naming.Context;
public class HelloClient {
public static void main( String args[] ) {
Context ic;
Object objref;
HelloInterface hi;
try {
ic = new InitialContext();
// STEP 1: Get the Object reference from the Name Service
// using JNDI call.
objref = ic.lookup("HelloService");
System.out.println("Client: Obtained a ref. to Hello server.");
// STEP 2: Narrow the object reference to the concrete type and
// invoke the method.
hi = (HelloInterface) PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
objref, HelloInterface.class);
hi.sayHello( " MARS " );
} catch( Exception e ) {
System.err.println( "Exception " + e + "Caught" );
e.printStackTrace( );
return;
}
}
}
First, the client application gets a reference to the remote object implementation (advertised as "HelloService") from the Naming Service using Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) calls. Like theNaming.rebind
method, the Naming.lookup
method takes java.lang.String
value representing the name of the object to look up. You supply Naming.lookup()the name of the object you want to look up, and it returns the object bound to that name. Naming.lookup() returns the stub for the remote implementation of the Hello
interface to its caller (HelloClient
).
- The client application invokes the remote
sayHello()
method on the server's remote object, causing the string "Hello from MARS!!" to be displayed on the command line.
Compile the Example
The source code for this example is now complete and the directory contains four files:
HelloInterface.java
contains the source code for the remote interfaceHelloImpl.java
contains the source code for the remote object implementationHelloServer.java
contains the source code for the serverHelloClient.java
contains the source code for the client application
In this section, you compile the remote object implementation file,HelloImpl.java
, in order to create the.class
files needed to run rmic
. You then run the rmic
compiler to create stubs and skeletons. A stub is a client-side proxy for a remote object which forwards RMI-IIOP calls to the server-side dispatcher, which in turn forwards the call to the actual remote object implementation. The last task is to compile the remaining .java
source files to create .class
files.
The following tasks will be completed in this section:
- Compile the remote object implementation
- Use rmic to generate stubs and skeletons
- Compile the source files
Compile the remote object implementation
To create stub and skeleton files, the rmic
compiler must be run on the fully-qualified package names of compiled class files that contain remote object implementations. In this example, the file that contains the remote object implementations is HelloImpl.java
. To generate the stubs and skeletons:
Compile
HelloImpl.java
, as follows:
javac -d . -classpath . HelloImpl.java
The "-d .
" option indicates that the generated files should be placed in the directory from which you are running the compiler. The "-classpath .
" option indicates that files on which HelloImpl.java
is dependent can be found in this directory.
Use rmic
to generate skeletons and stubs
To create CORBA-compatible stub and skeleton files, run thermic
compiler with the -iiop
option. Thermic -iiop
command takes one or more class names as an argument and produces class files of the form_HelloImpl_Tie.class
and_HelloInterface_Stub.class
. The remote implementation file, HelloImpl.class
, is the class name to pass in this example.
For an explanation of rmic
options, you can refer to the Solaris, Linux, or Mac OS X rmicman page or the Windowsrmic man page.
To create the stub and skeleton for the
HelloImpl
remote object implementation, run rmic
like this:
rmic -iiop HelloImpl
The preceding command creates the following files:
_HelloInterface_Stub.class
- the client stub_HelloImpl_Tie.class
- the server skeleton
Compile the source files
Compile the source files as follows:
javac -d . -classpath . HelloInterface.java HelloServer.java HelloClient.java
This command creates the class filesHelloInterface.class
, HelloServer.class
, and HelloClient.class
. These are the remote interface, the server, and the client application respectively. For an explanation of javac
options, you can refer to theSolaris, Linux, or Mac OS X javac man page or the Windowsjavac man page.
Run the Example
The following tasks will be completed in this section:
Start the Naming Service
For this example, we will use the Object Request Broker Daemon,orbd
, which includes both a Transient and a Persistent Naming Service, and is available with every download of the JDK.
For a caller (client, peer, or client application) to be able to invoke a method on a remote object, that caller must first obtain a reference to the remote object.
Once a remote object is registered on the server, callers can look up the object by name, obtain a remote object reference, and then remotely invoke methods on the object.
Start the Naming Service by running
orbd
from the command line.
For this example, on the Solaris operating system:
orbd -ORBInitialPort 1050&
or, on the Windows operating system:
start orbd -ORBInitialPort 1050
You must specify a port on which to run orbd
. For this example the port of 1050
is chosen because in the Solaris operating environment, a user must become root to start a process on a port under 1024. For more on the orbd
tool, you can refer to the orbd man page (Solaris, Linux, or Mac OS X or Windows).
You must stop and restart the server any time you modify a remote interface or use modified/additional remote interfaces in a remote object implementation. Otherwise, the type of the object reference bound in the Naming Service will not match the modified class.
Start the server
Open another terminal window and change to the directory containing the source files for this example. The command for running the client has been spread out below to make it easier to read, but should be typed without returns between the lines. The following command shows how to start the HelloServer
server. If you used a port other than 1050 or a host other thanlocalhost
when starting the orbd
tool, replace those values in the command below with the actual values used to start orbd
.
Start the Hello server, as follows:
java
-classpath .
-Djava.naming.factory.initial=com.sun.jndi.cosnaming.CNCtxFactory
-Djava.naming.provider.url=iiop://localhost:1050
HelloServer
For an explanation of java
options, you can refer to the Solaris, Linux, or Mac OS X javaman page or the Windowsjava man page.
The output should look like this:
Hello Server: Ready ...
Run the client application
Once the Naming Service and server are running, the client application can be run. From a new terminal window, go to the source code directory, and run the client application from the command line, as shown below. The command for running the client has been spread out below to make it easier to read, but should be typed without returns between the lines. If you used a port other than 1050 or a host other than localhost
when starting the orbd
tool, replace those values in the command below with the actual values used to start orbd
.
Start the client application, as follows:
java
-classpath .
-Djava.naming.factory.initial=com.sun.jndi.cosnaming.CNCtxFactory
-Djava.naming.provider.url=iiop://localhost:1050
HelloClient
After running the client application, you will see output similar to the following on your display in the client window:
Client: Obtained a ref. to Hello server.
The following message will display in the server window:
Hello from MARS
ORBD and the Hello server will continue to run until they are explicitly stopped. On Solaris, Linux, or Mac OS X, you can stop these processes using thepkill orbd
and pkill HelloServer
commands from a terminal window. On Windows, you can typeCtrl+C
in a prompt window to kill the process.
This completes the basic RMI-IIOP tutorial. If you are ready to move on to more complicated applications, here are some sources that may help:
- EJB clients interact with the Java EE EJB tier using the RMI-IIOP protocol. For more information on using RMI-IIOP in this way, see the Java Platform, Enterprise Edition Blueprintsor the Java EE Reference documentation.
- Another RMI-IIOP tutorialincludes support for the Portable Object Adapter (POA). POA support for RMI-IIOP is non-standard.
- The Java IDL tutorial includes an example for running the client and server on different machines. The concepts of Running the Hello World Example on Two Machines apply to this example as well.