JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.5.0
Package javax.management.remote.rmi
The RMI connector is a connector for the JMX Remote API that
uses RMI to transmit client requests to a remote MBean server.
See:
Description
Interface Summary |
RMIConnection |
RMI object used to forward an MBeanServer request from a client
to its MBeanServer implementation on the server side. |
RMIServer |
RMI object used to establish connections to an RMI connector. |
Package javax.management.remote.rmi Description
The RMI connector is a connector for the JMX Remote API that
uses RMI to transmit client requests to a remote MBean server.
This package defines the classes that the user of an RMI
connector needs to reference directly, for both the client and
server sides. It also defines certain classes that the user
will not usually reference directly, but that must be defined so
that different implementations of the RMI connector can
interoperate.
The RMI connector supports both the JRMP and the IIOP transports
for RMI.
Like most connectors in the JMX Remote API, an RMI connector
usually has an address, which
is a JMXServiceURL . The protocol part of this address is
rmi for a connector that uses the default RMI
transport (JRMP), or iiop for a connector that
uses RMI/IIOP.
There are two forms for RMI connector addresses:
-
In the JNDI form, the URL indicates where to find
an RMI stub for the connector. This RMI stub is a Java
object of type
RMIServer that gives remote access to the connector server.
With this address form, the RMI stub is obtained from an
external directory entry included in the URL. An external
directory is any directory recognized by JNDI , typically the RMI registry, LDAP, or COS Naming.
-
In the encoded form, the URL directly includes the
information needed to connect to the connector server. When
using RMI/JRMP, the encoded form is the serialized RMI stub
for the server object, encoded using BASE64 without embedded
newlines. When using RMI/IIOP, the encoded form is the CORBA
IOR for the server object.
Addresses are covered in more detail below.
Creating an RMI connector server
The usual way to create an RMI connector server is to supply an
RMI connector address to the method JMXConnectorServerFactory.newJMXConnectorServer . The MBean
server to which the connector server is attached can be
specified as a parameter to that method. Alternatively, the
connector server can be registered as an MBean in that MBean
server.
An RMI connector server can also be created by constructing an
instance of RMIConnectorServer , explicitly or through the MBean server's
createMBean method.
Choosing the RMI transport
You can choose the RMI transport (JRMP or IIOP) by specifying
rmi or iiop in the
protocol part of the
serviceURL when creating the connector server. You
can also create specialised connector servers by instantiating
an appropriate subclass of RMIServerImpl and
supplying it to the RMIConnectorServer
constructor.
If the serviceURL you specify has an empty URL
path (after the optional host and port), or if you do not
specify a serviceURL , then the connector server
will fabricate a new JMXServiceURL that clients can
use to connect:
If the serviceURL looks like:
service:jmx:rmi://host:port
then the connector server will generate an RMIJRMPServerImpl and the returned JMXServiceURL
looks like:
service:jmx:rmi://host:port/stub/XXXX
where XXXX is the serialized form of the
stub for the generated object, encoded in BASE64 without
newlines.
If the serviceURL looks like:
service:jmx:iiop://host:port
then the connector server will generate an RMIIIOPServerImpl and the returned
JMXServiceURL looks like:
service:jmx:iiop://host:port/ior/IOR:XXXX
where IOR:XXXX is the standard CORBA
encoding of the Interoperable Object Reference for the
generated object.
If there is no serviceURL , there must be a
user-provided RMIServerImpl . If the toStub
method on this object returns an instance of Stub , then the connector server will generate
a JMXServiceURL using the iiop
form above. Otherwise, it will generate a
JMXServiceURL using the rmi
form.
The host in a user-provided
serviceURL is optional. If present, it is copied
into the generated JMXServiceURL but otherwise
ignored. If absent, the generated JXMServiceURL
will have the local host name.
The port in a user-provided
serviceURL is also optional. If present, it is
also copied into the generated JMXServiceURL ;
otherwise, the generated JMXServiceURL has no port.
For an serviceURL using the rmi
protocol, the port , if present, indicates
what port the generated remote object should be exported on. It
has no other effect.
If the user provides an RMIServerImpl rather than a
JMXServiceURL , then the generated
JMXServiceURL will have the local host name in its
host part and no
port .
As an alternative to the generated addresses just described,
the serviceURL address supplied when creating a
connector server can specify a directory address in
which to store the provided or generated RMIServer
stub. This directory address is then used by both client and
server.
In this case, the serviceURL has one of these two
forms:
service:jmx:rmi://host:port/jndi/jndi-name
service:jmx:iiop://host:port/jndi/jndi-name
Here, jndi-name is a string that can be
supplied to javax.naming.InitialContext.bind .
As usual, the host and
:port can be omitted.
The connector server will generate an
RMIServerImpl based on the protocol
(rmi or iiop ) and, for
rmi , the port if any. When
the connector server is started, it will derive a stub from this
object using its toStub method
and store the object using the given
jndi-name . The properties defined by the
JNDI API are consulted as usual.
For example, if the JMXServiceURL is:
service:jmx:rmi://ignoredhost/jndi/rmi://myhost/myname
then the connector server will generate an
RMIJRMPServerImpl and store its stub using the JNDI
name
rmi://myhost/myname
which means entry myname in the RMI registry
running on the default port of host myhost . Note
that the RMI registry only allows registration from the local
host. So, in this case, myhost must be the name
(or a name) of the host that the connector server is running
on.
In this JMXServiceURL , the first rmi:
specifies the RMI
connector, while the second rmi: specifies the RMI
registry.
As another example, if the JMXServiceURL is:
service:jmx:iiop://ignoredhost/jndi/ldap://dirhost:9999/cn=this,ou=that
then the connector server will generate an
RMIIIOPServerImpl and store its stub using the JNDI
name
ldap://dirhost:9999/cn=this,ou=that
which means entry cn=this,ou=that in the LDAP
directory running on port 9999 of host dirhost .
If the JMXServiceURL is:
service:jmx:iiop://ignoredhost/jndi/cn=this,ou=that
then the connector server will generate an
RMIIIOPServerImpl and store its stub using the JNDI
name
cn=this,ou=that
For this case to work, the JNDI API must have been configured
appropriately to supply the information about what directory to
use.
In these examples, the host name ignoredhost is
not used by the connector server or its clients. It can be
omitted, for example:
service:jmx:iiop:///jndi/cn=this,ou=that
However, it is good practice to use the name of the host
where the connector server is running. This is often different
from the name of the directory host.
Connector server attributes
When using the default JRMP transport, RMI socket factories can
be specified using the attributes
jmx.remote.rmi.client.socket.factory and
jmx.remote.rmi.server.socket.factory in the
environment given to the
RMIConnectorServer constructor. The values of these
attributes must be of type RMIClientSocketFactory and RMIServerSocketFactory , respectively. These
factories are used when creating the RMI objects associated with
the connector.
Creating an RMI connector client
An RMI connector client is usually constructed using JMXConnectorFactory , with a
JMXServiceURL that has rmi or
iiop as its protocol.
If the JMXServiceURL was generated by the server,
as described above under "connector
addresses generated by the server", then the client will
need to obtain it directly or indirectly from the server.
Typically, the server makes the JMXServiceURL
available by storing it in a file or a lookup service.
If the JMXServiceURL uses the directory syntax, as
described above under "connector addresses
based on directory entries", then the client may obtain it
as just explained, or client and server may both know the
appropriate directory entry to use. For example, if the
connector server for the Whatsit agent uses the entry
whatsit-agent-connector in the RMI registry on host
myhost , then client and server can both know
that the appropriate JMXServiceURL is:
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://myhost/whatsit-agent-connector
If you have an RMI stub of type RMIServer , you can
construct an RMI connection directly by using the appropriate
constructor of RMIConnector .
Specifying an ORB for the RMI/IIOP connector
When using the IIOP transport, the client and server can
specify what ORB to use
with the attribute java.naming.corba.orb .
Connection to the ORB happens at start time
for the connector server, and at connect time for the connector client.
If the java.naming.corba.orb attribute is contained
in the environment Map, then its value (an ORB ), is used to connect the IIOP Stubs.
Otherwise, a new org.omg.CORBA.ORB is created by calling org.omg.CORBA.ORB.init((String[])null,(Properties)null) . A
later RMI connector client or server in the same JVM can reuse
this ORB, or it can create another one in the same way.
If the java.naming.corba.orb attribute is
specified and does not point to an ORB ,
then an IllegalArgumentException
will be thrown.
The mechanism described here does not apply when the IIOP
Remote objects (Stubs or Servers) are created and connected to
an ORB manually before being passed to the RMIConnector and
RMIConnectorServer.
- See Also:
-
JavaTM Remote Method
Invocation (RMI),
Java Naming and Directory InterfaceTM (JNDI),
RFC 2045,
section 6.8, "Base64 Content-Transfer-Encoding"
Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved
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