1 / 35

Overview

Overview. Topics: Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI) Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB). Java RMI. distributed object computing de velopment of distributed Java programs same syntax and semantics as in non-distributed programs. Computer A class AClass: myAClassMethod(){}. Computer B

arella
Télécharger la présentation

Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Overview • Topics: • Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI) • Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB)

  2. Java RMI • distributed object computing • development of distributed Java programs • same syntax and semantics as in non-distributed programs Computer A class AClass: myAClassMethod(){} Computer B class BClass: AClass a; /* initialize a */ a.myClassMethod(); RMI

  3. RMI architecture • The RMI achitecture defines • how objects behave • how and when exceptions can occur • how memory is managed • how parameters are passed to and returned from remote methods

  4. Principle of RMI (1) • RMI separates: • definition of behaviour • implementation of that behaviour • each of them is allowed to run on different JVMs • interfaces: define definition • classes: define implementation

  5. Principle of RMI (2) • 2 classes that implement the same interface • service implementation on server • service proxy on client • client program makes method calls to proxy • RMI sends request to remote JVM • return values are sent back to proxy / client program

  6. RMI architecture layers • 3 abstract layers: • Stubs & SkeletonsLayer • Remote Reference Layer • Transport Layer • advantages of layer architecture: • implementation of layers independent from each other • each layer can be enhanced / replaced without affecting rest of the system

  7. Stubs & Skeletons Layer (1) • lies just beneath developer • intercepts method calls made by client • redirects them to remote RMI service (= remote object) • Proxy Pattern (Book: Design Patterns by Gamma, Helm, Johnson): • one object in one context • represented by another object (the proxy) in another context • proxy forwards method calls between participating objects • in RMI, stub class is the proxy

  8. Stubs & Skeletons Layer (2) proxy represents the RealSubject in RMI: stub class

  9. Stubs & Skeletons Layer (3) • skeleton class: • helper class on server • generated for RMI to use • communicates with stub accross the link • reads parameters for the method call from the link • makes the call to the service object • accepts the return value, writes it back to the stub Server << parameters Client service object client program skeleton network link stub return values >>

  10. Remote Reference Layer • defines & supports the invocation semantics of the RMI connection • client gets remote reference to remote objects via naming service (discussed later) • Remote Reference Layer manages these remote reference • provides RemoteRef object (represents link to remote object) • stub object: forwards method callsbyRemoteRef.invoke() • in JDK1.1: • unicast point-to-point connection • service must be instantiated and exported to the RMI system, before client can use it • in Java 2 SDK: • multicast and other types of connection semantics • activatable objects

  11. Transport Layer • Transport Layer: • stream-based network connections that use TCP/IP • basic connectivity and firewall penetration strategies • on top of TCP/IP, RMI uses Java Remote Method Protocol (JRMP) • RMI-IIOP: instead of JRMP, OMG IIOP is used to communicate between clients and servers

  12. RMI-IIOP • RMI-IIOP: co-production of Sun and IBM • uses Object Management Group Internet Inter-ORB Protocol (OMG IIOP) • OMG: defines a vendor-neutral, distributed object architecture called Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) • CORBA Object Request Broker (ORB) servers and clients use IIOP for communication • RMI-IIOP: RMI programs can inter-operate with CORBA ORBs • modifications on the source code: RMI programs can be compiled with rmic –iiop to use IIOP • EJB: • based on RMI / RMI-IIOP • communication with CORBA ORBs easier with same protocol

  13. Naming Remote Objects (1) • clients: find remote services by using a naming or directory service, running on a well known host and port number • RMI • can use different directory services, e.g. the Java Naming and Directory Service (JNDI) • includes simple service called RMI Registry (rmiregistry, default on port 1099) • host: server program creates a remote service by • creating a local object that implements the service • exporting that object to RMI • after exporting, server registers object in the RMI Registry under a public name • RMI creates a listening service that waits for client connections and requests for the service

  14. Naming Remote Objects (2) • host (continued): • provides needed class files for client (HTTP, FTP, ...) • client: • RMI Registry is accessed through the static class Naming • client uses its method lookup() to query registry • methodlookup() accepts a URL that specifies the server host name and the name of the desired service • if needed: class files downloaded from server • method returns a remote reference to the service object URLs accepted by Naming.lookup(): rmi://<host_name>[:<name_service_port>]/<service_name>

  15. Using RMI • working RMI system: • interface definitions for the remote services • implementation of the remote services • stub and skeleton files • a server to host the remote services • an RMI Naming service for clients to find the remote services • a class file provider (HTTP or FTP server) • a client program that needs the remote services

  16. Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) • architecture for development of • transactional • 'distributed object applications'-based • server-side software • based on RMI / RMI-IIOP • enterprise beans: • server-side components • distributed objects • short name for such a component: "bean" • hosted in container (Enterprise JavaBeans) • provide remote services for clients distributed thoughout the network

  17. EJB Containers (1) • enterprise beans: software components that run in a special environment called EJB container • container: • hosts and manages an enterprise bean • hosting comparable to • webserver that hosts a servlet • browser that hosts an applet • enterprise bean can't function outside an EJB container • EJB container manages at runtime: • remote access, security • persistence, transactions • concurrency • access to and pooling of resources

  18. EJB Containers (2) • EJB container: isolates enterprise bean from direct access by client application • client invokes a method call on an enterprise bean: • container intercepts invocation • automatically manages persistence, transactions, security • developer doesn't have to care about writing that code • bean doesn't contain any of this logic

  19. EJB Containers (3) • containers: • pool resources, manage life cycles of all beans • reduces memory consumption and processing (scalability) • client application is unaware of this resource management • enterprise bean depends on container for everything: • JDBC connections • connections to other beans • identity of caller • reference to itself

  20. Interaction bean-container (1) • 3 types of interaction enterprise bean EJB container • callback methods • every bean implements a subtype of the EnterpriseBean interface • this i/f defines several "callback methods" • container invokes these methods to • activate a bean • persist its state to the database • end a transaction • remove the bean from memory • ...

  21. Interaction bean-container (2) • EJBContext • object EJBContext: reference to container • provides methods to interact with the container • e.g. request information about the bean's environment: • identity of its client • status of transaction • remote reference to itself • ...

  22. Interaction bean-container (3) • Java Naming and Directory Service (JNDI) • standard extension to the Java platform for accessing naming systens like • LDAP • NetWare • file systens • ... • bean has access to a special naming system Environment Naming Context (ENC) • JNDI ENC allows access to • JDBC connections • other enterprise beans • properties specific to that bean

  23. Enterprise Beans • 2 interfaces + 1 implementation class • client uses interfaces to interact with the bean • interfaces: • remote & home i/f • expose the capabilities of the bean • provide all methods needed to create, update, interact with, delete the bean • implementation class: • represents a business concept (like a addressbook / contact)

  24. Interfaces & types of beans • interfaces: • home interface • remote (or business) interface • entity beans • container managed persistence (CMP) • bean managed persistence (BMP) • session beans • stateful beans • stateless beans

  25. Remote & Home interfaces • home interface: • extends javax.ejb.EJBHome • life cycle methods to create, find and destroy a bean • remote interface: • extends javax.ejb.EJBObject • represents business methods

  26. Life cycle methods • home interface provides life cycle methods • for creating • for destroying • for locating beans • represent behaviours that are not specific to a single bean instance • separated from remote interface /* some imports */ public interface ContactHome extends EJBHome{ public Contact create(int number) throws RemoteException, CreateException; public Contact findByPrimaryKey(int pk) throws FinderException; }

  27. Business methods (1) • can perform tasks • this type of bean is called session bean import javax.ejb.EJBObject; import java.rmi.RemoteException; public interface AddressBook extends EJBObject{ public Contact findByContactData(String name, String firstname, String email) throws RemoteException; public Enumeration findByName(String firstname) throws RemoteException; public Contact findByEmail(String email) throws RemoteException; }

  28. Business methods (2) • can also represent business data stored in a database • this type of business object is called entity bean • each instance of an enterprise bean represents 1 row in a table entity beans database table bean1 bean2 bean3

  29. Entity type beans (1) • example for an entity bean (remote interface): import javax.ejb.EJBObject; import java.rmi.RemoteException; public interface Contact extends EJBObject{ public String getName() throws RemoteException; public String setName(String name) throws RemoteException; public String getFirstName() throws RemoteException; public String setFirstName(String firstname) throws RemoteException; public String getEmailAddress() throws RemoteException; public String setEmailAddress(String emailaddres) throws RemoteException; }

  30. Entity type beans (2) • two types of entity beans: • Container-Managed Persistence (CMP) • Bean-Managed Persistence (BMP) • CMP: • container (EJB server) manages persistence • developer doesn't have to write db access code • programmer has to specify in deployment desciptor which fields (instance variables/columns) are to be managed • BMP: • entity bean contains db access code (via JDBC) • responsible for reading and writing its own state to the database

  31. Session type beans (1) • session beans: • manage interactions of entity and other session beans • access resources • perform tasks on behalf of the client • not persistent business objects, do not represent data in db • interface javax.ejb.SessionBean provides methods ejcActivate() and ejbPassivate() • two types of session beans: • stateless session beans • stateful session beans

  32. Session type beans (2) • stateless beans: • made up of business methods that behave like procedures • operate only on passed through arguments on invocation • do not maintain business state between method invocations • each invocation of a business method is independent from previous invocations • doesn't remember anything from one invocation to the other • faster request processing, less resources used • don't use ejbActivate() and ejbPassivate() methods (overridden with empty implementation)

  33. Session type beans (3) • stateful beans: • encapsulate business logic and state specific to a client • dedicated to one client • clients do not share stateful beans • maintain business state / conversational state between method invocations • held in memory, not persistent

  34. Access to beans • access to beans from outside: • client application (as mentioned) • Java Server Pages (JSP) or Servlets • popularly used method: JSP • HTML pages with embedded Java code • client opens JSP page in browser • server processes page • beans can be used to perform tasks or access database • results are sent back to browser (HTML)

  35. Using EJB • working EJB system: • for each bean • home interface • remote interface • implementation • EJB server (e.g. j2ee) • naming service (usually JNDI) • a class file provider (HTTP or FTP server) • for entity beans: relational database (e.g. cloudscape) • client program

More Related