The JavaTM Tutorial
Previous Page Lesson Contents Next Page Start of Tutorial > Start of Trail > Start of Lesson Search
Feedback Form

Trail: IDL
Lesson: The Hello Client-Server Example

Developing the Hello World Server

This lesson introduces the basics of writing a CORBA transient server. Here's the complete version of HelloServer.java(in a .java source file).

Performing Basic Setup

The structure of a CORBA server program is the same as most Java applications: You import required library packages, declare the server class, define a main method, and remember to handle any exceptions.

Importing Required Packages

Start your text editor and save a new file titled HelloServer.java. Next, import the packages required for the client class:
// The package containing our stubs.
import HelloApp.*;
// HelloServer will use the naming service.
import org.omg.CosNaming.*;
// The package containing special exceptions
// thrown by the name service.
import org.omg.CosNaming.NamingContextPackage.*;
// All CORBA applications need these classes.
import org.omg.CORBA.*;

Declaring the Server Class

Declare the server class:
public class HelloServer {
    // Add the main method here in the next step.
}

Defining the main Method

Declare a standard main method:
public static void main(String args[]) {
    // Add the try-catch block here in the next step.
}

Handling CORBA System Exceptions

Because all CORBA programs can throw CORBA system exceptions at runtime, you will place all of the main functionality within a try-catch block. CORBA programs throw runtime exceptions whenever trouble occurs during any of the processes (marshaling, unmarshaling, upcall) involved in invocation. The exception handler simply prints the exception and its stack trace to standard output so you can see what kind of thing has gone wrong.

Inside main, set up a try-catch block:

try {
    // Add the rest of the HelloServer code here.
} catch(Exception e) {
    System.err.println("ERROR: " + e);
    e.printStackTrace(System.out);
}

Creating an ORB Object

Just like a client, a CORBA server also needs a local ORB object. Every server instantiates an ORB and registers its servant objects so that the ORB can find the server when it receives an invocation for it.

Inside HelloServer.java's try-catch block, declare and initialize an ORB variable:

ORB orb = ORB.init(args, null);

The call to the ORB's init method passes in the server's command line arguments, allowing you to set certain properties at runtime.

Managing the Servant Object

A server is a process that instantiates one or more servant objects. The servant implements the interface generated by idltojava and actually performs the work of the operations on that interface. Our HelloServer needs a HelloServant.

Instantiating the Servant Object

Inside the try-catch block, just below the call to init, instantiate the servant object:
HelloServant helloRef = new HelloServant();

This servant class isn't defined yet; you will do that in a later step. Next, connect the servant to the ORB, so that the ORB can recognize invocations on it and pass them along to the correct servant:

orb.connect(helloRef);

Defining the Servant Class

At the end of HelloServer.java, outside the HelloServer class, define the class for the servant object.
  1. Declare the servant class:
    class HelloServant extends _HelloImplBase {
        // Add the sayHello method here in the next step.
    }
    
  2. The servant is a subclass of _HelloImplBase so that it inherits the general CORBA functionality generated for it by the compiler.
  3. Declare the required sayHello method:
    public String sayHello() {
        // Add the method implementation here in the next step.
    }
    
  4. Write the sayHello implementation:
    return "\nHello World!!\n";
    

Working with COS Naming

The HelloServer works with the naming service to make the servant object's operations available to clients. The server needs an object reference to the name service, so that it can register itself and ensure that invocations on the Hello interface are routed to its servant object.

Obtaining the Initial Naming Context

In the try-catch block, below instantiation of the servant, call orb.resolve_initial_references to get an object reference to the name server:
org.omg.CORBA.Object objRef =
    orb.resolve_initial_references("NameService");

The string NameService is defined for all CORBA ORBs. When you pass in that string, the ORB returns a naming context object that is an object reference for the name service.

Narrowing the Object Reference

As with all CORBA object references, objRef is a generic CORBA object. To use it as a NamingContext object, you must narrow it to its proper type. Add the call to narrow just below the previous statement:
NamingContext ncRef = NamingContextHelper.narrow(objRef);

Here you see the use of an idltojava -generated helper class, similar in function to HelloHelper. The ncRef object is now an org.omg.CosNaming.NamingContext and you can use it to access the naming service and register the server. You will do that in the next step.

Registering the Servant with the Name Server

  1. Just below the call to narrow, create a new NameComponent member:
    NameComponent nc = new NameComponent("Hello", "");
    
  2. This statement sets the id field of nc, the new NameComponent, to "Hello" and the kind component to the empty string. Because the path to the Hello has a single element, create the single-element array that NamingContext.resolve requires for its work:
    NameComponent path[] = {nc};
    
  3. Finally, pass path and the servant object to the naming service, binding the servant object to the "Hello" id:
    ncRef.rebind(path, helloRef);
    
Now, when the client calls resolve("Hello") on the initial naming context, the naming service returns an object reference to the Hello servant.

Waiting for Invocation

The server is ready; it simply needs to wait around for a client to request its service. To achieve that, enter the following code at the end of (but within) the try-catch block:
java.lang.Object sync = new java.lang.Object();
synchronized(sync) {
    sync.wait();
}

This form of Object.wait requires HelloServer to remain alive (though quiescent) until an invocation comes from the ORB. Because of its placement in main, after an invocation completes and sayHello returns, the server will wait again.


Previous Page Lesson Contents Next Page Start of Tutorial > Start of Trail > Start of Lesson Search
Feedback Form

Copyright 1995-2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.