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RemoteStub
Classjava.rmi.server.RemoteStub
class is the common
superclass for stubs of remote objects. Stub objects are surrogates
that support exactly the same set of remote interfaces defined by
the actual implementation of a remote object.
package java.rmi.server; public abstract class RemoteStub extends java.rmi.RemoteObject { protected RemoteStub() {...} protected RemoteStub(RemoteRef ref) {...} protected static void setRef(RemoteStub stub, RemoteRef ref) {...} }The first constructor of
RemoteStub
creates a stub with a null
remote reference. The second constructor creates a stub with the
given remote reference, ref.
The setRef
method is deprecated (and unsupported) as of the Java 2 SDK,
Standard Edition, v1.2.
Because the stub implements the same set of remote interfaces as the remote object's class, the stub has the same type as the remote portions of the server object's type graph. A client, therefore, can make use of the built-in Java programming language operations to check a remote object's type and to cast from one remote interface to another.
Stubs are generated
using the rmic
compiler.
final
final
in the java.lang.Object
class and therefore cannot be overridden by any implementation:
The default implementation
for getClass
is appropriate for all objects written in
the Java programming language, local or remote; so, the method
needs no special implementation for remote objects. When used on a
remote stub, the getClass
method reports the exact
type of the stub object, generated by rmic
. Note that
stub type reflects only the remote interfaces implemented by the
remote object, not that object's local interfaces.
The wait
and notify
methods of java.lang.Object
deal with waiting and notification in the context of the Java
programming language's threading model. While use of these
methods for remote stubs does not break the threading model, these
methods do not have the same semantics as they do for local objects
written in the Java programming language. Specifically, these
methods operate on the client's local reference to the remote
object (the stub), not the actual object at the remote site.