This tutorial shows you the steps to follow to create a distributed version of the classic Hello World program using Java Remote Method Invocation (Java RMI). While you work through this example, you will probably come up with a number of related questions. You may find answers in the Java RMI FAQ.
The distributed Hello World example uses a simple client to make a remote method invocation to a server which may be running on a remote host. The client receives the "Hello, world!" message from the server.
This tutorial has the following steps:
Hello.java
- a remote
interfaceServer.java
- a remote
object implementation that implements the remote interfaceClient.java
- a simple
client that invokes a method of the remote interfaceexample.hello.Server
, which implements a remote
interface.
java.rmi.Remote
and declares a set of remote
methods. Each remote method must declare
java.rmi.RemoteException
(or a superclass of
RemoteException
) in its throws
clause, in
addition to any application-specific exceptions.
Here is the interface definition for the remote interface used
in this example, example.hello.Hello
. It declares just
one method, sayHello
, which returns a string to the
caller:
package example.hello; import java.rmi.Remote; import java.rmi.RemoteException; public interface Hello extends Remote { String sayHello() throws RemoteException; }Remote method invocations can fail in many additional ways compared to local method invocations (such as network-related communication problems and server problems), and remote methods will report such failures by throwing a
java.rmi.RemoteException
.
main
method that creates an instance of the remote
object implementation, exports the remote object, and then binds
that instance to a name in a Java RMI registry. The class
that contains this main
method could be the
implementation class itself, or another class entirely.
In this example, the main
method for the server is
defined in the class Server
which also implements the
remote interface Hello
. The server's main
method does the following:
Server
.
Descriptions for writing this server class follow the source code:
package example.hello; import java.rmi.registry.Registry; import java.rmi.registry.LocateRegistry; import java.rmi.RemoteException; import java.rmi.server.UnicastRemoteObject; public class Server implements Hello { public Server() {} public String sayHello() { return "Hello, world!"; } public static void main(String args[]) { try { Server obj = new Server(); Hello stub = (Hello) UnicastRemoteObject.exportObject(obj, 0); // Bind the remote object's stub in the registry Registry registry = LocateRegistry.getRegistry(); registry.bind("Hello", stub); System.err.println("Server ready"); } catch (Exception e) { System.err.println("Server exception: " + e.toString()); e.printStackTrace(); } } }
The implementation class Server
implements the
remote interface Hello
, providing an implementation
for the remote method sayHello
. The method
sayHello
does not need to declare that it throws any
exception because the method implementation itself does not throw
RemoteException
nor does it throw any other checked
exceptions.
Note: A class can define methods not specified in the remote interface, but those methods can only be invoked within the virtual machine running the service and cannot be invoked remotely.
main
method of the server needs to create the
remote object that provides the service. Additionally, the remote
object must be exported to the Java RMI runtime so that it
may receive incoming remote calls. This can be done as follows:
Server obj = new Server(); Hello stub = (Hello) UnicastRemoteObject.exportObject(obj, 0);The static method
UnicastRemoteObject.exportObject
exports the supplied remote object to receive incoming remote
method invocations on an anonymous TCP port and returns the stub
for the remote object to pass to clients. As a result of the
exportObject
call, the runtime may begin to listen on
a new server socket or may use a shared server socket to accept
incoming remote calls for the remote object. The returned stub
implements the same set of remote interfaces as the remote object's
class and contains the host name and port over which the remote
object can be contacted.
Note: For details on how to generate stub classes, see
the tools documentation for rmic
[UNIX, Windows]. For details on how
to deploy your application along with pregenerated stub classes,
see the codebase tutorial.
For a caller (client, peer, or applet) to be able to invoke a method on a remote object, that caller must first obtain a stub for the remote object. For bootstrapping, Java RMI provides a registry API for applications to bind a name to a remote object's stub and for clients to look up remote objects by name in order to obtain their stubs.
A Java RMI registry is a simplified name service that allows clients to get a reference (a stub) to a remote object. In general, a registry is used (if at all) only to locate the first remote object a client needs to use. Then, typically, that first object would in turn provide application-specific support for finding other objects. For example, the reference can be obtained as a parameter to, or a return value from, another remote method call. For a discussion on how this works, please take a look at Applying the Factory Pattern to Java RMI.
Once a remote object is registered on the server, callers can look up the object by name, obtain a remote object reference, and then invoke remote methods on the object.
The following code in the server obtains a stub for a registry on the local host and default registry port and then uses the registry stub to bind the name "Hello" to the remote object's stub in that registry:
Registry registry = LocateRegistry.getRegistry(); registry.bind("Hello", stub);The static method
LocateRegistry.getRegistry
that
takes no arguments returns a stub that implements the remote
interface java.rmi.registry.Registry
and sends
invocations to the registry on server's local host on the default
registry port of 1099
. The bind
method is
then invoked on the registry
stub in order to bind the
remote object's stub to the name "Hello"
in the
registry.
Note: The call to LocateRegistry.getRegistry
simply returns an appropriate stub for a registry. The call does
not check to see if a registry is actually running. If no registry
is running on TCP port 1099 of the local host when the
bind
method is invoked, the server will fail with a
RemoteException
.
The client program obtains a stub for the registry on the
server's host, looks up the remote object's stub by name in the
registry, and then invokes the sayHello
method on the
remote object using the stub.
Here is the source code for the client:
package example.hello; import java.rmi.registry.LocateRegistry; import java.rmi.registry.Registry; public class Client { private Client() {} public static void main(String[] args) { String host = (args.length < 1) ? null : args[0]; try { Registry registry = LocateRegistry.getRegistry(host); Hello stub = (Hello) registry.lookup("Hello"); String response = stub.sayHello(); System.out.println("response: " + response); } catch (Exception e) { System.err.println("Client exception: " + e.toString()); e.printStackTrace(); } } }
This client first obtains the stub for the registry by invoking
the static LocateRegistry.getRegistry
method with the
hostname specified on the command line. If no hostname is
specified, then null
is used as the hostname
indicating that the local host address should be used.
Next, the client invokes the remote method lookup
on the registry stub to obtain the stub for the remote object from
the server's registry.
Finally, the client invokes the sayHello
method on
the remote object's stub, which causes the following actions to
happen:
The response message returned from the remote invocation on the
remote object is then printed to System.out
.
The source files for this example can be compiled as follows:
javac -d destDir Hello.java Server.java Client.javawhere destDir is the destination directory to put the class files in.
Note: For details on how to deploy your application along with pregenerated stub classes, see the codebase tutorial.
To run this example, you will need to do the following:
To start the registry, run the rmiregistry
command
on the server's host. This command produces no output (when
successful) and is typically run in the background. For more
information, see the tools documentation for
rmiregistry
[UNIX, Windows].
For example, on the Solaris Operating System:
rmiregistry &
Or, on Windows platforms:
start rmiregistry
By default, the registry runs on TCP port 1099. To start a registry on a different port, specify the port number from the command line. For example, to start the registry on port 2001 on a Windows platform:
start rmiregistry 2001
If the registry will be running on a port other than 1099,
you'll need to specify the port number in the calls to
LocateRegistry.getRegistry
in the Server
and Client
classes. For example, if the registry is
running on port 2001 in this example, the call to
getRegistry
in the server would be:
Registry registry = LocateRegistry.getRegistry(2001);
To start the server, run the Server
class using the
java
command as follows:
On the Solaris Operating System:
java -classpath classDir -Djava.rmi.server.codebase=file:classDir/ example.hello.Server &
On Windows platforms:
start java -classpath classDir -Djava.rmi.server.codebase=file:classDir/ example.hello.Server
where classDir is the root directory of the class
file tree. Setting the java.rmi.server.codebase
system
property ensures that the registry can load the remote interface
definition (note that the trailing slash is important); for more
information about using this property, see the codebase tutorial.
The output from the server should look like this:
Server ready
The server remains running until the process is terminated by the user (typically by killing the process).
Once the server is ready, the client can be run as follows:
java -classpath classDir example.hello.Client
where classDir is the root directory of the class file tree.
The output from the client is the following message:
response: Hello, world!