8 Using RMI over IIOP

This chapter provides a high-level view of RMI over IIOP (RMI-IIOP) and RMI-IIOP interoperability between this release and prior WebLogic Server releases.

This chapter includes the following sections:

What is RMI over IIOP?

RMI over IIOP extends RMI to work across the IIOP protocol. This has two benefits that you can leverage. In a Java to Java paradigm, this allows you to program against the standardized Internet Interop-Orb-Protocol (IIOP). If you are not working in a Java-only environment, it allows your Java programs to interact with Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) clients and execute CORBA objects. CORBA clients can be written in a variety of languages (including C++) and use the Interface-Definition-Language (IDL) to interact with a remote object.

Overview of WebLogic RMI-IIOP

WebLogic Server provides its own ORB implementation which is instantiated by default when programs call ORB.init(), or when "java:comp/ORB" is looked up in JNDI. See Appendix A, "CORBA Support for WebLogic Server" for information how WebLogic Server complies with specifications for CORBA support in Java SE 1.4.

The WebLogic Server implementation of RMI-IIOP allows you to:

  • Connect Java RMI clients to WebLogic Server using the standardized IIOP protocol

  • Connect CORBA/IDL clients, including those written in C++, to WebLogic Server

  • Interoperate between WebLogic Server and Tuxedo clients

  • Connect a variety of clients to EJBs hosted on WebLogic Server

How you develop your RMI-IIOP applications depends on what services and clients you are trying to integrate. See Programming Stand-alone Clients for Oracle WebLogic Server for more information on how to create applications for various clients types that use RMI and RMI-IIOP.

The following diagram shows RMI Object Relationships for objects that use IIOP.

Figure 8-1 RMI Object Relationships

Description of Figure 8-1 follows
Description of "Figure 8-1 RMI Object Relationships"

Support for RMI-IIOP with RMI (Java) Clients

You can use RMI-IIOP with Java/RMI clients, taking advantage of the standard IIOP protocol. WebLogic Server provides multiple options for using RMI-IIOP in a Java-to-Java environment, including the new Java EE Application Client (thin client), which is based on the new small footprint client jar. To use the new thin client, you need to have the wlclient.jar (located in WL_HOME/server/lib) on the client side's CLASSPATH. For more information on RMI-IIOP client options, see Programming Stand-alone Clients for Oracle WebLogic Server.

Support for RMI-IIOP with Tuxedo Client

WebLogic Server contains an implementation of the WebLogic Tuxedo Connector, an underlying technology that enables you to interoperate with Tuxedo servers. Using WebLogic Tuxedo Connector, you can leverage Tuxedo as an ORB, or integrate legacy Tuxedo systems with applications you have developed on WebLogic Server. For more information, see the WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Programmer's Guide for Oracle WebLogic Server.

Support for RMI-IIOP with CORBA/IDL Clients

The developer community requires the ability to access Java EE services from CORBA/IDL clients. However, Java and CORBA are based on very different object models. Because of this, sharing data between objects created in the two programming paradigms was, until recently, limited to Remote and CORBA primitive data types. Neither CORBA structures nor Java objects could be readily passed between disparate objects. To address this limitation, the Object Management Group (OMG) created the Objects-by-Value Specification at http://www.omg.org/technology/documents/index.htm. This specification defines the enabling technology for exporting the Java object model into the CORBA/IDL programming model--allowing for the interchange of complex data types between the two models. WebLogic Server can support Objects-by-Value with any CORBA ORB that correctly implements the specification.

Protocol Compatibility

Interoperability between this release and prior WebLogic Server releases is supported in the following scenarios:

Server-to-Server Interoperability

The following table identifies supported options for achieving interoperability between two WebLogic Server instances.

Table 8-1 WebLogic Server-to-Server Interoperability

Server Interoperability WebLogic Server 8.1 WebLogic Server 9.x WebLogic Server 10.x

From WebLogic Server 8.1 to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

From WebLogic Server 9.x to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

From WebLogic Server 10.x to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

Sun JDK ORB clientFoot 1 

RMI/IIOPFoot 2 

RMI/IIOPFoot 3 

RMI/IIOPFoot 4 


Footnote 1 This option involves calling directly into the JDK ORB from within application hosted on WebLogic Server.

Footnote 2  JDK 1.3.x or 1.4.1. No clustering. No transaction propagation

Footnote 3  JDK 5.0. No clustering. No transaction propagation

Footnote 4  JDK 5.0. No clustering. No transaction propagation

Client-to-Server Interoperability

The following table identifies supported options for achieving interoperability between a stand-alone Java client application and a WebLogic Server instance.

Table 8-2 Client-to-Server Interoperability

Client-to-Server Interoperability WebLogic Server 8.1 WebLogic Server 9.x WebLogic Server 10.x

From WebLogic Server 8.1 to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

From WebLogic Server 9.x to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

From WebLogic Server 10.x to...

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

RMI/T3

RMI/IIOP

HTTP

Web Services

Sun JDK ORB clientFoot 1 

RMI/IIOPFoot 2 

RMI/IIOPFoot 3 

RMI/IIOPFoot 4 


Footnote 1  This option involved calling directly into the JDK ORB from within a client application.

Footnote 2  JDK 1.3.x or 1.4.1. No clustering. No transaction propagation

Footnote 3  JDK 5.0. No clustering. No transaction propagation

Footnote 4  JDK 5.0. No clustering. No transaction propagation