CORBA has two types of exceptions: standard system exceptions which are fully specified by the OMG and user exceptions which are defined by the individual application programmer. CORBA exceptions are a little different from Java exception objects, but those differences are largely handled in the mapping from IDL to Java.
Topics in this section include:
To specify an exception in IDL, the interface designer uses the raises keyword. This is similar to the throws specification in Java. When you use the exception keyword in IDL you create a user-defined exception. The standard system exceptions need not (and cannot) be specified this way.
All IDL operations can throw system exceptions when invoked. The interface designer need not specify anything to enable operations in the interface to throw system exceptions -- the capability is automatic.
This makes sense because no matter how trivial an operation's implementation is, the potential of an operation invocation coming from a client that is in another process, and perhaps (likely) on another machine, means that a whole range of errors is possible.
Therefore, a CORBA client should always catch CORBA system exceptions. Moreover, developers cannot rely on the Java compiler to notify them of a system exception they should catch, because CORBA system exceptions are descendants of java.lang.RuntimeException.
All CORBA system exceptions have the same structure:
exception <SystemExceptionName> { // descriptive of error unsigned long minor; // more detail about error CompletionStatus completed; // yes, no, maybe }
System exceptions are subtypes of java.lang.RuntimeException through org.omg.CORBA.SystemException:
java.lang.Exception
java.lang.RuntimeException
org.omg.CORBA.SystemException
BAD_PARAM
//etc.
All CORBA system exceptions have a minor code field, a number that provides additional information about the nature of the failure that caused the exception. Minor code meanings are not specified by the OMG; each ORB vendor specifies appropriate minor codes for that implementation. For the meaning of minor codes thrown by the Java ORB, see Minor code meanings .
All CORBA system exceptions have a completion status field, indicating the status of the operation that threw the exception. The completion codes are:
CORBA user exceptions are subtypes of java.lang.Exception through org.omg.CORBA.UserException:
java.lang.Exception
org.omg.CORBA.UserException
Stocks.BadSymbol
//etc.
Each user-defined exception specified in IDL results in a generated Java exception class. These exceptions are entirely defined and implemented by the programmer
System exceptions all have a field minor that allows CORBA vendors to provide additional information about the cause of the exception. For a list of standard OMG minor code exceptions (OMGVMCID), see the Object Management Group website.
Some of the most common Sun minor code exceptions are the following:
java.net.SocketException
, usually one of
BindException
, ConnectException
, or
NoRouteToHostException
.
Some things to verify are:
-ORBInitialHost
and
-ORBInitialPort
values being set correctly for the
naming service? If you are uncertain about what the settings should
be, read the document Starting and Stopping
ORBD.Unable to
create the listener thread on the specific port. Either the post is
taken or there was an error creating the daemon thread
. This
generally indicates that the port on which you are trying to run
the naming service is in use by another process. If you are running
on Solaris, you could discover whether or not something is running
on this port using the following terminal prompt command:
netstat | grep port_number
corba.INSSubcontract.getINSReference
.wchar
or wstring
in GIOP 1.0, which is
not legal in the spec.org.omg.CORBA.Object
, but that
particular instance has never been connected to an ORB. When using
the POA, you need to register the object with the POA first. If you
need more information on how to register an object with the POA,
refer to the POA document or the tutorial.null
was given to a write
method such as write_string
,
write_octet_array
, etc. You cannot return a Java
null
as the result of a Java method.Unable to determine local hostname using
InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName()
.
The ORB uses
InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName()
to create a
reference to the name service for looking for and/or binding
references. It also uses
InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName()
on the server
side to create remote object references (i.e., IORs) that contain
the name/port of the server (rather than a dotted-decimal/port
pair).
To avoid the call to getHostName
, you can set the
following properties (refer to Starting and Stopping
ORBD if you are not sure how to do this):
com.sun.CORBA.ORBServerHost
to the DNS name or
dotted-decimal address of the server if the ORB is acting as a
server.com.sun.CORBA.ORBInitialHost
to the DNS name
or dotted-decimal address of the name server.NOTE: These properties are proprietary and are subject to deletion or change.
If none of these suggestions work for you, or if you encounter a different Sun minor code exception, post a message to the developer forum at http://forum.java.sun.com.
When requesting the meaning of a minor code, include the following information: