rmic generates stub, skeleton, and tie classes for remote objects using either the JRMP or IIOP protocols. Also generates OMG IDL.
rmic [ options ] package-qualified-class-name(s)
The rmic compiler generates stub and skeleton class files (JRMP protocol) and stub and tie class files (IIOP protocol) for remote objects. These classes files are generated from compiled Java programming language classes that are remote object implementation classes. A remote implementation class is a class that implements the interface java.rmi.Remote. The class names in the rmic command must be for classes that have been compiled successfully with the javac command and must be fully package qualified. For example, running rmic on the class file name HelloImpl as shown here:
rmic hello.HelloImpl
creates the HelloImpl_Stub.class file in the hello subdirectory (named for the class's package).
A skeleton for a remote object is a JRMP protocol server-side entity that has a method that dispatches calls to the actual remote object implementation.
A tie for a remote object is a server-side entity similar to a skeleton, but which communicates with the client using the IIOP protocol.
A stub is a client-side proxy for a remote object which is responsible for communicating method invocations on remote objects to the server where the actual remote object implementation resides. A client's reference to a remote object, therefore, is actually a reference to a local stub.
By default, rmic generates stub classes that use the 1.2
JRMP stub protocol version only, as if the -v1.2 option had been specified. (Note that
the -vcompat option was the default
in releases prior to 5.0.) Use the -iiop
option to generate stub and tie
classes for the IIOP protocol.
A stub implements only the remote interfaces, not any local interfaces that the remote object also implements. Because a JRMP stub implements the same set of remote interfaces as the remote object itself, a client can use the Java programming language's built-in operators for casting and type checking. For IIOP, the PortableRemoteObject.narrow method must be used.
.:<your_path>For example:
.:/usr/local/java/classes
% rmic -d /java/classes foo.MyClasswould place the stub and skeleton classes derived from
MyClass
into the directory /java/classes/foo.
If the -d option is not specified, the default behavior is
as if "-d ." were specified: the package hierarchy of
the target class is created in the current directory, and
stub/tie/skeleton files are placed within it. (Note that in some
previous versions of rmic, if -d was not specified,
then the package hierarchy was not created, and all of the
output files were placed directly in the current directory.)When the -idl
option is used, other options also
include:
rmic
to generate IIOP stub and tie classes,
rather than JRMP stub and skeleton classes. A stub class is a local
proxy for a remote object and is used by clients to send calls to a
server. Each remote interface requires a stub class, which
implements that remote interface. A client's reference to a remote
object is actually a reference to a stub. Tie classes are used on
the server side to process incoming calls, and dispatch the calls
to the proper implementation class. Each implementation class
requires a tie class.
Invoking rmic with the -iiop generates stubs and ties that conform to this naming convention:
_<implementationName>_stub.class
_<interfaceName>_tie.class
When the -iiop
option is used, other options also
include:
-idl
option. Prevents
addition of valuetype methods and initializers to emitted
IDL. These methods and initializers are optional for
valuetypes, and are generated unless the
-noValueMethods option is specified when using the
-idl option.The PortableServer module for the Portable Object Adapter (POA) defines the native Servant type. In the Java programming language, the Servant type is mapped to the Java org.omg.PortableServer.Servant class. It serves as the base class for all POA servant implementations and provides a number of methods that may be invoked by the application programmer, as well as methods which are invoked by the POA itself and may be overridden by the user to control aspects of servant behavior. Based on the OMG IDL to Java Language Mapping Specification, CORBA V 2.3.1 ptc/00-01-08.pdf.
.:/usr/local/java/classes