4 Using Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for RMI/IIOP and CORBA Interoperability

This chapter describes how to modify applications to use Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector to support interoperability between Oracle WebLogic Server and Oracle Tuxedo CORBA objects.

This chapter includes the following sections:

Note:

You will need to perform some administration tasks to configure the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for CORBA interoperability. See Administration of Corba Applications in Administering WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for Oracle WebLogic Server.

See CORBA Programming at http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E13203_01/tuxedo/tux100/interm/corbaprog.html.

How to Develop Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Client Beans using the CORBA Java API

The Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector enables objects (such as EJBs or RMI objects) to invoke upon CORBA objects deployed in Oracle Tuxedo using the CORBA Java API (Outbound). Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector implements a WTC ORB which uses Oracle WebLogic Server RMI-IIOP runtime and CORBA support. This enhancement provides the following features:

  • Support of out and inout parameters

  • Support for a call a CORBA service from Oracle WebLogic Server using transactions and security.

  • Support for an ORB hosted in JNDI rather than an instance of the JDK ORB used in previous releases.

  • A wrapper is provided to allow users with legacy applications to use the new ORB without modifying their existing applications. Oracle recommends that users migrate to the new method of looking up the ORB in JNDI instead of doing:

    ORB orb = ORB.init(args, Prop);
    

To use CORBA Java API, you must use the WTC ORB. Use one of the following methods to obtain an ORB in your Bean:

Properties Prop;
Prop = new Properties();
Prop.put("org.omg.CORBA.ORBClass","weblogic.wtc.corba.ORB");
ORB orb = ORB.init(new String[0], Prop);

or

ORB orb = (ORB)(new InitialContext().lookup("java:comp/ORB"));

or

ORB orb = ORB.init();

You can use either of the following methods to reference objects deployed in Oracle Tuxedo:

Using CosNaming Service

  1. The Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector uses the CosNaming service to get a reference to an object in the remote Oracle Tuxedo CORBA domain. This is accomplished by using a corbaloc:tgiop or corbaname:tgiop object reference. The following statements use the CosNaming service to get a reference to an Oracle Tuxedo CORBA Object:

    // Get the simple factory.
    org.omg.CORBA.Object simple_fact_oref =
         orb.string_to_object("corbaname:tgiop:simpapp#simple_factory");
    

Where:

  • simpapp is the domain id of the Oracle Tuxedo domain specified in the Oracle Tuxedo UBB.

  • simple_factory is the name that the object reference was bound to in the Oracle Tuxedo CORBA CosNaming server.

Example ToupperCorbaBean.java Code

Note:

For an example on how to develop client beans for outbound Oracle Tuxedo CORBA objects, see the ORACLE_HOME\wlserver\samples\server\wtc\corba\simpappcns package in your Oracle WebLogic Server examples distribution. See Sample Applications and Code Examples in Understanding Oracle WebLogic Server.

The following ToupperCorbaBean.java code provides an example of how to call the WTC ORB and get an object reference using the COSNaming Service.

Example 4-1 Example Service Application

.
.
.
public String Toupper(String toConvert)
throws RemoteException
{
     log("toupper called, converting " + toConvert);

     try {
        // Initialize the ORB.
        String args[] = null;
         Properties Prop;
        Prop = new Properties();
        Prop.put("org.omg.CORBA.ORBClass",
                "weblogic.wtc.corba.ORB");

        ORB orb = (ORB) new InitialContext().lookup("java:comp/ORB");

        // Get the simple factory.
        org.omg.CORBA.Object simple_fact_oref =
        orb.string_to_object("corbaname:tgiop:simpapp#simple_factory");

        //Narrow the simple factory.
        SimpleFactory simple_factory_ref =
        SimpleFactoryHelper.narrow(simple_fact_oref);

        // Find the simple object.
        Simple simple = simple_factory_ref.find_simple();

        // Convert the string to upper case.
        org.omg.CORBA.StringHolder buf = 
          new org.omg.CORBA.StringHolder(toConvert);
        simple.to_upper(buf);
        return buf.value;
     }
     catch (Exception e) {
        throw new RemoteException("Can't call TUXEDO CORBA server: " +e);
     }
}
.
.
.

Using FactoryFinder

Note:

See How to Use FederationURL Formats for more information on object references.

Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector provides support for FactoryFinder objects using the find_one_factory_by_id method. This is accomplished by using a corbaloc:tgiop or corbaname:tgiop object reference. Use the following method to obtain the FactoryFinder object using the ORB:

// String to Object.
org.omg.CORBA.Object fact_finder_oref = 
     orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/FactoryFinder");

// Narrow the factory finder.
FactoryFinder fact_finder_ref =
     FactoryFinderHelper.narrow(fact_finder_oref);

// Use the factory finder to find the simple factory.
org.omg.CORBA.Object simple_fact_oref =
     fact_finder_ref.find_one_factory_by_id(SimpleFactoryHelper.id());

Where:

  • simpapp is the domain id of the Oracle Tuxedo domain specified in the Oracle Tuxedo UBB.

  • FactoryFinder is the name that the object reference was bound to in the Oracle Tuxedo CORBA server.

WLEC to Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector Migration

WLEC is no longer available or supported in Oracle WebLogic Server. WLEC users should migrate their applications to Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector.

Example Code

The following code provides an example of how to call the WTC ORB and get an object reference using FactoryFinder.

Example 4-2 Example FactoryFinder Code

.
.
.
public ConverterResult convert (String changeCase, String mixed) 
throws ProcessingErrorException
{
     String result;
     try {
     // Initialize the ORB.
     String args[] = null;
     Properties Prop;
     Prop = new Properties();
     Prop.put("org.omg.CORBA.ORBClass","weblogic.wtc.corba.ORB");
     ORB orb = (ORB)new InitialContext().lookup("java:comp/ORB");

     org.omg.CORBA.Object fact_finder_oref =
         orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/FactoryFinder");

     // Narrow the factory finder.
     FactoryFinder fact_finder_ref =
        FactoryFinderHelper.narrow(fact_finder_oref);

     // find_one_factory_by_id
     org.omg.CORBA.Object simple_fact_oref =
        fact_finder_ref.find_one_factory_by_id(FactoryFinderHelper.id());

     // Narrow the simple factory.
     SimpleFactory simple_factory_ref =
        SimpleFactoryHelper.narrow(simple_fact_oref);

     // Find the simple object.
     Simple simple = simple_factory_ref.find_simple();

     if (changeCase.equals("UPPER")) {
     // Invoke the to_upper opeation on M3 Simple object
     org.omg.CORBA.StringHolder buf = 
        new org.omg.CORBA.StringHolder(mixed);
     simple.to_upper(buf);
     result = buf.value;
     }
     else
     {
     result = simple.to_lower(mixed);
     }

     }
     catch (org.omg.CORBA.SystemException e) {e.printStackTrace();

     throw new ProcessingErrorException("Converter error: Corba system exception: " + e);
     }
     catch (Exception e) {
     e.printStackTrace();
     throw new ProcessingErrorException("Converter error: " + e);
     }
return new ConverterResult(result);
}
.
.
.

How to Develop RMI/IIOP Applications for the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector

RMI over IIOP (Internet Inter-ORB Protocol) extends RMI so that Java programs can interact with Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) clients and execute CORBA objects. The Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector:

  • Enables Oracle Tuxedo CORBA objects to invoke upon EJBs deployed in Oracle WebLogic Server (Inbound).

  • Enables objects (such as EJBs or RMI objects) to invoke upon CORBA objects deployed in Oracle Tuxedo (Outbound).

The following sections provide information on how to modify RMI/IIOP applications to use the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector to interoperate with Oracle Tuxedo CORBA applications:

How to Modify Inbound RMI/IIOP Applications to use the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector

A client must pass the correct name to which the Oracle WebLogic Server's name service has been bound to the COSNaming Service.

The following code provides an example for obtaining a naming context. "WLS" is the bind name specified in the cnsbind command detailed in Administration of Corba Applications in Administering WebLogic Tuxedo Connector for Oracle WebLogic Server.

Example 4-3 Example Code to Obtain a Naming Context

.
.
.
// obtain a naming context
     TP::userlog("Narrowing to a naming context");
     CosNaming::NamingContext_var context =
          CosNaming::NamingContext::_narrow(o);
     CosNaming::Name name;
     name.length(1);
     name[0].id = CORBA::string_dup("WLS");
     name[0].kind = CORBA::string_dup("");
.
.
.

How to Develop Outbound RMI/IIOP Applications to use the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector

An EJB must use a FederationURL to obtain the initial context used to access a remote Oracle Tuxedo CORBA object. Use the following sections to modify outbound RMI/IIOP applications to use the Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector:

How to Modify the ejb-jar.xml File to Pass a FederationURL to EJBs

The following code provides an example of how to configure an ejb-jar.xml file to pass a FederationURL format to the EJB at run-time.

Example 4-4 Example ejb-jar.xml File Passing a FederationURL to an EJB

<?xml version="1.0"?>

<!DOCTYPE ejb-jar PUBLIC '-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Enterprise JavaBeans 
1.1//EN' 'http://java.sun.com/j2ee/dtds/ejb-jar_1_1.dtd'>

<ejb-jar>
     <small-icon>images/green-cube.gif</small-icon>
     <enterprise-beans>
     <session>
          <small-icon>images/orange-cube.gif</small-icon>
          <ejb-name>IIOPStatelessSession</ejb-name>
          <home>examples.iiop.ejb.stateless.TraderHome</home>
          <remote>examples.iiop.ejb.stateless.Trader</remote>
          <ejb-class>examples.iiop.ejb.stateless.TraderBean</ejb-class>
          <session-type>Stateless</session-type>
          <transaction-type>Container</transaction-type>
          <env-entry>
               <env-entry-name>foreignOrb</env-entry-name>
               <env-entry-type>java.lang.String </env-entry-type>
               <env-entry-value>corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp</env-entry-value>
          </env-entry>
          <env-entry>
               <env-entry-name>WEBL</env-entry-name>
               <env-entry-type>java.lang.Double </env-entry-type>
               <env-entry-value>10.0</env-entry-value>
          </env-entry>
          <env-entry>
               <env-entry-name>INTL</env-entry-name>
               <env-entry-type>java.lang.Double </env-entry-type>
               <env-entry-value>15.0</env-entry-value>
          </env-entry>
          <env-entry>
               <env-entry-name>tradeLimit</env-entry-name>
               <env-entry-type>java.lang.Integer </env-entry-type>
               <env-entry-value>500</env-entry-value>
          </env-entry>
     </session>
     </enterprise-beans>
     <assembly-descriptor>
          <container-transaction>
               <method>
                    <ejb-name>IIOPStatelessSession</ejb-name>
                    <method-intf>Remote</method-intf>
                    <method-name>*</method-name>
               </method>
          <trans-attribute>NotSupported</trans-attribute>
          </container-transaction>
     </assembly-descriptor>
</ejb-jar>

To pass the FederationURL to the EJB at run-time, add an env-entry for the EJB in the ejb-jar.xml file for your application. You must assign the following env-entry sub-elements:

Assign env-entry-name

The env-entry-name element is used to specify the name of the variable used to pass the value in the env-entry-value element to the EJB. The example code shown in Example 4-4 specifies the env-entry-name as foreignOrb.

Assign env-entry-type

The env-entry-type element is used to specify the data type (example String, Integer, Double) of the env-entry-value element that is passed to the EJB. The example code shown in Example 4-4 specifies that the foreignOrb variable passes String data to the EJB.

Assign env-entry-value

The env-entry-value element is used to specify the data that is passed to the EJB. The example code shown in Example 4-4 specifies that the foreignOrb variable passes the following FederationURL format to the EJB:

corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp

Where simpapp is the DOMAINID of the Oracle Tuxedo remote service specified in the Oracle Tuxedo UBB.

How to Modify EJBs to Use FederationURL to Access an Object

This section provides information on how to use the FederationURL to obtain the InitialContext used to access a remote Oracle Tuxedo CORBA object.

The following code provides an example of how to use FederationURL to get an InitialContext.

  1. Retrieve the FederationURL format defined in the ejb-jar.xml file.

    Example:

    "ic.lookup("java:/comp/env/foreignOrb")
    

    The example code shown in Example 4-4 specifies that the foreignOrb variable passes the following FederationURL format to the EJB:

    corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp
    
  2. Concatenate the FederationURL format with "/NameService" to form the FederationURL.

    Example:

    "ic.lookup("java:/comp/env/foreignOrb") + "/NameService"
    

    The resulting FederationURL is:

    corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/NameService
    
  3. Get the InitialContext.

    Example:

    env.put(Context.PROVIDER_URL, (String)
         ic.lookup("java:/comp/env/foreignOrb") + "/NameService");
    InitialContext cos = new InitialContext(env);
    

    The result is the InitialContext of the Oracle Tuxedo CORBA object.

Example 4-5 Example TraderBean.java Code to get InitialContext

.
.
.
public void createRemote() throws CreateException {
     log("createRemote() called");

     try {
          InitialContext ic = new InitialContext();

     // Lookup a EJB-like CORBA server in a remote CORBA domain
          Hashtable env = new Hashtable();
          env.put(Context.PROVIDER_URL, (String)
             ic.lookup("java:/comp/env/foreignOrb")
             + "/NameService");

          InitialContext cos = new InitialContext(env);
          TraderHome thome =
             (TraderHome)PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
             cos.lookup("TraderHome_iiop"),TraderHome.class);
             remoteTrader = thome.create();
}
     catch (NamingException ne) {
     throw new CreateException("Failed to find value "+ne);
}
     catch (RemoteException re) {
     throw new CreateException("Error creating remote ejb "+re);
}
}
.
.
.

Use the following steps to use FederationURL to obtain an InitialContext for a remote Oracle Tuxedo CORBA object:

How to Use FederationURL Formats

This section provides information on the syntax for the following FederationURL formats:

  • The CORBA URL syntax is described in the CORBA specification. For more information, see the OMG Web Site at http://www.omg.org/.

  • The corbaloc:tgiop form is specific to the Oracle tgiop protocol.

Using corbaloc URL Format

This section provides the syntax for corbaloc URL format:

<corbaloc> = "corbaloc:tgiop":[<version>] <domain>["/"<key_string>]
<version> = <major> "." <minor> "@" | empty_string
<domain> = TUXEDO CORBA domain name
<major> = number
<minor> = number
<key_string> = <string> | empty_string
Examples of corbaloc:tgiop

This section provides examples on how to use corbaloc:tgiop.

orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/NameService");
orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/FactoryFinder");
orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/InterfaceRepository");
orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/Tobj_SimpleEventsService");
orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/NotificationService");
orb.string_to_object("corbaloc:tgiop:1.1@simpapp/NotificationService);
Examples using -ORBInitRef

You can also use the -ORBInitRef option to orb.init and resolve_initial_reference.

Given the following -ORBInitRef definitions:

-ORBInitRef FactoryFinder=corbaloc:tgiop:simp/FactoryFinder
-ORBInitRef InterfaceRepository=corbaloc:tgiop:simp/InterfaceRepository
-ORBInitRef Tobj_SimpleEventService=corbaloc:tgiop:simp/Tobj_SimpleEventsService
-ORBInitRef NotificationService=corbaloc:tgiop:simp/NotificationService

then:

orb.resolve_initial_references("NameService");
orb.resolve_initial_references("FactoryFinder");
orb.resolve_initial_references("InterfaceRepository");
orb.resolve_initial_references("Tobj_SimpleEventService");
orb.resolve_initial_references("NotificationService");
Examples Using -ORBDefaultInitRef

You can use the -ORBDefaultInitRef and resolve_initial_reference.

Given the following -ORBDefaultInitRef definition:

-ORBDefaultInitRef corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp

then:

orb.resolve_initial_references("NameService");

Using the corbaname URL Format

You can also use the corbaname format instead of the corbaloc format.

Examples Using -ORBInitRef

Given the following -ORBInitRef definition:

-ORBInitRef NameService=corbaloc:tgiop:simpapp/NameService

then:

orb.string_to_object("corbaname:rir:#simple_factory");
orb.string_to_object("corbaname:tgiop:simpapp#simple_factory");
orb.string_to_object("corbaname:tgiop:1.1@simpapp#simple_factory");
orb.string_to_object("corbaname:tgiop:simpapp#simple/simple_factory");

How to Manage Transactions for Oracle Tuxedo CORBA Applications

Note:

See Overview of Transactions in Tuxedo CORBA Applications in Using CORBA Transactions at http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E13203_01/tuxedo/tux100/trans/gstrx.html.

The Oracle WebLogic Tuxedo Connector uses the Java Transaction API (JTA) to manage transactions with Oracle Tuxedo Corba Applications. See: