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ITONK1. CORBA Programming: Presentation of a simple “Hello World” CORBA client and server application. Outline. CORBA programming Code examples We will make a very small CORBA application with a Java server, Java Client & C++ client application In Java (SUN ORB) What gets generated?
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ITONK1 CORBA Programming:Presentation of a simple“Hello World”CORBA client and server application
Outline • CORBA programming • Code examples • We will make a very small CORBA application with a Java server, Java Client & C++ client application • In Java (SUN ORB) • What gets generated? • What files do we need to write (client + server)? • In Orbacus C++ ORB • We make a client Only small steps in CORBA programming – much complexity Studets are not required to be able to use CORBA for development
Server returns“Hello World !“ User activa- tes client CORBA Java / C++ Hello World Client CORBA Java Hello World Server TCP/IP Network “Hello World” CORBA Example with file IOR Development PC Clientapp. Serverapp.
Who’s doing what? • Some code will get generated by the IDL compiler • Some code we will need to implement ourselves • Staring with the IDL file
IDL Interface of Hello Servant module HelloApp interface Hello{string sayHello();};
Java IDLCompiler -IDLJ IDL Compiler Example Java Hello.java (Both Client & Server) contains the Java version of the IDL interface. HelloOperations.java contains the methods – here only sayHello(). All the operations in the IDL interface are placed in the operations file. _HelloStub.java is the client stub. HelloPOA.java is the skeleton class you should extend from. It implements dynamic invocation functions. HelloHelper.java (Both Client & Server) provides auxiliary functionality, notably the narrow() method required to cast CORBA object references to their proper types. HelloHolder.java Whenever the IDL type is an out or an inout parameter, the Holder class is used. Hello.idlfile Generates Input What gets generated by the IDL Compiler
// HelloServer.java, stringified object reference version // Stefan Wagner, 2003 import org.omg.CosNaming.*; import org.omg.CosNaming.NamingContextPackage.*; import org.omg.CORBA.*; import org.omg.PortableServer.*; import org.omg.PortableServer.POA; import HelloApp.*; //This is the servant - implementing the methods from the IDL class HelloServant extends HelloPOA { private ORB orb; public HelloServant(ORB orb) { this.orb = orb; } public String sayHello() { return "\nHello world !!\n"; } } HelloServant The server object (Part 1) Implemented manually By extending from HelloPOA we may communicate with ORB Constructor taking ORB as a parameter (from HelloPOA) The CORBA operation implemented
//This is the HelloServer - the server running the HelloServant - Servant public class HelloServer { public static void main(String args[]) { try{ // create and initialize the ORB org.omg.CORBA.ORB orb = org.omg.CORBA.ORB.init(args, null); // create servant and register it with the ORB HelloServant helloRef = new HelloServant(orb); // get reference to rootpoa and activate the POAManager POA rootpoa = POAHelper.narrow(orb.resolve_initial_references("RootPOA")); rootpoa.the_POAManager().activate(); // get object reference from the servant org.omg.CORBA.Object ref = rootpoa.servant_to_reference(helloRef); Hello href = HelloHelper.narrow(ref); // stringify the helloRef and dump it in a file String oir = orb.object_to_string(href); java.io.PrintWriter out = new java.io.PrintWriter(new java.io.FileOutputStream("object.ref")); out.println(oir); out.close(); // wait for invocations from clients orb.run(); } catch (Exception e) { System.err.println("ERROR: " + e); e.printStackTrace(System.out); } } } HelloServant The server object (Part 2) Init ORB and register servant with ORB Implemented manually Activate rootPOA The POA produces the reference Narrow the call (CORBA type cast + IDL type check) Object reference ”stringified” and Sent to file object.ref Start the orb server process
// HelloClientSOR.java, stringified object reference version import java.io.*; import org.omg.CORBA.*; import HelloApp.HelloHelper; import HelloApp.*; public class HelloClientSOR { public static void main(String args[]) { try { // create and initialize the ORB org.omg.CORBA.ORB orb = org.omg.CORBA.ORB.init(args, null); // Get the stringified object reference and destringify it. java.io.BufferedReader in = new java.io.BufferedReader(new java.io.FileReader("object.ref")); String ref = in.readLine(); org.omg.CORBA.Object obj = orb.string_to_object(ref) ; Hello helloRef = HelloHelper.narrow(obj); // call the Hello server object and print results String Hello = helloRef.sayHello(); System.out.println(Hello); } catch (Exception e) { System.out.println("ERROR : " + e) ; e.printStackTrace(System.out); } } } HelloClientSOR The Client program Implemented manually Init ORB Object reference Read from file Narrow the call (CORBA type cast + IDL type check) Call via Proxy Discuss with your neighbor 2 min. what happens after sayHello()
What is this object.ref file? IOR:000000000000001749444c3a48656c6c6f4170702f48656c6c6f3a312e30000000000001000000000000006c000102000000000e3139322e3136382e312e3130300011b600000021afabcb0000000020a80a250300000001000000000000000000000004000000000a0000000000000100000001000000200000000000010001000000020501000100010020000101090000000100010100 • IOR: Interoperable Object Reference • Includes info on: Repository ID (standard), Endpoint Info (standard) - including IP and port number, Object Key (proprietary) • Can be written into a file • Not really nice with a file-based reference – or what? • May employ a naming service instead • This we shall look at later • File-based may be necessary due to firewall problems • Possible to use a HTTP or FTP server for distributing the references
Parsed IOR _IIOP_ParseCDR: byte order BigEndian, repository id <IDL:HelloApp/Hello:1.0>, 1 profile _IIOP_ParseCDR: profile 1 is 138 bytes, tag 0 (INTERNET), BigEndian byte order (iiop.c:parse_IIOP_Profile): bo=BigEndian, version=1.2, hostname=172.20.186.138, port=1658, object_key=<....... ..s.................RootPOA..............> (iiop.c:parse_IIOP_Profile): encoded object key is <%AF%AB%CB%00%00%00%00%20%E8%DCs%BE%00%00%00%01%00%00%00%00%00%00%00%01%00%00%00%08RootPOA%00%00%00%00%08%00%00%00%01%00%00%00%00%14> (iiop.c:parse_IIOP_Profile): non-native cinfo is <iiop_1_2_1_%25AF%25AB%25CB%2500%2500%2500%2500%2520%25E8%25DCs%25BE%2500%2500%2500%2501%2500%2500%2500%2500%2500%2500%2500%2501%2500%2500%2500%2508RootPOA%2500%2500%2500%2500%2508%2500%2500%2500%2501%2500%2500%2500%2500%2514@tcp_172.20.186.138_1658> object key is <#AF#AB#CB#00#00#00#00 #E8#DCs#BE#00#00#00#01#00#00#00#00#00#00#00#01#00#00#00#08RootPOA#00#00#00#00#08#00#00#00#01#00#00#00#00#14>; no trustworthy most-specific-type info; unrecognized ORB type; reachable with IIOP 1.2 at host "172.20.186.138", port 1658 For the translation of IORs http://www2.parc.com/istl/projects/ILU/parseIOR/
#include <OB/CORBA.h> #include <Hello.h> #include <fstream.h> int run(CORBA::ORB_ptr); int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { int status = EXIT_SUCCESS; CORBA::ORB_var orb; try { orb = CORBA::ORB_init(argc, argv); status = run(orb); } catch (const CORBA::Exception&) { status = EXIT_FAILURE; } if(!CORBA::is_nil(orb)) { try { orb -> destroy(); } catch(const CORBA::Exception&) { status = EXIT_FAILURE; } } return status; } HelloCorba C++ Client Part 1 Implemented manually Init ORB Call run method (see next slide) Destroy ORB
… int run(CORBA::ORB_ptr orb) { const char* refFile = "object.ref"; ifstream in(refFile); char s[2048]; in >> s; CORBA::Object_var obj = orb -> string_to_object(s); HelloApp::Hello_var hello = HelloApp::Hello::_narrow(obj); cout << hello->sayHello() << endl; return 0; } HelloCorba C++ Client Part 2 Object reference Read from file HelloApp::Hello_var smartpointer type Generated by IDL compiler + Hello Narrow the call (CORBA type cast) to the Hello_var smartpointer (helper + memory management) Call method via Proxy and print result Read more on Smartpointer types in OOMI-1 chapter 4