Example: Looking up an EJB home with JNDI
Most applications that use JNDI run in a container. Some do not. The name used to look up an object depends on whether or not the application is running in a container. Sometimes it is more convenient for an application to use a corbaname URL as the lookup name. Container-based JNDI clients and thin Java clients can use a corbaname URL.
The following examples show how to perform JNDI lookups from different types of applications.
- JNDI lookup from an application running in a container
- JNDI lookup from an application that does not run in a container
- JNDI lookup with a corbaname URL
JNDI lookup from an application running in a container
Applications that run in a container can use java: lookup names. Lookup names of this form provide a level of indirection such that the lookup name used to look up an object is not dependent on the object's name as it is bound in the name server's name space. The deployment descriptors for the application provide the mapping from the java: name and the name server lookup name. The container sets up the java: name space based on the deployment descriptor information so that the java: name is correctly mapped to the corresponding object.
The following example shows a lookup of an EJB home. The actual home lookup name is determined by the application's deployment descriptors. The enterprise bean (EJB) resides in an EJB container, which provides an interface between the bean and the application server on which it resides.
// Get the initial context as shown in a previous example
...
// Look up the home interface using the JNDI name
try {
java.lang.Object ejbHome =
initialContext.lookup(
"java:comp/env/com/mycompany/accounting/AccountEJB");
accountHome = (AccountHome)javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
(org.omg.CORBA.Object) ejbHome, AccountHome.class);
}
catch (NamingException e) { // Error getting the home interface
...
}
JNDI lookup from an application that does not run in a container
Applications that do not run in a container cannot use java: lookup names because it is the container which sets the java: name space up for the application. Instead, an application of this type must look the object up directly from the name server. Each application server contains a name server. System artifacts such as EJB homes are bound relative to the server root context in that name server. The various name servers are federated by means of a system name space structure. The recommended way to look up objects on different servers is to qualify the name so that the name resolves from any initial context in the cell. If a relative name is used, the initial context must be the same server root context as the one under which the object is bound. The form of the qualified name depends on whether the qualified name is a topology-based name or a fixed name. Examples of each form of qualified name follow.
- Topology-based qualified names
Topology-based qualified names traverse through the system name space to the server root context under which the target object is bound. A topology-based qualified name resolves from any initial context in the cell.
- Single server
- The following example shows a lookup of an EJB home that is running in the single server, MyServer, configured in the node, Node1.
// Get the initial context as shown in a previous example
// Using the form of lookup name below, it doesn't matter which
// server in the cell is used to obtain the initial context.
...
// Look up the home interface using the JNDI name
try {
java.lang.Object ejbHome = initialContext.lookup(
"cell/nodes/Node1/servers/MyServer/com/mycompany/accounting/AccountEJB");
accountHome = (AccountHome)javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
(org.omg.CORBA.Object) ejbHome, AccountHome.class);
}
catch (NamingException e) { // Error getting the home interface
...
}
- Fixed qualified names
If the target object has a cell-scoped fixed name defined for it, you can use its qualified form instead of the topology-based qualified name. Even though the topology-based name works, the fixed name does not change with the specific cell topology or with the movement of the target object to a different server. An example lookup with a qualified fixed name is shown below.
// Get the initial context as shown in a previous example
// Using the form of lookup name below, it doesn't matter which
// server in the cell is used to obtain the initial context.
...
// Look up the home interface using the JNDI name
try {
java.lang.Object ejbHome = initialContext.lookup(
"cell/persistent/com/mycompany/accounting/AccountEJB");
accountHome = (AccountHome)javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
(org.omg.CORBA.Object) ejbHome, AccountHome.class);
}
catch (NamingException e) { // Error getting the home interface
...
}
JNDI lookup with a corbaname URL
A corbaname can be useful at times as a lookup name. If, for example, the target object is not a member of the federated name space and cannot be located with a qualifiied name, a corbaname can be a convenient way to look up the object. A lookup with a corbaname URL follows.
// Get the initial context as shown in a previous example
...
// Look up the home interface using a corbaname URL
try {
java.lang.Object ejbHome = initialContext.lookup(
"corbaname:iiop:someHost:2809#com/mycompany/accounting/AccountEJB");
accountHome = (AccountHome)javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject.narrow(
(org.omg.CORBA.Object) ejbHome, AccountHome.class);
}
catch (NamingException e) { // Error getting the home interface
...
}