/* * @(#)Activator.java 1.18 03/12/19 * * Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms. */ package java.rmi.activation; import java.rmi.MarshalledObject; import java.rmi.Remote; import java.rmi.RemoteException; import java.rmi.activation.UnknownObjectException; /** * The Activator facilitates remote object activation. A * "faulting" remote reference calls the activator's * activate method to obtain a "live" reference to a * "activatable" remote object. Upon receiving a request for activation, * the activator looks up the activation descriptor for the activation * identifier, id, determines the group in which the * object should be activated initiates object re-creation via the * group's ActivationInstantiator (via a call to the * newInstance method). The activator initiates the * execution of activation groups as necessary. For example, if an * activation group for a specific group identifier is not already * executing, the activator initiates the execution of a VM for the * group.

* * The Activator works closely with * ActivationSystem, which provides a means for registering * groups and objects within those groups, and ActivationMonitor, * which recives information about active and inactive objects and inactive * groups.

* * The activator is responsible for monitoring and detecting when * activation groups fail so that it can remove stale remote references * to groups and active object's within those groups.

* * @author Ann Wollrath * @version 1.18, 12/19/03 * @see ActivationInstantiator * @see ActivationGroupDesc * @see ActivationGroupID * @since 1.2 */ public interface Activator extends Remote { /** * Activate the object associated with the activation identifier, * id. If the activator knows the object to be active * already, and force is false , the stub with a * "live" reference is returned immediately to the caller; * otherwise, if the activator does not know that corresponding * the remote object is active, the activator uses the activation * descriptor information (previously registered) to determine the * group (VM) in which the object should be activated. If an * ActivationInstantiator corresponding to the * object's group descriptor already exists, the activator invokes * the activation group's newInstance method passing * it the object's id and descriptor.

* * If the activation group for the object's group descriptor does * not yet exist, the activator starts an * ActivationInstantiator executing (by spawning a * child process, for example). When the activator receives the * activation group's call back (via the * ActivationSystem's activeGroup * method) specifying the activation group's reference, the * activator can then invoke that activation instantiator's * newInstance method to forward each pending * activation request to the activation group and return the * result (a marshalled remote object reference, a stub) to the * caller.

* * Note that the activator receives a "marshalled" object instead of a * Remote object so that the activator does not need to load the * code for that object, or participate in distributed garbage * collection for that object. If the activator kept a strong * reference to the remote object, the activator would then * prevent the object from being garbage collected under the * normal distributed garbage collection mechanism.

* * @param id the activation identifier for the object being activated * @param force if true, the activator contacts the group to obtain * the remote object's reference; if false, returning the cached value * is allowed. * @return the remote object (a stub) in a marshalled form * @exception ActivationException if object activation fails * @exception UnknownObjectException if object is unknown (not registered) * @exception RemoteException if remote call fails * @since 1.2 */ public MarshalledObject activate(ActivationID id, boolean force) throws ActivationException, UnknownObjectException, RemoteException; }