Querying an existing Java RMI service
In this recipe, we will configure a Spring web application, so that it will be able to execute a method on an existing RMI service.
Getting ready
We will query the Java RMI service of the previous Creating a Java RMI service recipe.
We need the UserService
interface so that our application knows the methods available on the RMI service:
public interface UserService { public abstract List<User> findAll(); public abstract void addUser(User user); }
User
objects will be exchanged over the network, so we need the User
class of the previous recipe as well:
public class User implements Serializable { private String name; private int age; public User(String name, int age) { this.name = name; this.age = age; } // ... getters and setters }
In real applications, these classes could be provided to the RMI client as a JAR file.
How to do it…
Here are the steps to query a Java RMI service:
- In the Spring configuration, add a
RmiProxyFactoryBean...