JavaTM IDL technology ("Java IDL")
adds CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture)
capability to the Java
platform, providing standards-based interoperability and
connectivity. Java IDL enables distributed Web-enabled Java
applications to transparently invoke operations on remote
network services using the industry standard IDL (Object
Management Group Interface Definition Language) and IIOP (Internet
Inter-ORB Protocol) defined by the Object Management Group.
Runtime components include a Java ORB for distributed
computing using IIOP communication.
package org.omg.CORBA - provides the mapping
of the OMG CORBA APIs to the Java[tm] programming language
package org.omg.CosNaming - provides the
naming service for Java IDL
package org.omg.PortableServer -
provides classes and interfaces for making the server side of your applications portable
across multivendor ORBs
package
org.omg.PortableInterceptor - provides a mechanism to register ORB hooks through which
ORB services can intercept the
normal flow of execution of the ORB
package org.omg.DynamicAny - provides
classes and interfaces to enable Any values to be dynamically interpreted
(traversed)
and constructed through DynAny objects
org.omg.CORBA.ORB - provides APIs
for the CORBA Object Request Broker features
Tutorials and Programmer's Guides
Most of the tutorials are
variations on the basic distributed "Hello World"
application.
Introductory-Level Tutorials
The following
documents provide introductory-level information on creating applications that
use Java IDL. All use the POA-server side model. The differences are in the
server implementations.
In order to best understand the material, progress through the
examples in the order presented here.
Other server-side models may be created using J2SE. If you'd like to use other server-
side models, refer to these tutorials. Both of these tutorials use a transient server
implementation.
The tutorials listed in this section are for developers who understand the material in
the introductory-level tutorials, and are looking for more complex material.
These tutorials are for experienced developers. The descriptive material is reduced,
the sample code is commented for better understanding of the material.
The OMG is the official
source of information for all CORBA and IIOP related information.
The CORBA 2.3.1 Specification is available electronically
from formal/99-10-07.pdf.
The
URLs for the CORBA specifications may change. If this link is broken, link to
http://www.omg.org and search the specifications.
For more information on which OMG specifications are implemented in this release of the
Java
platform, see the compliance
document.
For information on product limitations in this release of the Java IDL/RMI-IIOP
technologies, see
Java IDL Product Limitations.