Chapter 33.
Distributed Message Beans in JOnAS 4.1
JOnAS release 4.1 dramatically simplifies the use of a distributed JORAM platform from within
JOnAS servers. Such a configuration allows, for example, a bean hosted by JOnAS instance "A"
to send messages on a JORAM queue, to which a Message-Driven Bean (MDB) hosted by JOnAS
instance "B" listens.
The reasons for this progress are:
•
The JORAM Resource Adapter allows much finer configuration than the JMS service did.
•
JORAM provides a distributed JNDI server that enables JOnAS instances to share information.
Note
Before you proceed with this chapter, you should review Section 3.7.1
JORAM Resource Adapter
.
33.1. Scenario and General Architecture
The following scenario and general settings are proposed:
•
Two instances of JOnAS are run (JOnAS "A" and JOnAS "B"). JOnAS A hosts a simple bean that
provides a method for sending a message on a JORAM queue. JOnAS B hosts a Message-Driven
Bean that listens on the same JORAM queue.
•
Each JOnAS instance has a dedicated, collocated JORAM server: server "s0" for JOnAS A, "s1"
for JOnAS B. Those two servers are aware of each other.
•
The queue is hosted by JORAM server s1.
•
An additional JNDI service is provided by the JORAM servers. This service is used for storing the
shared information (basically, the queue’s naming reference).
33.2. Common Configuration
The JORAM servers are part of a single JORAM platform, described by the following
a3servers.xml
configuration file:
ï
?xml version="1.0"?
ð
ï
config
ð
ï
domain name="D1"/
ð
ï
server id="0" name="S0" hostname="hostA"
ð
ï
network domain="D1" port="16301"/
ð
ï
service
class="org.objectweb.joram.mom.proxies.ConnectionManager"
args="root root"/
ð
ï
service
class="org.objectweb.joram.mom.proxies.tcp.TcpProxyService"
args="16010"/
ð
ï
service
class="fr.dyade.aaa.jndi2.distributed.DistributedJndiServer"
args="16400 0"/
ð
Summary of Contents for Application Server
Page 1: ...Red Hat Application Server JOnAS User Guide ...
Page 8: ......
Page 22: ...14 Chapter 1 Java Open Application Server JOnAS a J2EE Platform ...
Page 58: ...50 Chapter 3 JOnAS Configuration ...
Page 66: ...58 Chapter 5 JOnAS Class Loader Hierarchy ...
Page 78: ...70 Chapter 6 JOnAS Command Reference ...
Page 80: ......
Page 86: ...78 Chapter 7 Developing Session Beans ...
Page 136: ...128 Chapter 9 Developing Message Driven Beans ...
Page 142: ...134 Chapter 10 Defining the Deployment Descriptor ...
Page 148: ...140 Chapter 11 Transactional Behavior of EJB Applications ...
Page 158: ...150 Chapter 14 EJB Packaging ...
Page 162: ...154 Chapter 15 Application Deployment and Installation Guide ...
Page 164: ......
Page 176: ...168 Chapter 18 WAR Packaging ...
Page 178: ......
Page 184: ...176 Chapter 20 Defining the Client Deployment Descriptor ...
Page 186: ...178 Chapter 21 Client Packaging ...
Page 188: ......
Page 192: ...184 Chapter 23 EAR Packaging ...
Page 194: ......
Page 200: ...192 Chapter 24 JOnAS Services ...
Page 204: ...196 Chapter 25 JOnAS and the Connector Architecture ...
Page 222: ...214 Chapter 27 Ant EJB Tasks Using EJB JAR ...
Page 234: ...226 Chapter 29 Web Services with JOnAS ...
Page 236: ......
Page 260: ...252 Chapter 34 How to use Axis in JOnAS ...
Page 270: ...262 Chapter 36 Web Service Interoperability between JOnAS and BEA WebLogic ...
Page 296: ......