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 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
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 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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package org.springframework.ejb.access;

import javax.naming.NamingException;

import org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactory;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanClassLoaderAware;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.FactoryBean;
import org.springframework.lang.Nullable;
import org.springframework.util.ClassUtils;

Convenient FactoryBean for remote SLSB proxies. Designed for EJB 2.x, but works for EJB 3 Session Beans as well.

See JndiObjectLocator for info on how to specify the JNDI location of the target EJB.

If you want control over interceptor chaining, use an AOP ProxyFactoryBean with SimpleRemoteSlsbInvokerInterceptor rather than rely on this class.

In a bean container, this class is normally best used as a singleton. However, if that bean container pre-instantiates singletons (as do the XML ApplicationContext variants) you may have a problem if the bean container is loaded before the EJB container loads the target EJB. That is because by default the JNDI lookup will be performed in the init method of this class and cached, but the EJB will not have been bound at the target location yet. The best solution is to set the lookupHomeOnStartup property to false, in which case the home will be fetched on first access to the EJB. (This flag is only true by default for backwards compatibility reasons).

This proxy factory is typically used with an RMI business interface, which serves as super-interface of the EJB component interface. Alternatively, this factory can also proxy a remote SLSB with a matching non-RMI business interface, i.e. an interface that mirrors the EJB business methods but does not declare RemoteExceptions. In the latter case, RemoteExceptions thrown by the EJB stub will automatically get converted to Spring's unchecked RemoteAccessException.

Author:Rod Johnson, Colin Sampaleanu, Juergen Hoeller
See Also:
Since:09.05.2003
/** * Convenient {@link FactoryBean} for remote SLSB proxies. * Designed for EJB 2.x, but works for EJB 3 Session Beans as well. * * <p>See {@link org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectLocator} for info on * how to specify the JNDI location of the target EJB. * * <p>If you want control over interceptor chaining, use an AOP ProxyFactoryBean * with SimpleRemoteSlsbInvokerInterceptor rather than rely on this class. * * <p>In a bean container, this class is normally best used as a singleton. However, * if that bean container pre-instantiates singletons (as do the XML ApplicationContext * variants) you may have a problem if the bean container is loaded before the EJB * container loads the target EJB. That is because by default the JNDI lookup will be * performed in the init method of this class and cached, but the EJB will not have been * bound at the target location yet. The best solution is to set the lookupHomeOnStartup * property to false, in which case the home will be fetched on first access to the EJB. * (This flag is only true by default for backwards compatibility reasons). * * <p>This proxy factory is typically used with an RMI business interface, which serves * as super-interface of the EJB component interface. Alternatively, this factory * can also proxy a remote SLSB with a matching non-RMI business interface, i.e. an * interface that mirrors the EJB business methods but does not declare RemoteExceptions. * In the latter case, RemoteExceptions thrown by the EJB stub will automatically get * converted to Spring's unchecked RemoteAccessException. * * @author Rod Johnson * @author Colin Sampaleanu * @author Juergen Hoeller * @since 09.05.2003 * @see org.springframework.remoting.RemoteAccessException * @see AbstractSlsbInvokerInterceptor#setLookupHomeOnStartup * @see AbstractSlsbInvokerInterceptor#setCacheHome * @see AbstractRemoteSlsbInvokerInterceptor#setRefreshHomeOnConnectFailure */
public class SimpleRemoteStatelessSessionProxyFactoryBean extends SimpleRemoteSlsbInvokerInterceptor implements FactoryBean<Object>, BeanClassLoaderAware {
The business interface of the EJB we're proxying.
/** The business interface of the EJB we're proxying. */
@Nullable private Class<?> businessInterface; @Nullable private ClassLoader beanClassLoader = ClassUtils.getDefaultClassLoader();
EJBObject.
/** EJBObject. */
@Nullable private Object proxy;
Set the business interface of the EJB we're proxying. This will normally be a super-interface of the EJB remote component interface. Using a business methods interface is a best practice when implementing EJBs.

You can also specify a matching non-RMI business interface, i.e. an interface that mirrors the EJB business methods but does not declare RemoteExceptions. In this case, RemoteExceptions thrown by the EJB stub will automatically get converted to Spring's generic RemoteAccessException.

Params:
  • businessInterface – the business interface of the EJB
/** * Set the business interface of the EJB we're proxying. * This will normally be a super-interface of the EJB remote component interface. * Using a business methods interface is a best practice when implementing EJBs. * <p>You can also specify a matching non-RMI business interface, i.e. an interface * that mirrors the EJB business methods but does not declare RemoteExceptions. * In this case, RemoteExceptions thrown by the EJB stub will automatically get * converted to Spring's generic RemoteAccessException. * @param businessInterface the business interface of the EJB */
public void setBusinessInterface(@Nullable Class<?> businessInterface) { this.businessInterface = businessInterface; }
Return the business interface of the EJB we're proxying.
/** * Return the business interface of the EJB we're proxying. */
@Nullable public Class<?> getBusinessInterface() { return this.businessInterface; } @Override public void setBeanClassLoader(ClassLoader classLoader) { this.beanClassLoader = classLoader; } @Override public void afterPropertiesSet() throws NamingException { super.afterPropertiesSet(); if (this.businessInterface == null) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("businessInterface is required"); } this.proxy = new ProxyFactory(this.businessInterface, this).getProxy(this.beanClassLoader); } @Override @Nullable public Object getObject() { return this.proxy; } @Override public Class<?> getObjectType() { return this.businessInterface; } @Override public boolean isSingleton() { return true; } }