Provides the mapping of the OMG CORBA APIs to the JavaTM
programming language, including the class ORB, which is implemented
so that a programmer can use it as a fully-functional Object Request Broker
(ORB).
Signifies an argument used for both input and output in an invocation,
meaning that the argument is being passed from the client to
the server and then back from the server to the client.
Contains the value used to indicate a policy value that is
incorrect for a valid policy type in a call to the
create_policy method defined in the ORB class.
org/omg/CORBA/Current.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT.
org/omg/CORBA/CurrentOperations.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT.
An IRObject IDL interface represents the most generic interface
from which all other Interface Repository interfaces are derived,
even the Repository itself.
org/omg/CORBA/Policy.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:20 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyOperations.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:20 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/_PolicyStub.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl.
org/omg/CORBA/AnySeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/AnySeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/BooleanSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/BooleanSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/CharSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/CharSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
An object used in Request operations
to specify the context object in which context strings
must be resolved before being sent along with the request invocation.
org/omg/CORBA/CurrentHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/CurrentHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/DefinitionKindHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:43 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/DoubleSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/DoubleSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/FloatSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/FloatSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/IdentifierHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:42 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/LongLongSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/LongLongSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/LongSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/LongSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/OctetSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/OctetSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:20 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:20 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyListHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyListHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:21 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/PolicyTypeHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ../../../../../src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableServer/corba.idl
Saturday, July 17, 1999 12:26:20 AM PDT
org/omg/CORBA/RepositoryIdHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:43 o'clock GMT+00:00
The mapping of a CORBA enum tagging
SET_OVERRIDE and ADD_OVERRIDE, which
indicate whether policies should replace the
existing policies of an Object or be added to them.
org/omg/CORBA/ShortSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ShortSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/StringValueHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from orb.idl
31 May 1999 22:27:30 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/StructMemberHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:43 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ULongLongSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ULongLongSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:37 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ULongSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ULongSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/UnionMemberHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:43 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/UShortSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/UShortSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/ValueMemberHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:44 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/VersionSpecHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:43 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/VisibilityHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from ir.idl
03 June 1999 11:33:44 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/WCharSeqHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/WCharSeqHolder.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from streams.idl
13 May 1999 22:41:36 o'clock GMT+00:00
org/omg/CORBA/WStringValueHelper.java
Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.0"
from orb.idl
31 May 1999 22:27:30 o'clock GMT+00:00
An exception carrying one of the following policy error reason codes
defined in the org.omg.CORBA package:
BAD_POLICY, BAD_POLICY_TYPE, BAD_POLICY_VALUE, UNSUPPORTED_POLICY, UNSUPPORTED_POLICY_VALUE
The CORBA TRANSACTION_REQUIRED exception, which is thrown
by the ORB on the client or server during the
processing of a request that
is required to be enclosed in a transaction.
The CORBA WrongTransaction user-defined exception.
Package org.omg.CORBA Description
Provides the mapping of the OMG CORBA APIs to the JavaTM
programming language, including the class ORB, which is implemented
so that a programmer can use it as a fully-functional Object Request Broker
(ORB).
An ORB handles (or brokers) method invocations between a client and
the method's implementation on a server. Because the client and server
may be anywhere on a network, and because the invocation and implementation
may be written in different programming languages, an ORB does a great
deal of work behind the scenes to accomplish this communication.
What the General User Needs to Know
Most of what an ORB does is completely transparent to the user, and a major
portion of the CORBA package consists of classes used by the ORB
behind the scenes. The result is that most programmers will use only a
small part of this package directly. In fact, most programmers will use
only a few methods from the ORB class, some exceptions, and occasionally,
a holder class.
ORB Methods
These are the ORB methods that a general user might invoke:
connect()
disconnect()
init()
init(String [] args, Properties props)
init(Applet app, Properties props)
list_initial_services()
resolve_initial_references(String name)
object_to_string(Object obj)
string_to_object(String str)
Exceptions
Exceptions in Java IDL are similar to those in any code written in the
Java programming language. If a method is defined to throw an exception,
then any code using that method must have a try/catch
block and handle that exception when it is thrown.
The documentation on Java
IDL exceptions has more information and explains the difference between
system exceptions and user-defined exceptions.
The following is a list of the system exceptions (which are unchecked
exceptions inheriting through org.omg.CORBA.SystemException from
java.lang.RuntimeException) that are defined in the package org.omg.CORBA:
Note that there are some packages inside the CORBA package with
"Package" as part of their names. These packages are generally quite small
because all they do is provide exceptions or classes for use by interfaces
and classes in the CORBA package.
For example, the package org.omg.CORBA.TypeCodePackage contains
two exceptions thrown by methods in the class TypeCode. These
exceptions are:
BadKind
Bounds
The package org.omg.CORBA.ORBPackage contains two exceptions:
InvalidName
InconsistentTypeCode
The package org.omg.CORBA.DynAnyPackage contains four exceptions:
InvalidValue, thrown by methods in
DynAny
DynFixed
Invalid, thrown by methods in
DynAny
TypeMismatch, thrown by methods in
DynAny
InvalidSeq, thrown by methods in
DynArray
DynSequence
DynStruct
DynValue
Holder classes
Holder classes are generated by the idltojava compiler as
support for out and inout parameter passing modes. Because the Java
programming language does not support out or inout parameters, holder
classes are needed as a means of passing a parameter that can be modified.
Holder classes implement the org.omg.CORBA.portable.Streamable
interface in order to support portable stubs and skeletons.
Holder classes are named by appending "Holder" to the name of the type.
Note that the name of the type refers to its name in the Java programming langua
ge.
For example, a holder class for the interface named Account
in the Java programming language would be named AccountHolder.
There are holder classes available for all of the basic IDL data types
in the org.omg.CORBA package. So, for instance, there are
classes already defined for
IntHolder, ShortHolder, LongHolder,
FloatHolder, ByteHolder, CharHolder,
and so on. New holder classes are generated
for all named user-defined IDL types except those defined by a
typedef.
Each holder class contains the following:
a constructor from an instance
a default constructor
a public field, value, which contains an instance of the typed
value
a method for reading an input stream and assigning the contents to the type
's
value field
a method for writing the value of the value field to an output
stream
a method for getting the type code of the type
The default constructor for a holder class sets the value
field to the default value for the type as defined by the Java
programming language. These default values are:
false for boolean types
0 for numeric and char types
null for strings
null for object references
As an example, if the interface Account, defined in OMG IDL,
were mapped to the Java programming language, the following holder class
would be generated:
final public class AccountHolder implements
org.omg.CORBA.portable.Streamable {
public Account value;
// the field that holds an Account object
public AccountHolder() {}
// the default constructor
public AccountHolder(Account initial) {...}
// creates a new AccountHolder from initial
public void _read(org.omg.CORBA.portable.InputStream is) {...}
// reads the contents of is and assigns the contents to value
public void _write(org.omg.CORBA.portable.OutputStream os) {...}
// writes value to os
public org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode _type() {...}
// returns the type code for Account
}
The Holder classes defined in the package org.omg.CORBA are:
Some of the classes in this package are "helper" classes. These classes
fall into two broad categories, helpers for value types and
helpers for non value types. Because all of the helper classes in one category
provide the same methods, one generic explanation of each
category of helper classes is presented here.
Note that, generally, the only helper method an application programmer uses is
the narrow method. The other methods are normally used behind
the scenes and are transparent to the programmer.
When OMG IDL is mapped to the Java programming language,
a "helper" class is generated for each user-defined type.
This generated class will have the name of the user-defined type with
the suffix Helper appended. For example, if the
interface Account is defined in OMG IDL, the
idltojava compiler will automatically generate a class named
AccountHelper. The AccountHelper class
will contain the static methods needed for manipulating instances of the type,
in this case, Account objects.
These methods provide the means to insert the
type into an Any object, extract the type from an Any
object, get the type code for the type, get the type's repository id, read the
type from an input stream, and write the type to an output stream.
Every user-defined type's helper class will include these basic methods.
If a user-defined type is a value type IDL type, it's helper class also
has to implement the ValueHelper interface, so this category of
helper classes will contain additional methods.
In addition,
if the IDL type maps to an interface in the Java programming language, the
helper class will also contain a method for casting an object (narrowing it)
to the type.
The narrow Method
When an object is the return value for a method, it is returned in the
form of a generic object, either an org.omg.CORBA.Object object
or a java.lang.Object object. This object must be cast to its
more specific type before it can be operated on. For example, an
Account object will be returned as a generic object and must
be narrowed to an Account object so that Account
methods may be called on it.
The narrow method has two forms, one that takes an
org.omg.CORBA.Object object and one that takes a
java.lang.Object object. Whether the interface is abstract or
not determines which narrow method its helper class will provide.
The helper class for an interface
that is not abstract will have a narrow method that takes a CORBA
object, whereas the narrow method for an interface that is abstract will
take an object in the Java programming language. The helper class for a
non-abstract interface that has at least one abstract base interface will provide
both versions of the narrow method.
Example of a Basic Helper Class
A basic helper class, for purposes of this explanation, is one with
the methods that are provided by every helper class, plus a narrow
method if the type defined in OMG IDL maps to an interface in the Java
programming language. Types that are not value types will have a basic
helper class generated for them.
For example, assuming that the interface Account is not a
value type IDL type and is also not an abstract interface and has no
abstract base interfaces, its AccountHelper class will include
the following methods:
public static void insert(org.omg.CORBA.Any a, Account ac)
Inserts an Account object into an Any object.
Parameters:
a the Any object into which the Account
object will be inserted
ac the Account object to be inserted
public static Account extract(org.omg.CORBA.Any a)
Extracts an Account object from an Any object.
Parameters:
a the Any object from which the Account
object will be extracted
Returns:
the Account object that is the value for the given Any
object
public static org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode type()
Gets the typecode for this type.
Returns:
the typecode for an Account object
public static String id()
Gets the repository id for this type.
Returns:
the repository id of an Account object
public static Account
read(org.omg.CORBA.portable.InputStream istream)
Reads an Account object from an input stream.
Parameters:
istream the input stream from which the Account
object will be read
Returns:
the Account object that was contained in the input stream
public static void
write(org.omg.CORBA.portable.OutputStream ostream)
Writes an Account object to an output stream.
Parameters:
ostream the output stream to which the Account
object will be written
public static Account narrow(org.omg.CORBA.Object obj)
Converts (narrows) an Object object to an Account object.
Parameters:
obj the CORBA Object that will be narrowed to this type
Returns:
the CORBA Object as an Account object
Additional Methods for Value Type Helper Classes
A helper class for a value type includes some additional methods because
it must implement the org.omg.CORBA.portable.ValueHelper
interface. The main difference is that value types are types that can be
passed by value as parameters or return values of a method, which means that
they must be serializable.
Assuming that Address is a value type, the
AddressHelper class will include the following additional methods:
public static ValueHelper get_instance()
Gets an instance of AddressHelper, creating it if necessary.
Returns:
an AddressHelper object, which implements the interface
ValueHelper
public java.io.Serializable
read_Value(org.omg.CORBA.portable.InputStream istream)
Reads a serializable instance of Address from the given input stream.
Parameters:
istream the input stream from which the Address object will
be read
Returns:
the serialized Address object
public void write_Value(org.omg.CORBA.portable.OutputStream os,
java.io.Serializable obj)
Writes a serializable instance of Address to the given output stream.
Parameters:
ostream the output stream to which the Address object will
be written
obj the serialized Address object that will be written
public Class get_class()
Returns the class for an instance of Address.
Returns:
the Class object for this type
public String get_id()
Gets the repository id for an instance of Address.
Returns:
the repository id for this type
public String [] get_truncatable_base_ids()
Gets an array of the truncatable base repository ids for an
instance of Address.
Returns:
an array of String objects containing the truncatable base
repository ids for this type
public org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode get_type()
Gets the typecode for the type Address.
Returns:
the TypeCode object indicating the type of an
Address object
The Helper classes defined in the package org.omg.CORBA are:
The other classes and interfaces in the CORBA package, which are
used behind the scenes, can be put into four groups. Three of the groups
are used with requests in some capacity, and the fourth group, concerning
the Interface Repository, is a category by itself.
Classes Created by an ORB
The first group contains classes that are created by an ORB and contain
information used in request operations. They are listed in roughly increasing
order of complexity:
TCKind -- indicates the kind (datatype) for a TypeCode
object>
TypeCode -- indicates a datatype and possibly other information>
Any -- contains a value and its typecode>
NamedValue -- contains a name, an Any object, and an
argument mode flag. NamedValue objects contain information about
method arguments, method return values, or a context.
ContextList -- a list of strings that describe the contexts that
need to be resolved and sent with an invocation>
ExceptionList -- a list of TypeCodes for exceptions that
may be thrown by a method>
Environment -- a container for the exception thrown during a method
invocation>
Context -- a list of NamedValue objects used to pass
auxiliary information from client to server>
NVList -- a list of NamedValue objects, used to pass
arguments or get results>
Classes That Deal with Requests
The second group of classes deals with requests:
Object -- the base class for all CORBA object references>
Request -- the main class in the DII, which contains methods for
adding arguments to the request, for accessing information about the method
being invoked (the method name, its arguments, exceptions it throws, and
so on), and for making invocations on the request>
DynamicImplementation -- the base class for server implementations
using the DSI. It has the method invoke, which is used by an implementation
of this class to determine the state of a ServerRequest object
and to set its result or exception>
ServerRequest -- captures the explicit state of a request for
the Dynamic Skeleton Interface>
Interfaces That Serve as Constants
The third group contains interfaces that serve as constants. The IDL-to-Java
mapping mandates that IDL enums are mapped to a Java class with the enumerated
values represented as public static final fields in that class (e.g. DefinitionKind).
On the other hand IDL constants defined outside of an IDL interface are
mapped to a Java interface for each constant.
This is why several interfaces in the org.omg.CORBA package
consist of a single field, value, which is a short. This
field is a constant used for such things as an error code or value modifier.
For example, the value field of the interface BAD_POLICY
is one of the possible reasons for the exception PolicyError to
be thrown. To specify this error code, you would use BAD_POLICY.value.
The exception PolicyError uses the value field of
the following interfaces as its possible error codes.
BAD_POLICY
BAD_POLICY_TYPE
BAD_POLICY_VALUE
UNSUPPORTED_POLICY
UNSUPPORTED_POLICY_VALUE
The method TypeCode.type_modifier returns the value field
of one of the following interfaces. The VM in the names of these
interfaces stands for "value modifier."
VM_NONE
VM_ABSTRACT
VM_CUSTOM
VM_TRUNCATABLE
The following constants are returned by a ValueMember object's
access method to denote the visibility of the ValueMember object.
PRIVATE_MEMBER
PUBLIC_MEMBER
These flags, used in NamedValue objects or as parameters to methods,
are defined in the following interfaces:
ARG_IN
ARG_INOUT
ARG_OUT
CTX_RESTRICT_SCOPE
Interface Repository Interfaces and Classes
A fourth group contains the Interface Repository interfaces and classes,
which are generated by the idltojava compiler from the OMG IDL
interface ir.idl. The purpose of the Interface Repository is to
identify the interfaces stored in it so that they can be accessed by an
ORB. Each module, type, interface, attribute, operation, parameter, exception,
constant, and so on is described completely by the Interface Repository
API.
An ORB does not require that there be an interface repository, and Java
IDL does not include one. Even though this release does not include an
implementation of an interface repository, the following IR classes and
interfaces have been included for the purpose of creating type codes (see
create_value_tc, create_struct_tc, create_union_tc and create_exception_tc
methods in interface org.omg.CORBA.ORB)
&nbs
IRObject
IDLType
DefinitionKind
StructMember
UnionMember
ValueMember
Related Documentation
For overviews, guides, and a tutorial, please see:
Some of the API included in org.omg.CORBA is provided for
conformance with the current OMG CORBA specification but is not implemented
in Sun's release of the JDKTM. This enables
other JDK licensees to provide implementations of this API in standard
extensions and products.
General Summary of Features or API Not Implemented in This Release:
Interface Repository. An Interface Repository is not required for normal
operation of Java IDL. Java IDL clients can access an Interface Repository
provided by another Java or C++ ORB.
RMI/IIOP>
Objects-by-Value>
Of the recently added type extensions to IDL, only longlong (signed
and unsigned) is supported. The wide character IDL types wchar
and wstring are not supported. The types long double
and fixed are also not supported.
The method org.omg.CORBA.Any.equal is not implemented for complex
TypeCodes (tk_objref, tk_Principal, tk_struct,
tk_union, tk_sequence, tk_array, tk_alias,
and tk_except), extended TypeCodes (tk_longdouble, tk_wchar, tk_wstring) and value TypeCodes (tk_value, tk_value_box).
There is no implementation for org.omg.CORBA.DynAny and other
dynamic-Any interfaces.
The API for org.omg.CORBA.Context is not implemented.
NOTE: Abstract classes, such as Context, by definition have
methods that are not implemented.
Policies (org.omg.CORBA.Policy) and methods for getting them are
not implemented.
Domain managers (org.omg.CORBA.DomainManager) and methods for
getting them are not implemented.
org.omg.CORBA.ServiceInformation and ORB methods for getting these
objects are not implemented.
org.omg.CORBA.portable.ServantObject and Delegate/ObjectImpl
methods _servant_preinvoke, _servant_postinvoke and _is_local
are not implemented.
ORB methods for supporting single-threading (perform_work, work_pending)
are not implemented.
Specific List of Unimplemented Features in Package org.omg.CORBA
Unimplemented Interfaces in package org.omg.CORBA:
Current
DynAny
DynStruct
DynEnum
DynArray
DomainManager
Policy
DynFixed
DynUnion
DynSequence
DynValue
IRObject
IDLType
Unimplemented Methods in package org.omg.CORBA:
ORB
public org.omg.CORBA.Policy create_policy(int type, org.omg.CORBA.Any
val)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynEnum create_dyn_enum(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type) throws
public org.omg.CORBA.DynUnion create_dyn_union(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynArray create_dyn_array(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynSequence create_dyn_sequence(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynStruct create_dyn_struct(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynAny create_basic_dyn_any(org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public org.omg.CORBA.DynAny create_dyn_any(org.omg.CORBA.Any value)
public boolean get_service_information(short service_type, ServiceInformationHolder
service_info)
public void perform_work()
public boolean work_pending()
public void shutdown(boolean wait_for_completion)
public void run()
public org.omg.CORBA.Current get_current()
Any
public void insert_Value(java.io.Serializable v, TypeCode t)
public void insert_Value(java.io.Serializable v)
public java.io.Serializable extract_Value()
public void insert_fixed(java.math.BigDecimal value, org.omg.CORBA.TypeCode
type)
public void insert_fixed(java.math.BigDecimal value)
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