Chapter 17. Factories and the Activation Framework
In Chapter 14 and Chapter 15, we discussed how to build a better naming service, one that has a great deal more flexibility than the RMI registry and enables easier lookup of specific servers. However, applications that could potentially have millions of servers still require more infrastructure to help them deal with resource management. In this chapter, we’ll discuss the most common way of achieving this, the factory pattern, and how it is supported in RMI. To do this, we’ll implement a basic factory directly, and then implement similar functionality using RMI’s activation framework.
Resource Management
Our bank example
has so far been a small-scale application. While
Account
is a
fairly flexible interface, and you may think you
can support millions of accounts using our new
naming service and one of the implementations of
Account
that
we’ve discussed, the fact of the matter is that
more infrastructure is required.
To see why, consider the Bank of America advertisement quoted in Chapter 5:
When traveling, take advantage of more than 13,000 Bank of America ATMs coast to coast. We’re in 30 states and the District of Columbia. As a Bank of America Check Card or ATM cardholder, there’s no ATM fee when you use an ATM displaying a Bank of America sign...
—Bank of America advertisement
That’s 13,000 dedicated client machines. Plus, there are the client applications running inside each branch of the bank, the central reporting and analysis ...
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