That might work. Basically, if you create an EJB3, then the JAR file should 
contain the local and remote interface classes and the implementation class. 
The remote interface class needs to be included in the client's classpath - for 
a simple test it is usually easier to just include it in the client's JAR file. 
To summarize:

somejb.jar:
org.xxx.yyy.EjbRemote.class
org.xxx.yyy.EjbLocal.class
org.xxx.yyy.EjbImpl.class

client.jar:
org.xxx.yyy.EjbRemote.class
org.xxx.yyy.Client.class

In Ant, when building the client you can use the 'includes' directive of a 
fileset to grab **/*Remote.class from the EJB build directory. 


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