From: Russell Collins
Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 11:11 AM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: RE: JNDI in Geronimo 2

I want to thank you Wang, Tang and everyone else who has helped me.  I have 
tried everyone's suggestions and have even ran through the tutorial exactly the 
way it is on the site with no success.  This leads me to believe that there is 
something wrong with my installation of Ganymede.  I have since cleaned out all 
of the plug-ins associated with the Geronimo App Server.  Upon trying to 
reinstall the plug-ins, I got errors saying that it could not be installed.  I 
will need to figure out what is wrong before I can continue.  I think that once 
I have those environment issues worked out, I will be fine.  I will keep you 
guys posted.



From: Rex Wang [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2009 9:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: JNDI in Geronimo 2

BTW
you should add
repository\org\apache\openejb\openejb-client\3.0\openejb-client-3.0.jar
to your client's build path.


Rex
2009/3/11 Rex Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Russell, could you provide the whole exception strack?

I can not got your problem.

here is my code:
public class Client {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {

        try {
            Properties p = new Properties();
            p.setProperty("java.naming.factory.initial", 
"org.apache.openejb.client.RemoteInitialContextFactory");
            p.setProperty("java.naming.provider.url", "ejbd://localhost:4201");

            InitialContext context = new InitialContext(p);

            FirstObjectRemote obj= (FirstObjectRemote) 
context.lookup("FirstObjectBeanRemote");
            System.out.println(obj.hello("Rex"));

        } catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }

    }
}

I try it with Tang's EJB code as follows:
import javax.ejb.Stateless;

@Stateless
public class FirstObjectBean implements FirstObjectRemote{
        public String hello(String name){
                      return "Hello " + name;
       }
}
import javax.ejb.Remote;

@Remote
public interface FirstObjectRemote {
    public String hello(String name);
}

Rex

2009/3/11 Russell Collins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>


Thank you Wang and Tang.  Here are the things that I have done.



*         Changed the JDK to version 1.5.0_6

*         Updated all of my classes to use this version of Java

*         Changed the provider url to ejbd://localhost:4201



I get the error



java.lang.RuntimeException: Invalid response from server: -1









From: Ying Tang [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2009 3:23 AM

To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: JNDI in Geronimo 2



Yes,  should be ejbd://localhost:4201. The same as the example in the 
doc<http://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/GMOxDOC22/Deploying+and+running+EJB+application+clients>.

2009/3/10 Rex Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>

Tang, I believe Russell use a remote client, but not a application client.

to Russell, try "ejbd://localhost:4201"


Rex.

2009/3/10 Ying Tang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>



Hi Russell,

I suggest you use JDK 1.5 instead of 1.6. It is also recommended that Eclipse 
and Geronimo use the same Java environment.

Please let me know if there is still any problem.

Best Regards,

Ying Tang

2009/3/10 Russell Collins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>



Thank you Tang.  This should be real strait forward but there has got to be 
some reason why this is not working.  Here is the configuration that I have.  
This may help in solving this issue.



Eclipse Ganymede

Java 1.6..0_11

Geronimo 2.1.2

Geronimo 2.1.3 (tried it on both)



There are a couple of other things that I tried that gave me different results.

1.    Added a runtime dependency to the Geronimo Runtime.  This gave me a 
different error.  It was a java runtime error that said that the response from 
the server is: -1

2.    Created a client j2ee application to run my app.



Basically, I am following everything in that link that you sent me.  I am just 
getting these errors when trying to look up the object.  Any more insight would 
be greatly appreciated.





From: Ying Tang [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: Monday, March 09, 2009 11:21 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: JNDI in Geronimo 2



Hi Error! Filename not specified.Russell,


I tried your example on Geronimo 2.1.4.

1. I renamed the implementation class  as FirstObjectBean.  A bit different 
from your code:
---------------------------------------------------

@Stateless

public class FirstObjectBean implements FirstObjectRemote { import

   public String hello(String name){

                  return "Hello " + name;

   }

}
---------------------------------------------------

2.  In the application client that referece the EJB, I used
---------------------------------------------------
import ejb.FirstObjectRemote;
...
FirstObjectRemote firstObject = 
(FirstObjectRemote)context.lookup("FirstObjectBeanRemote");
---------------------------------------------------
3. Add the EJB project to the build path of the application client project.
4. Add the two projects to the Geronimo server, and run the application client.

The application works well and the "Hello Russel" message shows up.

For more detailed information, please refer to:
http://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/GMOxDOC22/Deploying+and+running+EJB+application+clients

Hope this helps.


Best Regards,

Ying Tang  (Sophia)

2009/3/9 Russell Collins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>

Hello.  I am new to the list, new to EJB 3.0 and new to Geronimo 2.  I am 
pretty sure I understand all of the concepts but I am having an issue with a 
JNDI lookup in Geronimo.  I have created a Bean and it looks as follows.



Interface:



@Remote

public interface FirstObjectRemote {

      public String hello(String name);

}



Class:



@Stateless

public class FirstObject implements FirstObjectRemote {



   public FirstObject() {

   }



   @Override

   public String hello(String name){

                  return "Hello " + name;

   }



}



Everything deploys just fine (at lease I think it does).  I created a test 
class:





public class TheClass

{

public static void main(String[] args)

      {

            Properties prop=new Properties();

            prop.put(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY, 
"org.apache.openejb.client.RemoteInitialContextFactory");

            prop.put(Context.PROVIDER_URL, "ejbd://localhost:1099");



            try{

                  Context context = new InitialContext(prop);

                  FirstObjectRemote firstObject = 
(FirstObjectRemote)context.lookup("FirstObjectRemote");

                  System.out.println(firstObject.hello("Russell"));

            }

            catch(Exception ex){

                  System.out.println(ex.toString());

            }



      }

}





I get an error I when trying to run this.  The error that comes back is:





javax.naming.NamingException: Cannot lookup '/FirstObjectRemote'. [Root 
exception is java.rmi.RemoteException: Error while communicating with server: ; 
nested exception is:

      java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: javax/transaction/RollbackException]







What am I missing?










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