"bwarren" wrote :
| Is JBoss Remoting the way to go here?
|
Well, as it happens, JBossRemoting is the way you've already gone. EJBs, EJB3s, and
JBossMessaging connections all, by default, use JBossRemoting as their transport layer,
each, again by default, with their own Remoting servers listening on ports other than 80.
However, one of the primary design principles of Remoting is the ability to swap one
Remoting transport for another. In your case, you can get closer to your goal with the
servlet transport, in which all of the various proxies connect to a Remoting servlet,
which then passes the invocations to the appropriate subsystem. Of course, you would need
a servlet container (i.e., a JBossWeb (aka Tomcat) connector) listening on port 80. Can
you do that? Or will the network powers open up, say, 8080 (the default JBossWeb port in
the Application Server - see
$JBOSS_HOME/server/$CONFIG/deploy/jboss-web.deployer/server.xml)?
The configuration details are given in the wiki entry "EJB, JMS and JNDI over HTTP
with Unified Invoker" at
http://www.jboss.org/community/wiki/EJBJMSandJNDIoverHTTPwithUnifiedInvoker.
What do you think?
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