JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3

java.rmi.registry
Interface RegistryHandler


Deprecated. no replacement

public interface RegistryHandler

RegistryHandler is an interface used internally by the RMI runtime in previous implementation versions. It should never be accessed by application code.

Since:
JDK1.1

Method Summary
 Registry registryImpl(int port)
          Deprecated. no replacement. As of the Java 2 platform v1.2, RMI no longer uses the RegistryHandler to obtain the registry's implementation.
 Registry registryStub(String host, int port)
          Deprecated. no replacement. As of the Java 2 platform v1.2, RMI no longer uses the RegistryHandler to obtain the registry's stub.
 

Method Detail

registryStub

public Registry registryStub(String host,
                             int port)
                      throws RemoteException,
                             UnknownHostException
Deprecated. no replacement. As of the Java 2 platform v1.2, RMI no longer uses the RegistryHandler to obtain the registry's stub.

Returns a "stub" for contacting a remote registry on the specified host and port.
Parameters:
host - name of remote registry host
port - remote registry port
Returns:
remote registry stub
Throws:
RemoteException - if a remote error occurs
UnknownHostException - if unable to resolve given hostname

registryImpl

public Registry registryImpl(int port)
                      throws RemoteException
Deprecated. no replacement. As of the Java 2 platform v1.2, RMI no longer uses the RegistryHandler to obtain the registry's implementation.

Constructs and exports a Registry on the specified port. The port must be non-zero.
Parameters:
port - port to export registry on
Returns:
registry stub
Throws:
RemoteException - if a remote error occurs

JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3

Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java 2 SDK SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

Java, Java 2D, and JDBC are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the US and other countries.
Copyright 1993-2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc. 901 San Antonio Road
Palo Alto, California, 94303, U.S.A. All Rights Reserved.