On 14 May 2004, at 16:32, Patrick Mueller wrote:
I'm interested in finding out how I'll be able to talk to Geronimo at a management-type level from an external client in the current/near term. I think JSR 77 and 88 appear to be the 'standard' way to do this.
JSR 77 seems kind of kind of yucky in that it requires I talk through an EJB, which will require plenty-o-code in my client that wants to talk to Geronimo (however, I'm a noob in the J2EE space; perhaps the MEJB can be accessed via WS or something else (RMI?)).
JSR 88 seems to imply that Geronimo will supply some code my client can use.
And then, there might be stuff you are doing above-and-beyond, like JSR 160 (or any sort of remote interface to JMX). I noticed that when I start 1.0M1, I get the titilating line logged:
[TcpTransportServerChannel] Listening for connections at: tcp://localhost:61616
Who is listening on the other end of this port?
Other JMS connections might try connect to it - its defined in the j2ee-server-plan.xml in the assembly module.
BTW, I'm glad you managed to work '666' into the port number. Always easy to remember. <grin/>
Just seemed an easy number to remember :). The 61 part actually came from me reminiscing about a 6-1 victory over my football team's rivals after the rival team just won the league :)
James ------- http://radio.weblogs.com/0112098/
