See: Description
| Interface | Description | 
|---|---|
| LoaderHandler | Deprecated
 no replacement 
 | 
| RemoteCall | Deprecated
 no replacement. 
 | 
| RemoteRef | 
RemoteRef represents the handle for a remote object. | 
| RMIClientSocketFactory | 
 An  
RMIClientSocketFactory instance is used by the RMI runtime
 in order to obtain client sockets for RMI calls. | 
| RMIFailureHandler | 
 An  
RMIFailureHandler can be registered via the
 RMISocketFactory.setFailureHandler call. | 
| RMIServerSocketFactory | 
 An  
RMIServerSocketFactory instance is used by the RMI runtime
 in order to obtain server sockets for RMI calls. | 
| ServerRef | Deprecated
 No replacement. 
 | 
| Skeleton | Deprecated
 no replacement. 
 | 
| Unreferenced | 
 A remote object implementation should implement the
  
Unreferenced interface to receive notification when there are
 no more clients that reference that remote object. | 
| Class | Description | 
|---|---|
| LogStream | Deprecated
 no replacement 
 | 
| ObjID | 
 An  
ObjID is used to identify a remote object exported
 to an RMI runtime. | 
| Operation | Deprecated
 no replacement 
 | 
| RemoteObject | 
 The  
RemoteObject class implements the
 java.lang.Object behavior for remote objects. | 
| RemoteObjectInvocationHandler | 
 An implementation of the  
InvocationHandler interface for
 use with Java Remote Method Invocation (Java RMI). | 
| RemoteServer | 
 The  
RemoteServer class is the common superclass to server
 implementations and provides the framework to support a wide range
 of remote reference semantics. | 
| RemoteStub | Deprecated
 Statically generated stubs are deprecated, since
 stubs are generated dynamically. 
 | 
| RMIClassLoader | 
RMIClassLoader comprises static methods to support
 dynamic class loading with RMI. | 
| RMIClassLoaderSpi | 
RMIClassLoaderSpi is the service provider interface for
 RMIClassLoader. | 
| RMISocketFactory | 
 An  
RMISocketFactory instance is used by the RMI runtime
 in order to obtain client and server sockets for RMI calls. | 
| UID | 
 A  
UID represents an identifier that is unique over time
 with respect to the host it is generated on, or one of 216
 "well-known" identifiers. | 
| UnicastRemoteObject | 
 Used for exporting a remote object with JRMP and obtaining a stub
 that communicates to the remote object. 
 | 
| Exception | Description | 
|---|---|
| ExportException | 
 An  
ExportException is a RemoteException
 thrown if an attempt to export a remote object fails. | 
| ServerCloneException | 
 A  
ServerCloneException is thrown if a remote exception occurs
 during the cloning of a UnicastRemoteObject. | 
| ServerNotActiveException | 
 An  
ServerNotActiveException is an Exception
 thrown during a call to RemoteServer.getClientHost if
 the getClientHost method is called outside of servicing a remote
 method call. | 
| SkeletonMismatchException | Deprecated
 no replacement. 
 | 
| SkeletonNotFoundException | Deprecated
 no replacement. 
 | 
| SocketSecurityException | Deprecated
 This class is obsolete. 
 | 
Deprecated: HTTP Tunneling. The HTTP tunneling
mechanism has been deprecated. See RMISocketFactory for
further information.
Deprecated: Skeletons and Static Stubs.
Skeletons and statically generated stubs are deprecated.  This
includes the APIs in this package that require the use of skeletons
or static stubs, the runtime support for them, and the use of the
rmic stub compiler to generate them.  Support for skeletons
and static stubs may be removed in a future release of the
platform. Skeletons are unnecessary, as server-side method dispatching
is handled directly by the RMI runtime. Statically generated stubs are
unnecessary, as stubs are generated dynamically using Proxy objects. See UnicastRemoteObject for
information about dynamic stub generation. Generation of skeletons and
static stubs was typically performed as part of an application's build
process by calling the rmic tool. This is unnecessary, and
calls to rmic can simply be omitted.
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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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