public abstract class RMISocketFactory extends Object implements RMIClientSocketFactory, RMIServerSocketFactory
RMISocketFactory instance is used by the RMI runtime
 in order to obtain client and server sockets for RMI calls.  An
 application may use the setSocketFactory method to
 request that the RMI runtime use its socket factory instance
 instead of the default implementation.
 The default socket factory implementation performs a
 three-tiered approach to creating client sockets. First, a direct
 socket connection to the remote VM is attempted.  If that fails
 (due to a firewall), the runtime uses HTTP with the explicit port
 number of the server.  If the firewall does not allow this type of
 communication, then HTTP to a cgi-bin script on the server is used
 to POST the RMI call. The HTTP tunneling mechanisms are disabled by
 default. This behavior is controlled by the java.rmi.server.disableHttp
 property, whose default value is true. Setting this property's
 value to false will enable the HTTP tunneling mechanisms.
 
Deprecated: HTTP Tunneling. The HTTP tunneling mechanisms described above, specifically HTTP with an explicit port and HTTP to a cgi-bin script, are deprecated. These HTTP tunneling mechanisms are subject to removal in a future release of the platform.
The default socket factory implementation creates server sockets that are bound to the wildcard address, which accepts requests from all network interfaces.
You can use the RMISocketFactory class to create a server socket that
 is bound to a specific address, restricting the origin of requests. For example,
 the following code implements a socket factory that binds server sockets to an IPv4
 loopback address. This restricts RMI to processing requests only from the local host.
 
     class LoopbackSocketFactory extends RMISocketFactory {
         public ServerSocket createServerSocket(int port) throws IOException {
             return new ServerSocket(port, 5, InetAddress.getByName("127.0.0.1"));
         }
         public Socket createSocket(String host, int port) throws IOException {
             // just call the default client socket factory
             return RMISocketFactory.getDefaultSocketFactory()
                                    .createSocket(host, port);
         }
     }
     // ...
     RMISocketFactory.setSocketFactory(new LoopbackSocketFactory());
 java.rmi.server.hostname system property
 to 127.0.0.1 to ensure that the generated stubs connect to the right
 network interface.| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| RMISocketFactory()Constructs an  RMISocketFactory. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| abstract ServerSocket | createServerSocket(int port)Create a server socket on the specified port (port 0 indicates
 an anonymous port). | 
| abstract Socket | createSocket(String host,
            int port)Creates a client socket connected to the specified host and port. | 
| static RMISocketFactory | getDefaultSocketFactory()Returns a reference to the default socket factory used
 by this RMI implementation. | 
| static RMIFailureHandler | getFailureHandler()Returns the handler for socket creation failure set by the
  setFailureHandlermethod. | 
| static RMISocketFactory | getSocketFactory()Returns the socket factory set by the  setSocketFactorymethod. | 
| static void | setFailureHandler(RMIFailureHandler fh)Sets the failure handler to be called by the RMI runtime if server
 socket creation fails. | 
| static void | setSocketFactory(RMISocketFactory fac)Set the global socket factory from which RMI gets sockets (if the
 remote object is not associated with a specific client and/or server
 socket factory). | 
public RMISocketFactory()
RMISocketFactory.public abstract Socket createSocket(String host, int port) throws IOException
createSocket in interface RMIClientSocketFactoryhost - the host nameport - the port numberIOException - if an I/O error occurs during socket creationpublic abstract ServerSocket createServerSocket(int port) throws IOException
createServerSocket in interface RMIServerSocketFactoryport - the port numberIOException - if an I/O error occurs during server socket
 creationpublic static void setSocketFactory(RMISocketFactory fac) throws IOException
fac - the socket factoryIOException - if the RMI socket factory is already setSecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
             checkSetFactory method doesn't allow the operation.getSocketFactory(), 
SecurityManager.checkSetFactory()public static RMISocketFactory getSocketFactory()
setSocketFactory
 method. Returns null if no socket factory has been
 set.setSocketFactory(RMISocketFactory)public static RMISocketFactory getDefaultSocketFactory()
getSocketFactory
 returns null.public static void setFailureHandler(RMIFailureHandler fh)
If there is a security manager, this method first calls
 the security manager's checkSetFactory method
 to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
fh - the failure handlerSecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
          checkSetFactory method doesn't allow the
          operation.getFailureHandler(), 
RMIFailureHandler.failure(Exception)public static RMIFailureHandler getFailureHandler()
setFailureHandler method.setFailureHandler(RMIFailureHandler) Submit a bug or feature 
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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