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29.4. Publishing a Service in an OSGi Container
Overview
When you develop an application that will be deployed into an OSGi container, you need to coordinate the publishing and stopping of your endpoints with the life-cycle of the bundle in which it is packaged. You want your endpoints published when the bundle is started and you want the endpoints stopped when the bundle is stopped.
You tie your endpoints life-cycle to the bundle's life-cycle by implementing an OSGi bundle activator. A bundle activator is used by the OSGi container to create the resource for a bundle when it is started. The container also uses the bundle activator to clean up the bundles resources when it is stopped.
The bundle activator interface
You create a bundle activator for your application by implementing the
org.osgi.framework.BundleActivator
interface. The BundleActivator
interface, shown in Example 29.4, “Bundle Activator Interface”, it has two methods that need to be implemented.
Example 29.4. Bundle Activator Interface
interface BundleActivator { public void start(BundleContext context) throws java.lang.Exception; public void stop(BundleContext context) throws java.lang.Exception; }
The
start()
method is called by the container when it starts the bundle. This is where you instantiate and publish the endpoints.
The
stop()
method is called by the container when it stops the bundle. This is where you would stop the endpoints.
Implementing the start method
The bundle activator's start method is where you publish your endpoints. To publish your endpoints the start method must do the following:
- Instantiate an
javax.xml.ws.Endpoint
object for the service provider. - Create an optional server context to use when publishing the service provider.
- Publish the service provider using one of the
publish()
methods.
Example 29.5, “Bundle Activator Start Method for Publishing an Endpoint” shows code for publishing a service provider.
Example 29.5. Bundle Activator Start Method for Publishing an Endpoint
package com.widgetvendor.osgi; import javax.xml.ws.Endpoint; import org.osgi.framework.BundleActivator; import org.osgi.framework.BundleContext; public class widgetActivator implements BundleActivator { private Endpoint endpt; ... public void start(BundleContext context) { 1 WidgetOrderImpl impl = new WidgetOrderImpl(); 2 endpt = Endpoint.create(impl); 3 endpt.publish("http://localhost:9000/SoapContext/SoapPort"); } ... }
The code in Example 29.5, “Bundle Activator Start Method for Publishing an Endpoint” does the following:
Implementing the stop method
The bundle activator's stop method is where you clean up the resources used by your application. Its implementation should include logic for stopping all of the endpoint's published by the application.
Example 29.6, “Bundle Activator Stop Method for Stopping an Endpoint” shows a stop method for stopping a published endpoint.
Example 29.6. Bundle Activator Stop Method for Stopping an Endpoint
package com.widgetvendor.osgi; import javax.xml.ws.Endpoint; import org.osgi.framework.BundleActivator; import org.osgi.framework.BundleContext; public class widgetActivator implements BundleActivator { private Endpoint endpt; ... public void stop(BundleContext context) { endpt.stop(); } ... }
Informing the container
You must add inform the container that the application's bundle includes a bundle activator. You do this by adding the Bundle-Activator property to the bundle's manifest. This property tells the container which class in the bundle to use when activating the bundle. Its value is the fully qualified name of the class implementing the bundle activator.
Example 29.7, “Bundle Activator Manifest Entry” shows a manifest entry for a bundle whose activator is implemented by the class
com.widgetvendor.osgi.widgetActivator
.
Example 29.7. Bundle Activator Manifest Entry
Bundle-Activator: com.widgetvendor.osgi.widgetActivator