Name
rmid - start the activation system daemon that enables objects to be registered and activated in a Java Virtual Machine (JVM)
Synopsis
rmid
[options]
- options
- This represent the command-line options for the
rmid
command. See Options for rmid.
Description
The rmid
command starts the activation system daemon. The activation system daemon must be started before objects that can be activated are either registered with the activation system or activated in a JVM.
Start the daemon by executing the rmid
command and specifying a security policy file, as follows:
rmid -J-Djava.security.policy=rmid.policy
When you run Oracle's implementation of the rmid
command, by default you must specify a security policy file so that the rmid
command can verify whether or not the information in each ActivationGroupDesc
is allowed to be used to start a JVM for an activation group. Specifically, the command and options specified by the CommandEnvironment
and any properties passed to an ActivationGroupDesc
constructor must now be explicitly allowed in the security policy file for the rmid
command. The value of the sun.rmi.activation.execPolicy
property dictates the policy that the rmid
command uses to determine whether or not the information in an ActivationGroupDesc
can be used to start a JVM for an activation group. For more information see the description of the -J-Dsun.rmi.activation.execPolicy=policy
option.
Executing the rmid
command starts the Activator
and an internal registry on the default port 1098 and binds an ActivationSystem
to the name java.rmi.activation.ActivationSystem
in this internal registry.
To specify an alternate port for the registry, you must specify the -port
option when you execute the rmid
command. For example, the following command starts the activation system daemon and a registry on the registry's default port, 1099.
rmid -J-Djava.security.policy=rmid.policy -port 1099
Start RMID on Demand (Oracle Solaris and Linux Only)
An alternative to starting rmid
from the command line is to configure inetd
(Oracle Solaris) or xinetd
(Linux) to start rmid
on demand.
When RMID starts, it attempts to obtain an inherited channel (inherited from inetd
/xinetd
) by calling the System.inheritedChannel
method. If the inherited channel is null or not an instance of java.nio.channels.ServerSocketChannel
, then RMID assumes that it wasn't started by inetd
/xinetd
, and it starts as previously described.
If the inherited channel is a ServerSocketChannel
instance, then RMID uses the java.net.ServerSocket
obtained from the ServerSocketChannel
as the server socket that accepts requests for the remote objects it exports: The registry in which the java.rmi.activation.ActivationSystem
is bound and the java.rmi.activation.Activator
remote object. In this mode, RMID behaves the same as when it is started from the command line, except in the following cases:
Output printed to
System.err
is redirected to a file. This file is located in the directory specified by thejava.io.tmpdir
system property (typically/var/tmp
or/tmp
) with the prefixrmid-err
and the suffixtmp
.The
-port
option isn't allowed. If this option is specified, then RMID exits with an error message.The
-log
option is required. If this option isn't specified, then RMID exits with an error message
Options for rmid
-C
optionSpecifies an option that's passed as a command-line argument to each child process (activation group) of the
rmid
command when that process is created. For example, you could pass a property to each virtual machine spawned by the activation system daemon:rmid -C-Dsome.property=value
This ability to pass command-line arguments to child processes can be useful for debugging. For example, the following command enables server-call logging in all child JVMs.
rmid -C-Djava.rmi.server.logCalls=true
-J
optionSpecifies an option that's passed to the Java interpreter running RMID command. For example, to specify that the
rmid
command use a policy file namedrmid.policy
, the-J
option can be used to define thejava.security.policy
property on thermid
command line, for example:rmid -J-Djava.security.policy-rmid.policy
-J-Dsun.rmi.activation.execPolicy=
policySpecifies the policy that the RMID command employs to check commands and command-line options used to start the JVM in which an activation group runs. This option exists only in Oracle's implementation of the Java RMI activation daemon. If this property isn't specified on the command line, then the result is the same as though
-J-Dsun.rmi.activation.execPolicy=default
were specified.The possible values of policy can be
default
, policyClassName, ornone
.default
The
default
or unspecified valueexecPolicy
allows thermid
command to execute commands with specific command-line options only when thermid
command was granted permission to execute those commands and options in the security policy file that thermid
command uses. Only the default activation group implementation can be used with the default execution policy.The
rmid
command starts a JVM for an activation group with the information in the group's registered activation group descriptor,ActivationGroupDesc
. The group descriptor specifies an optionalActivationGroupDesc.CommandEnvironment
that includes the command to execute to start the activation group and any command-line options to be added to the command line. By default, thermid
command uses thejava
command found injava.home
. The group descriptor also contains properties overrides that are added to the command line as options defined as:-D
property=
value. Thecom.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecPermission
permission grants thermid
command permission to execute a command that's specified in the group descriptor'sCommandEnvironment
to start an activation group. Thecom.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission
permission enables thermid
command to use command-line options, specified as properties overrides in the group descriptor or as options in theCommandEnvironment
when starting the activation group. When granting thermid
command permission to execute various commands and options, the permissionsExecPermission
andExecOptionPermission
must be granted to all code sources.ExecPermission
class: Represents permission for thermid
command to execute a specific command to start an activation group.ExecPermission
syntax: The name ofExecPermission
is the path name of a command to grant thermid
command permission to execute.A path name that ends in a slash (
/
) and an asterisk (*
) indicates that all of the files are contained in that directory where the slash is the file-separator character,File.separatorChar
.A path name that ends in a slash (
/
) and a minus sign (-
) indicates that all files and subdirectories are contained in that directory (recursively).A path name that consists of the special token
<<ALL FILES>>
matches any file.A path name that consists of an asterisk (
*
) indicates that all the files are in the current directory.A path name that consists of a minus sign (
-
) indicates that all the files are in the current directory and (recursively) all files and subdirectories are contained in the current directory.ExecOptionPermission
class: Represents permission for thermid
command to use a specific command-line option when starting an activation group. The name ofExecOptionPermission
is the value of a command-line option.ExecOptionPermission
syntax: Options support a limited wild card scheme. An asterisk signifies a wild card match, and it can appear as the option name itself (matches any option), or an asterisk (*) can appear at the end of the option name only when the asterisk (*
) follows a dot (.
) or an equals sign (=
).For example:
*
or-Dmydir.*
or-Da.b.c=*
is valid, but*mydir
or-Da*b
orab*
isn't valid.Policy file for rmid
When you grant the
rmid
command permission to execute various commands and options, the permissionsExecPermission
andExecOptionPermission
must be granted to all code sources (universally). It is safe to grant these permissions universally because only thermid
command checks these permissions.An example policy file that grants various execute permissions to the
rmid
command is:Oracle Solaris:
grant { permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecPermission "/files/apps/java/jdk1.7.0/solaris/bin/java"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecPermission "/files/apps/rmidcmds/*"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Djava.security.policy=/files/policies/group.policy"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Djava.security.debug=*"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Dsun.rmi.*"; };
Windows:
grant { permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecPermission "c:\\files\\apps\\java\\jdk1.7.0\\win\\bin\\java"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecPermission "c:\\files\\apps\\rmidcmds\\*"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Djava.security.policy=c:\\files\\policies\\group.policy"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Djava.security.debug=*"; permission com.sun.rmi.rmid.ExecOptionPermission "-Dsun.rmi.*"; };
The first permission granted allows the
rmid
command to execute the 1.7.0 release of thejava
command, specified by its explicit path name. By default, the version of thejava
command found injava.home
is used (the same one that thermid
command uses), and doesn't need to be specified in the policy file. The second permission allows thermid
command to execute any command in either the directory/files/apps/rmidcmds
(Oracle Solaris, Linux, and macOS) or the directoryc:\files\apps\rmidcmds\
(Windows).The third permission granted,
ExecOptionPermission
, allows thermid
command to start an activation group that defines the security policy file to be either/files/policies/group.policy
(Oracle Solaris) orc:\files\policies\group.policy
(Windows). The next permission allows thejava.security.debug property
to be used by an activation group. The last permission allows any property in thesun.rmi property
name hierarchy to be used by activation groups.To start the
rmid
command with a policy file, thejava.security.policy
property needs to be specified on thermid
command line, for example:rmid -J-Djava.security.policy=rmid.policy
.policyClassName
If the default behavior isn't flexible enough, then an administrator can provide, when starting the
rmid
command, the name of a class whosecheckExecCommand
method is executed to check commands to be executed by thermid
command.The
policyClassName
specifies a public class with a public, no-argument constructor and an implementation of the followingcheckExecCommand
method:public void checkExecCommand(ActivationGroupDesc desc, String[] command) throws SecurityException;
Before starting an activation group, the
rmid
command calls the policy'scheckExecCommand
method and passes to it the activation group descriptor and an array that contains the complete command to start the activation group. If thecheckExecCommand
throws aSecurityException
, then thermid
command doesn't start the activation group and anActivationException
is thrown to the caller attempting to activate the object.none
If the
sun.rmi.activation.execPolicy
property value isnone
, then thermid
command doesn't perform any validation of commands to start activation groups.
-log
dir- Specifies the name of the directory that the activation system daemon uses to write its database and associated information. The log directory defaults to creating a log, in the directory in which the
rmid
command was executed. -port
portSpecifies the port that the registry uses. The activation system daemon binds
ActivationSystem
, with the namejava.rmi.activation.ActivationSystem
, in this registry. TheActivationSystem
on the local machine can be obtained using the followingNaming.lookup
method call:import java.rmi.*; import java.rmi.activation.*; ActivationSystem system; system = (ActivationSystem) Naming.lookup("//:port/java.rmi.activation.ActivationSystem");
-stop
- Stops the current invocation of the
rmid
command for a port specified by the-port
option. If no port is specified, then this option stops thermid
invocation running on port 1098.