Recent Posts
Archives

PostHeaderIcon Basic RPC call with GWT

Let’s assume you have a “Hello World” GWT application. You need emulate a basic RPC call (RMI, EJB, etc.). Here is the program:

Under the *.gwt.client folder:

Create an service interface:

[java]@RemoteServiceRelativePath("fooService")
public interface FooService extends RemoteService {
public String getHelloFoo(String totoName);
}[/java]

Create another interface for asynchronous call. You can notice the method name differs lightly from the one in the other interface:

[java]public interface FooServiceAsync {
void getHelloFoo(String fooName, AsyncCallback<String> callback);
}[/java]

Under the *.gwt.server folder, create an implementation for service interface:

[java]public class FooServiceImpl extends RemoteServiceServlet implements FooService {
public FooServiceImpl() {
// TODO init
}

public String getHelloFoo(String fooName) {
// TODO call actual service
return "hello world!";
}
}[/java]

In the web.xml file, add the following blocks:

[xml] <!– Servlets –>
<servlet>
<servlet-name>fooService</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>com…….server.FooServiceImpl</servlet-class>
</servlet>

<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>fooService</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/ivargwt/fooService</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
[/xml]

The tags content match the argument given as parameter to RemoteServiceRelativePath annotation above.

From then, in your concrete code, you can instantiate the service and call remote method:

[java]FooServiceAsync fooService = GWT.create(FooService.class);
fooService.getHelloFoo("how are you?", new AsyncCallback<String>() {

public void onSuccess(String result) {
MessageBox.alert("OK", result, null);
}

public void onFailure(Throwable caught) {
MessageBox.alert("ERROR", "rpc call error-" + caught.getLocalizedMessage(), null);
}
});
[/java]

Now you can compile, package your war and deploy under Tomcat or WebLogic.

NB: special to “black-belt GWT guy” David Chau from SFEIR.

Leave a Reply