4.3.4. The HTTP InitialContext Factory Implementation

4.3.4. The HTTP InitialContext Factory Implementation

The JNDI naming service can be accessed over HTTP. From a JNDI client's perspective this is a transparent change as they continue to use the JNDI Context interface. Operations through the Context interface are translated into HTTP posts to a servlet that passes the request to the NamingService using its JMX invoke operation. Advantages of using HTTP as the access protocol include better access through firewalls and proxies setup to allow HTTP, as well as the ability to secure access to the JNDI service using standard servlet role based security.

To access JNDI over HTTP you use the org.jboss.naming.HttpNamingContextFactory as the factory implementation. The complete set of support InitialContext environment properties for this factory are:

The JNDI Context implementation returned by the HttpNamingContextFactory is a proxy that delegates invocations made on it to a bridge servlet which forwards the invocation to the NamingService through the JMX bus and marshalls the reply back over HTTP. The proxy needs to know what the URL of the bridge servlet is in order to operate. This value may have been bound on the server side if the JBoss web server has a well known public interface. If the JBoss web server is sitting behind one or more firewalls or proxies, the proxy cannot know what URL is required. In this case, the proxy will be associated with a system property value that must be set in the client VM. For more information on the operation of JNDI over HTTP see Section 4.4.1, “Accessing JNDI over HTTP”.