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Chapter 9  Interceptors

omniORB supports interceptors that allow the application to insert processing in various points along the call chain, and in various other locations. It does not (yet) support the standard Portable Interceptors API.

The interceptor interfaces are defined in a single header, include/omniORB4/omniInterceptors.h. Each interception point consists of a singleton object with add() and remove() methods, and the definition of an ‘interceptor info’ class. For example:

class omniInterceptors { ... class clientSendRequest_T { public: class info_T { public: GIOP_C& giop_c; IOP::ServiceContextList service_contexts; info_T(GIOP_C& c) : giop_c(c), service_contexts(5) {} private: info_T(); info_T(const info_T&); info_T& operator=(const info_T&); }; typedef CORBA::Boolean (*interceptFunc)(info_T& info); void add(interceptFunc); void remove(interceptFunc); }; ... };

You can see that the interceptors themselves are functions that take the info_T object as their argument and return boolean. Interceptors are called in the order they are registered; normally, all interceptor functions return true, meaning that processing should continue with subsequent interceptors. If an interceptor returns false, later interceptors are not called. You should only do that if you really know what you are doing.

Notice that the info_T contains references to omniORB internal data types. The definitions of these types can be found in other header files within include/omniORB4 and include/omniORB4/internal.

9.1  Interceptor registration

All the interceptor singletons are registered within another singleton object of class omniInterceptors. You retrieve a pointer to the object with the omniORB::getInterceptors() function, which must be called after the ORB has been initialised with CORBA::ORB_init(), but before the ORB is used. The code to register an interceptor looks, for example, like:

omniInterceptors* interceptors = omniORB::getInterceptors(); interceptors->clientSendRequest.add(myInterceptorFunc);

9.2  Available interceptors

The following interceptors are available:

encodeIOR

Called when encoding an IOR to represent an object reference. This interception point allows the application to insert extra profile components into IORs. Note that you must understand and adhere to the rules about data stored in IORs, otherwise the IORs created may be invalid. omniORB itself uses this interceptor to insert various items, so you can see an example of its use in the insertSupportedComponents() function defined in src/lib/omniORB/orbcore/ior.cc.
decodeIOR

Called when decoding an IOR. The application can use this to get out whatever information they put into IORs with encodeIOR. Again, see extractSupportedComponents() in src/lib/omniORB/orbcore/ior.cc for an example.
clientOpenConnection

Called as a client opens a new connection to a server, after the connection is opened but before it is used to send a request. The interceptor function can set the info_T’s reject member to true to cause the client to immediately close the new connection and throw CORBA::TRANSIENT to the calling code. In that case, the interceptor function can also set the why member to provide a message that is logged.
clientSendRequest

Called just before a request header is sent over the network. The application can use it to insert service contexts in the header. See the setCodeSetServiceContext() function in src/lib/omniORB/orbcore/cdrStream.cc for an example of its use.
clientReceiveReply

Called as the client receives a reply, just after unmarshalling the reply header. Called for normal replies and exceptions.
serverAcceptConnection

Called when a server accepts a new incoming connection, but before it reads any data from it. The interceptor function can set the info_T’s reject member to true to cause the server to immediately close the new connection. In that case, the interceptor function can also set the why member to provide a message that is logged.
serverReceiveRequest

Called when the server receives a request, just after unmarshalling the request header. See the getCodeSetServiceContext() function in src/lib/omniORB/orbcore/cdrStream.cc for an example.
serverSendReply

Called just before the server marshals a reply header.
serverSendException

Called just before the server marshals an exception reply header.
createRope

Called when the ORB is about to create a ‘rope’ that encapsulates a bundle of connections (‘strands’) to a remote address space. It allows application code to override omniORB’s normal connection management.
createIdentity

Called when the ORB is about to create an ‘identity’ object to represent a CORBA object. It allows application code to provide its own identity implementations. It is very unlikely that an application will need to do this.
createORBServer

Used internally by the ORB to register different kinds of server. At present, only a GIOP server is registered. It is very unlikely that application code will need to do this.
createThread

Called whenever the ORB creates a thread. The info_T class for this interceptor is
class info_T { public: virtual void run() = 0; virtual omni_thread* self() = 0; };

The interceptor is called in the context of the newly created thread. The function must call the info_T’s run() method, to pass control to the thread body. run() returns just before the thread exits. This arrangement allows the interceptor to initialise some per-thread state before the thread body runs, then release it just before the thread exits.

The info_T’s self() method returns a pointer to the omni_thread object for the thread, equivalent to calling omni_thread::self().

assignUpcallThread

The ORB maintains a general thread pool, from which threads are drawn for various purposes. One purpose is for performing upcalls to application code, in response to incoming CORBA calls. The assignUpcallThread interceptor is called when a thread is assigned to perform upcalls. In the thread per connection model, the thread stays assigned to performing upcalls for the entire lifetime of the underlying network connection; in the thread pool model, threads are assigned for upcalls on a per call basis, so this interceptor is triggered for every incoming call1. As with the createThread interceptor, the interceptor function must call the info_T’s run() method to pass control to the upcall.

When a thread finishes its assignment of processing upcalls, it returns to the pool (even in thread per connection mode), so the same thread can be reassigned to perform more upcalls, or reused for a different purpose.

assignAMIThread

Asynchronous Method Invocation (AMI) uses threads to perform outgoing calls. The assignAMIThread interceptor is called when a thread is assigned to perform AMI calls. As with the other thread interceptors, the interceptor function must call the info_T’s run() method to pass control to the AMI call.

Unlike the other interceptors, the interceptor functions for createThread, assignUpcallThread and assignAMIThread have no return values. Interceptor chaining is performed by calls through the info_T::run() method, rather than by visiting interceptor functions in turn.

9.3  Server-side call interceptor

Calls can be intercepted on the server just before the upcall into application code. This interceptor is registered with omniORB’s callDescriptor class, which is responsible for encapsulating the state of a call. Unlike the transport-related serverReceiveRequest, serverSendReply and serverSendException interceptors, the callDescriptor interceptor is invoked for all calls, even ones from colocated clients in the same address space.

The types used for the call interceptor are defined in include/omniORB4/callDescriptor.h. The interceptor takes the form of a bare function with two parameters. The first parameter is a pointer to the callDescriptor; the second is a pointer to omniServant, which is the base class of all servant classes. The interceptor function must call the callDescriptor’s interceptedCall() method to pass on the call.

This interception point allows access to various parts of omniORB’s call machinery. The callDescriptor includes access to the operation name and, if cast to the concrete subclass defined by the IDL compiler, the call arguments and return values too.


1
Except that with the threadPoolWatchConnection parameter set true, a thread can perform multiple upcalls even when thread pool mode is active.

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