I obtain a remote reference from an RMI registry; lets call it s. Now, s is of (interface) type S which offers a method m(A, B, int).
On the client, I have implementations of A and B which both extend UnicastRemoteObject (and are therefore automatically exported). Consider instances a and b, respectively.
Now I call m(a, b, 0). It compiles, but fails at runtime with the very non-informative
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: argument type mismatch
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
at sun.rmi.server.UnicastServerRef.dispatch(UnicastServerRef.java:305)
at sun.rmi.transport.Transport$1.run(Transport.java:159)
at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
at sun.rmi.transport.Transport.serviceCall(Transport.java:155)
at sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPTransport.handleMessages(TCPTransport.java:535)
at sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPTransport$ConnectionHandler.run0(TCPTransport.java:790)
at sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPTransport$ConnectionHandler.run(TCPTransport.java:649)
at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.runTask(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:886)
at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:908)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:662)
at sun.rmi.transport.StreamRemoteCall.exceptionReceivedFromServer(StreamRemoteCall.java:255)
at sun.rmi.transport.StreamRemoteCall.executeCall(StreamRemoteCall.java:233)
at sun.rmi.server.UnicastRef.invoke(UnicastRef.java:142)
at java.rmi.server.RemoteObjectInvocationHandler.invokeRemoteMethod(RemoteObjectInvocationHandler.java:178)
at java.rmi.server.RemoteObjectInvocationHandler.invoke(RemoteObjectInvocationHandler.java:132)
at $Proxy0.m(Unknown Source)
[... application specific sites]
Sadly, NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0 is natively implemented and can not be inspected. So, I am at a total loss. Obviously, types match, otherwise the original code should not compile, right?
What can be reasons for this?
Edit: We use Java 6. The error can be reproduced on Ubuntu 11.04 32bit, Ubuntu 10.10 64bit and Windows 7 32bit.
Edit 2: I implemented some dummy methods on S to test individual parameters. Turns out, s.n(), s.t0(b) and s.t1(0) work as expected; only s.t2(a) fails. This implies that something is wrong with how I implemented A, doesn't it?
The only striking difference between A and B (aside from actual content, of course) is that A is a class extending UnicastRemoteObject and follows the convention of a remote interface but does not implement a distinguished remote interface. B is a remote interface an implementation of which I pass.
Ais the same on both server and client. The one forBis only available client-side, the server only knows interfaceB. – Raphael Sep 19 '11 at 16:45