1*cdf0e10cSrcweir#************************************************************************* 2*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 3*cdf0e10cSrcweir# DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. 4*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 5*cdf0e10cSrcweir# Copyright 2000, 2010 Oracle and/or its affiliates. 6*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 7*cdf0e10cSrcweir# OpenOffice.org - a multi-platform office productivity suite 8*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 9*cdf0e10cSrcweir# This file is part of OpenOffice.org. 10*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 11*cdf0e10cSrcweir# OpenOffice.org is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 12*cdf0e10cSrcweir# it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 13*cdf0e10cSrcweir# only, as published by the Free Software Foundation. 14*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 15*cdf0e10cSrcweir# OpenOffice.org is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 16*cdf0e10cSrcweir# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 17*cdf0e10cSrcweir# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 18*cdf0e10cSrcweir# GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 for more details 19*cdf0e10cSrcweir# (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code). 20*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 21*cdf0e10cSrcweir# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 22*cdf0e10cSrcweir# version 3 along with OpenOffice.org. If not, see 23*cdf0e10cSrcweir# <http://www.openoffice.org/license.html> 24*cdf0e10cSrcweir# for a copy of the LGPLv3 License. 25*cdf0e10cSrcweir# 26*cdf0e10cSrcweir#************************************************************************* 27*cdf0e10cSrcweir 28*cdf0e10cSrcweirTest that a Java URP bridge started in a native process uses the same thread 29*cdf0e10cSrcweirpool as a C++ URP bridge. This test currently only works on Linux Intel. 30*cdf0e10cSrcweir 31*cdf0e10cSrcweirThere are two processes involved. The client starts as a native process. It 32*cdf0e10cSrcweirfirst loads a Java component (Relay) via the in-process JNI bridge, which in 33*cdf0e10cSrcweirturn starts to accept incomming URP connections. The native part of the client 34*cdf0e10cSrcweirthen connects to the server, retrieves a thread-local token from it, and checks 35*cdf0e10cSrcweirthe token for correctness. The server simply waits for a connection from the 36*cdf0e10cSrcweirnative part of the client, creates a connection to the Java part of the client, 37*cdf0e10cSrcweirand routes all requests from the native part of the client to the Java part of 38*cdf0e10cSrcweirthe client. The Java part of the client in turn uses the in-process JNI bridge 39*cdf0e10cSrcweirto obtain the thread-local token. 40