public interface Activator extends Remote
Activator facilitates remote object activation. A
 "faulting" remote reference calls the activator's
 activate method to obtain a "live" reference to a
 "activatable" remote object. Upon receiving a request for activation,
 the activator looks up the activation descriptor for the activation
 identifier, id, determines the group in which the
 object should be activated initiates object re-creation via the
 group's ActivationInstantiator (via a call to the
 newInstance method). The activator initiates the
 execution of activation groups as necessary. For example, if an
 activation group for a specific group identifier is not already
 executing, the activator initiates the execution of a VM for the
 group. 
 The Activator works closely with
 ActivationSystem, which provides a means for registering
 groups and objects within those groups, and ActivationMonitor,
 which recives information about active and inactive objects and inactive
 groups. 
The activator is responsible for monitoring and detecting when activation groups fail so that it can remove stale remote references to groups and active object's within those groups.
ActivationInstantiator, 
ActivationGroupDesc, 
ActivationGroupID| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| MarshalledObject<? extends Remote> | activate(ActivationID id,
        boolean force)Activate the object associated with the activation identifier,
  id. | 
MarshalledObject<? extends Remote> activate(ActivationID id, boolean force) throws ActivationException, UnknownObjectException, RemoteException
id. If the activator knows the object to be active
 already, and force is false , the stub with a
 "live" reference is returned immediately to the caller;
 otherwise, if the activator does not know that corresponding
 the remote object is active, the activator uses the activation
 descriptor information (previously registered) to determine the
 group (VM) in which the object should be activated. If an
 ActivationInstantiator corresponding to the
 object's group descriptor already exists, the activator invokes
 the activation group's newInstance method passing
 it the object's id and descriptor. 
 If the activation group for the object's group descriptor does
 not yet exist, the activator starts an
 ActivationInstantiator executing (by spawning a
 child process, for example). When the activator receives the
 activation group's call back (via the
 ActivationSystem's activeGroup
 method) specifying the activation group's reference, the
 activator can then invoke that activation instantiator's
 newInstance method to forward each pending
 activation request to the activation group and return the
 result (a marshalled remote object reference, a stub) to the
 caller.
Note that the activator receives a "marshalled" object instead of a Remote object so that the activator does not need to load the code for that object, or participate in distributed garbage collection for that object. If the activator kept a strong reference to the remote object, the activator would then prevent the object from being garbage collected under the normal distributed garbage collection mechanism.
id - the activation identifier for the object being activatedforce - if true, the activator contacts the group to obtain
 the remote object's reference; if false, returning the cached value
 is allowed.ActivationException - if object activation failsUnknownObjectException - if object is unknown (not registered)RemoteException - if remote call fails Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
 Copyright © 1993, 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates.  All rights reserved.