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JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.4.2 |
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java.lang.Object javax.naming.spi.NamingManager
This class contains methods for creating context objects and objects referred to by location information in the naming or directory service.
This class cannot be instantiated. It has only static methods.
The mention of URL in the documentation for this class refers to a URL string as defined by RFC 1738 and its related RFCs. It is any string that conforms to the syntax described therein, and may not always have corresponding support in the java.net.URL class or Web browsers.
NamingManager is safe for concurrent access by multiple threads.
Except as otherwise noted, a Name or environment parameter passed to any method is owned by the caller. The implementation will not modify the object or keep a reference to it, although it may keep a reference to a clone or copy.
Field Summary | |
static String |
CPE
Constant that holds the name of the environment property into which getContinuationContext() stores the value of its CannotProceedException parameter. |
Method Summary | |
static Context |
getContinuationContext(CannotProceedException cpe)
Creates a context in which to continue a context operation. |
static Context |
getInitialContext(Hashtable env)
Creates an initial context using the specified environment properties. |
static Object |
getObjectInstance(Object refInfo,
Name name,
Context nameCtx,
Hashtable environment)
Creates an instance of an object for the specified object and environment. |
static Object |
getStateToBind(Object obj,
Name name,
Context nameCtx,
Hashtable environment)
Retrieves the state of an object for binding. |
static Context |
getURLContext(String scheme,
Hashtable environment)
Creates a context for the given URL scheme id. |
static boolean |
hasInitialContextFactoryBuilder()
Determines whether an initial context factory builder has been set. |
static void |
setInitialContextFactoryBuilder(InitialContextFactoryBuilder builder)
Sets the InitialContextFactory builder to be builder. |
static void |
setObjectFactoryBuilder(ObjectFactoryBuilder builder)
The ObjectFactoryBuilder determines the policy used when trying to load object factories. |
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object |
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait |
Field Detail |
public static final String CPE
The value of this constant is "java.naming.spi.CannotProceedException".
getContinuationContext(javax.naming.CannotProceedException)
,
Constant Field ValuesMethod Detail |
public static void setObjectFactoryBuilder(ObjectFactoryBuilder builder) throws NamingException
The builder can only be installed if the executing thread is allowed (by the security manager's checkSetFactory() method) to do so. Once installed, the builder cannot be replaced.
builder
- The factory builder to install. If null, no builder
is installed.
SecurityException
- builder cannot be installed
for security reasons.
NamingException
- builder cannot be installed for
a non-security-related reason.
IllegalStateException
- If a factory has already been installed.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable)
,
ObjectFactory
,
ObjectFactoryBuilder
,
SecurityManager.checkSetFactory()
public static Object getObjectInstance(Object refInfo, Name name, Context nameCtx, Hashtable environment) throws Exception
If an object factory builder has been installed, it is used to create a factory for creating the object. Otherwise, the following rules are used to create the object:
refInfo
is a Reference
or Referenceable
containing a factory class name,
use the named factory to create the object.
Return refInfo
if the factory cannot be created.
Under JDK 1.1, if the factory class must be loaded from a location
specified in the reference, a SecurityManager must have
been installed or the factory creation will fail.
If an exception is encountered while creating the factory,
it is passed up to the caller.
refInfo
.
If an exception is encountered while creating the object, the
exception is passed up to the caller.
Service providers that implement the DirContext interface should use DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance(), not this method. Service providers that implement only the Context interface should use this method.
Note that an object factory (an object that implements the ObjectFactory interface) must be public and must have a public constructor that accepts no arguments.
The name
and nameCtx
parameters may
optionally be used to specify the name of the object being created.
name
is the name of the object, relative to context
nameCtx
. This information could be useful to the object
factory or to the object implementation.
If there are several possible contexts from which the object
could be named -- as will often be the case -- it is up to
the caller to select one. A good rule of thumb is to select the
"deepest" context available.
If nameCtx
is null, name
is relative
to the default initial context. If no name is being specified, the
name
parameter should be null.
refInfo
- The possibly null object for which to create an object.name
- The name of this object relative to nameCtx
.
Specifying a name is optional; if it is
omitted, name
should be null.nameCtx
- The context relative to which the name
parameter is specified. If null, name
is
relative to the default initial context.environment
- The possibly null environment to
be used in the creation of the object factory and the object.
refInfo
; or
refInfo
if an object cannot be created using
the algorithm described above.
NamingException
- if a naming exception was encountered
while attempting to get a URL context, or if one of the
factories accessed throws a NamingException.
Exception
- if one of the factories accessed throws an
exception, or if an error was encountered while loading
and instantiating the factory and object classes.
A factory should only throw an exception if it does not want
other factories to be used in an attempt to create an object.
See ObjectFactory.getObjectInstance().getURLContext(java.lang.String, java.util.Hashtable)
,
ObjectFactory
,
ObjectFactory.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable)
public static Context getURLContext(String scheme, Hashtable environment) throws NamingException
The resulting context is for resolving URLs of the
scheme scheme
. The resulting context is not tied
to a specific URL. It is able to handle arbitrary URLs with
the specified scheme.
The class name of the factory that creates the resulting context has the naming convention scheme-idURLContextFactory (e.g. "ftpURLContextFactory" for the "ftp" scheme-id), in the package specified as follows. The Context.URL_PKG_PREFIXES environment property (which may contain values taken from applet parameters, system properties, or application resource files) contains a colon-separated list of package prefixes. Each package prefix in the property is tried in the order specified to load the factory class. The default package prefix is "com.sun.jndi.url" (if none of the specified packages work, this default is tried). The complete package name is constructed using the package prefix, concatenated with the scheme id.
For example, if the scheme id is "ldap", and the Context.URL_PKG_PREFIXES property contains "com.widget:com.wiz.jndi", the naming manager would attempt to load the following classes until one is successfully instantiated:
If a factory is instantiated, it is invoked with the following parameters to produce the resulting context.
factory.getObjectInstance(null, environment);
For example, invoking getObjectInstance() as shown above on a LDAP URL context factory would return a context that can resolve LDAP urls (e.g. "ldap://ldap.wiz.com/o=wiz,c=us", "ldap://ldap.umich.edu/o=umich,c=us", ...).
Note that an object factory (an object that implements the ObjectFactory interface) must be public and must have a public constructor that accepts no arguments.
scheme
- The non-null scheme-id of the URLs supported by the context.environment
- The possibly null environment properties to be
used in the creation of the object factory and the context.
scheme
;
null
if the factory for creating the
context is not found.
NamingException
- If a naming exception occurs while creating
the context.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable)
,
ObjectFactory.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable)
public static Context getInitialContext(Hashtable env) throws NamingException
If an InitialContextFactoryBuilder has been installed, it is used to create the factory for creating the initial context. Otherwise, the class specified in the Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY environment property is used. Note that an initial context factory (an object that implements the InitialContextFactory interface) must be public and must have a public constructor that accepts no arguments.
env
- The possibly null environment properties used when
creating the context.
NoInitialContextException
- If the
Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY property
is not found or names a nonexistent
class or a class that cannot be instantiated,
or if the initial context could not be created for some other
reason.
NamingException
- If some other naming exception was encountered.InitialContext
,
InitialDirContext
public static void setInitialContextFactoryBuilder(InitialContextFactoryBuilder builder) throws NamingException
The builder can only be installed if the executing thread is allowed by the security manager to do so. Once installed, the builder cannot be replaced.
builder
- The initial context factory builder to install. If null,
no builder is set.
SecurityException
- builder cannot be installed for security
reasons.
NamingException
- builder cannot be installed for
a non-security-related reason.
IllegalStateException
- If a builder was previous installed.hasInitialContextFactoryBuilder()
,
SecurityManager.checkSetFactory()
public static boolean hasInitialContextFactoryBuilder()
setInitialContextFactoryBuilder(javax.naming.spi.InitialContextFactoryBuilder)
public static Context getContinuationContext(CannotProceedException cpe) throws NamingException
In performing an operation on a name that spans multiple
namespaces, a context from one naming system may need to pass
the operation on to the next naming system. The context
implementation does this by first constructing a
CannotProceedException
containing information
pinpointing how far it has proceeded. It then obtains a
continuation context from JNDI by calling
getContinuationContext
. The context
implementation should then resume the context operation by
invoking the same operation on the continuation context, using
the remainder of the name that has not yet been resolved.
Before making use of the cpe parameter, this method updates the environment associated with that object by setting the value of the property CPE to cpe. This property will be inherited by the continuation context, and may be used by that context's service provider to inspect the fields of this exception.
cpe
- The non-null exception that triggered this continuation.
NamingException
- If a naming exception occurred.public static Object getStateToBind(Object obj, Name name, Context nameCtx, Hashtable environment) throws NamingException
Service providers that implement the DirContext interface should use DirectoryManager.getStateToBind(), not this method. Service providers that implement only the Context interface should use this method.
This method uses the specified state factories in the Context.STATE_FACTORIES property from the environment properties, and from the provider resource file associated with nameCtx, in that order. The value of this property is a colon-separated list of factory class names that are tried in order, and the first one that succeeds in returning the object's state is the one used. If no object's state can be retrieved in this way, return the object itself. If an exception is encountered while retrieving the state, the exception is passed up to the caller.
Note that a state factory (an object that implements the StateFactory interface) must be public and must have a public constructor that accepts no arguments.
The name
and nameCtx
parameters may
optionally be used to specify the name of the object being created.
See the description of "Name and Context Parameters" in
ObjectFactory.getObjectInstance()
for details.
This method may return a Referenceable object. The service provider obtaining this object may choose to store it directly, or to extract its reference (using Referenceable.getReference()) and store that instead.
obj
- The non-null object for which to get state to bind.name
- The name of this object relative to nameCtx
,
or null if no name is specified.nameCtx
- The context relative to which the name
parameter is specified, or null if name
is
relative to the default initial context.environment
- The possibly null environment to
be used in the creation of the state factory and
the object's state.
NamingException
- If one of the factories accessed throws an
exception, or if an error was encountered while loading
and instantiating the factory and object classes.
A factory should only throw an exception if it does not want
other factories to be used in an attempt to create an object.
See StateFactory.getStateToBind().StateFactory
,
StateFactory.getStateToBind(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable)
,
DirectoryManager.getStateToBind(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable, javax.naming.directory.Attributes)
|
JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.4.2 |
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