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Service.javaAPI DocJava SE 6 API11966Tue Jun 10 00:22:04 BST 2008com.sun.jmx.remote.util

Service.java

/*
 * @(#)Service.java	1.7 05/12/30
 * 
 * Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
 * SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
 */
package com.sun.jmx.remote.util;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.NoSuchElementException;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.TreeSet;


import java.security.AccessController;
import java.security.PrivilegedAction;

/**
 * EXTRACTED FROM sun.misc.Service
 * A simple service-provider lookup mechanism.  A <i>service</i> is a
 * well-known set of intjavax.management.remoteerfaces and (usually abstract) classes.  A <i>service
 * provider</i> is a specific implementation of a service.  The classes in a
 * provider typically implement the interfaces and subclass the classes defined
 * in the service itself.  Service providers may be installed in an
 * implementation of the Java platform in the form of extensions, that is, jar
 * files placed into any of the usual extension directories.  Providers may
 * also be made available by adding them to the applet or application class
 * path or by some other platform-specific means.
 *
 * <p> In this lookup mechanism a service is represented by an interface or an
 * abstract class.  (A concrete class may be used, but this is not
 * recommended.)  A provider of a given service contains one or more concrete
 * classes that extend this <i>service class</i> with data and code specific to
 * the provider.  This <i>provider class</i> will typically not be the entire
 * provider itself but rather a proxy that contains enough information to
 * decide whether the provider is able to satisfy a particular request together
 * with code that can create the actual provider on demand.  The details of
 * provider classes tend to be highly service-specific; no single class or
 * interface could possibly unify them, so no such class has been defined.  The
 * only requirement enforced here is that provider classes must have a
 * zero-argument constructor so that they may be instantiated during lookup.
 *
 * <p> A service provider identifies itself by placing a provider-configuration
 * file in the resource directory <tt>META-INF/services</tt>.  The file's name
 * should consist of the fully-qualified name of the abstract service class.
 * The file should contain a list of fully-qualified concrete provider-class
 * names, one per line.  Space and tab characters surrounding each name, as
 * well as blank lines, are ignored.  The comment character is <tt>'#'</tt>
 * (<tt>0x23</tt>); on each line all characters following the first comment
 * character are ignored.  The file must be encoded in UTF-8.
 *
 * <p> If a particular concrete provider class is named in more than one
 * configuration file, or is named in the same configuration file more than
 * once, then the duplicates will be ignored.  The configuration file naming a
 * particular provider need not be in the same jar file or other distribution
 * unit as the provider itself.  The provider must be accessible from the same
 * class loader that was initially queried to locate the configuration file;
 * note that this is not necessarily the class loader that found the file.
 *
 * <p> <b>Example:</b> Suppose we have a service class named
 * <tt>java.io.spi.CharCodec</tt>.  It has two abstract methods:
 *
 * <pre>
 *   public abstract CharEncoder getEncoder(String encodingName);
 *   public abstract CharDecoder getDecoder(String encodingName);
 * </pre>
 *
 * Each method returns an appropriate object or <tt>null</tt> if it cannot
 * translate the given encoding.  Typical <tt>CharCodec</tt> providers will
 * support more than one encoding.
 *
 * <p> If <tt>sun.io.StandardCodec</tt> is a provider of the <tt>CharCodec</tt>
 * service then its jar file would contain the file
 * <tt>META-INF/services/java.io.spi.CharCodec</tt>.  This file would contain
 * the single line:
 *
 * <pre>
 *   sun.io.StandardCodec    # Standard codecs for the platform
 * </pre>
 *
 * To locate an encoder for a given encoding name, the internal I/O code would
 * do something like this:
 *
 * <pre>
 *   CharEncoder getEncoder(String encodingName) {
 *       Iterator ps = Service.providers(CharCodec.class);
 *       while (ps.hasNext()) {
 *           CharCodec cc = (CharCodec)ps.next();
 *           CharEncoder ce = cc.getEncoder(encodingName);
 *           if (ce != null)
 *               return ce;
 *       }
 *       return null;
 *   }
 * </pre>
 *
 * The provider-lookup mechanism always executes in the security context of the
 * caller.  Trusted system code should typically invoke the methods in this
 * class from within a privileged security context.
 *
 */

public final class Service {

    private static final String prefix = "META-INF/services/";

    private Service() { }

    private static void fail(Class service, String msg, Throwable cause)
	throws IllegalArgumentException
    {
	IllegalArgumentException sce
	    = new IllegalArgumentException(service.getName() + ": " + msg);
	
	throw (IllegalArgumentException) EnvHelp.initCause(sce, cause);
    }

    private static void fail(Class service, String msg)
	throws IllegalArgumentException
    {
	throw new IllegalArgumentException(service.getName() + ": " + msg);
    }

    private static void fail(Class service, URL u, int line, String msg)
	throws IllegalArgumentException
    {
	fail(service, u + ":" + line + ": " + msg);
    }

    /**
     * Parse a single line from the given configuration file, adding the name
     * on the line to both the names list and the returned set if and only if the name is
     * not already a member of the returned set.
     */
    private static int parseLine(Class service, URL u, BufferedReader r, int lc,
				 List names, Set returned)
	throws IOException, IllegalArgumentException
    {
	String ln = r.readLine();
	if (ln == null) {
	    return -1;
	}
	int ci = ln.indexOf('#');
	if (ci >= 0) ln = ln.substring(0, ci);
	ln = ln.trim();
	int n = ln.length();
	if (n != 0) {
	    if ((ln.indexOf(' ') >= 0) || (ln.indexOf('\t') >= 0))
		fail(service, u, lc, "Illegal configuration-file syntax");
	    if (!Character.isJavaIdentifierStart(ln.charAt(0)))
		fail(service, u, lc, "Illegal provider-class name: " + ln);
	    for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
		char c = ln.charAt(i);
		if (!Character.isJavaIdentifierPart(c) && (c != '.'))
		    fail(service, u, lc, "Illegal provider-class name: " + ln);
	    }
	    if (!returned.contains(ln)) {
		names.add(ln);
		returned.add(ln);
	    }
	}
	return lc + 1;
    }

    /**
     * Parse the content of the given URL as a provider-configuration file.
     *
     * @param  service
     *         The service class for which providers are being sought;
     *         used to construct error detail strings
     *
     * @param  url
     *         The URL naming the configuration file to be parsed
     *
     * @param  returned
     *         A Set containing the names of provider classes that have already
     *         been returned.  This set will be updated to contain the names
     *         that will be yielded from the returned <tt>Iterator</tt>.
     *
     * @return A (possibly empty) <tt>Iterator</tt> that will yield the
     *         provider-class names in the given configuration file that are
     *         not yet members of the returned set
     *
     * @throws IllegalArgumentException
     *         If an I/O error occurs while reading from the given URL, or
     *         if a configuration-file format error is detected
     */
    private static Iterator parse(Class service, URL u, Set returned)
	throws IllegalArgumentException
    {
	InputStream in = null;
	BufferedReader r = null;
	ArrayList names = new ArrayList();
	try {
	    in = u.openStream();
	    r = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(in, "utf-8"));
	    int lc = 1;
	    while ((lc = parseLine(service, u, r, lc, names, returned)) >= 0);
	} catch (IOException x) {
	    fail(service, ": " + x);
	} finally {
	    try {
		if (r != null) r.close();
		if (in != null) in.close();
	    } catch (IOException y) {
		fail(service, ": " + y);
	    }
	}
	return names.iterator();
    }


    /**
     * Private inner class implementing fully-lazy provider lookup
     */
    private static class LazyIterator implements Iterator {

	Class service;
	ClassLoader loader;
	Enumeration configs = null;
	Iterator pending = null;
	Set returned = new TreeSet();
	String nextName = null;

	private LazyIterator(Class service, ClassLoader loader) {
	    this.service = service;
	    this.loader = loader;
	}

	public boolean hasNext() throws IllegalArgumentException {
	    if (nextName != null) {
		return true;
	    }
	    if (configs == null) {
		try {
		    String fullName = prefix + service.getName();
		    if (loader == null)
			configs = ClassLoader.getSystemResources(fullName);
		    else
			configs = loader.getResources(fullName);
		} catch (IOException x) {
		    fail(service, ": " + x);
		}
	    }
	    while ((pending == null) || !pending.hasNext()) {
		if (!configs.hasMoreElements()) {
		    return false;
		}
		pending = parse(service, (URL)configs.nextElement(), returned);
	    }
	    nextName = (String)pending.next();
	    return true;
	}

	public Object next() throws IllegalArgumentException {
	    if (!hasNext()) {
		throw new NoSuchElementException();
	    }
	    String cn = nextName;
	    nextName = null;
	    try {
		return Class.forName(cn, true, loader).newInstance();
	    } catch (ClassNotFoundException x) {
		fail(service,
		     "Provider " + cn + " not found");
	    } catch (Exception x) {
		fail(service,
		     "Provider " + cn + " could not be instantiated: " + x,
		     x);
	    }
	    return null;	/* This cannot happen */
	}

	public void remove() {
	    throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
	}

    }


    /**
     * Locates and incrementally instantiates the available providers of a
     * given service using the given class loader.
     *
     * <p> This method transforms the name of the given service class into a
     * provider-configuration filename as described above and then uses the
     * <tt>getResources</tt> method of the given class loader to find all
     * available files with that name.  These files are then read and parsed to
     * produce a list of provider-class names.  The iterator that is returned
     * uses the given class loader to lookup and then instantiate each element
     * of the list.
     *
     * <p> Because it is possible for extensions to be installed into a running
     * Java virtual machine, this method may return different results each time
     * it is invoked. <p>
     *
     * @param  service
     *         The service's abstract service class
     *
     * @param  loader
     *         The class loader to be used to load provider-configuration files
     *         and instantiate provider classes, or <tt>null</tt> if the system
     *         class loader (or, failing that the bootstrap class loader) is to
     *         be used
     * 
     * @return An <tt>Iterator</tt> that yields provider objects for the given
     *         service, in some arbitrary order.  The iterator will throw a
     *         <tt>IllegalArgumentException</tt> if a provider-configuration
     *         file violates the specified format or if a provider class cannot
     *         be found and instantiated.
     *
     * @throws IllegalArgumentException
     *         If a provider-configuration file violates the specified format
     *         or names a provider class that cannot be found and instantiated
     *
     */
    public static Iterator providers(Class service, ClassLoader loader)
	throws IllegalArgumentException
    {
	return new LazyIterator(service, loader);
    }
}