GigaSpaces XAP 8.0 API

Package net.jini.config

Provides a Configuration interface for obtaining objects needed to configure applications, such as Exporter or ProxyPreparer instances, or other application-specific objects, from configuration files, databases, or other sources.

See:
          Description

Interface Summary
Configuration Defines an interface for obtaining objects needed to configure applications, such as Exporter or ProxyPreparer instances, or other application-specific objects, from configuration files, databases, or other sources.
ConfigurationEntryFactory  
 

Class Summary
AbstractConfiguration A skeletal implementation of the Configuration interface, used to simplify writing implementations.
AbstractConfiguration.Primitive Represents the value of an entry with a primitive type.
AggregateConfig  
ConfigurationFile Supplies objects needed to configure applications, such as Exporter or ProxyPreparer instances, or application-specific objects, constructed from data in a configuration source and override options, as well as data supplied in the call to getEntry.
ConfigurationFile.ErrorDescriptor Class used to represent a syntax error encountered when parsing a configuration source or a problem encountered when attempting to return an existing entry or the type of an existing entry.
ConfigurationProvider Provides a standard means for obtaining Configuration instances, using a configurable provider.
EmptyConfiguration A Configuration with no entries.
PlainConfiguration  
 

Exception Summary
ConfigurationException Thrown if a problem occurs when obtaining configuration information.
ConfigurationNotFoundException Thrown if a configuration source location specified when creating a Configuration is not found, including if null is specified for provider options and the implementation does not provide default options.
NoSuchEntryException Thrown when an attempt to obtain an object from a Configuration does not find a matching entry.
 

Package net.jini.config Description

Provides a Configuration interface for obtaining objects needed to configure applications, such as Exporter or ProxyPreparer instances, or other application-specific objects, from configuration files, databases, or other sources. Application developers are encouraged to use this interface, rather than explicitly constructing instances of exporters and proxy preparers, so that applications can be customized without requiring code modifications. Applications should normally use ConfigurationProvider to obtain Configuration instances, so that the interpretation of configuration options can be customized without requiring code modifications.

The ConfigurationException class is the superclass of all exceptions thrown if a problem occurs when obtaining configuration information. NoSuchEntryException is the subclass thrown for a missing configuration entry. ConfigurationNotFoundException is the subclass thrown for missing configuration source locations and if default options are requested but not available.

The ConfigurationFile class is the standard default configuration provider, which reads text written in a subset of the expression syntax in the Java(TM) programming language from files and URLs to produce configuration objects.

The AbstractConfiguration class is a skeletal implementation of the Configuration interface, used to simplify writing implementations.

The EmptyConfiguration class implements a Configuration with no entries. Applications can use an instance of this class to simplify handling cases where no configuration is specified rather than, for example, checking for a null configuration.

Using Configuration

Once an application gets a Configuration using ConfigurationProvider or through an application-specific mechanism, the application should pass that configuration to other subsystems that need configuration information, in addition to using it for its own needs. This arrangement provides the user with a uniform way to supply configuration information to all the components that make up an application.

The names that applications and subsystems use for configuration entries should be chosen carefully to avoid conflicts. One possible approach is to use fully qualified class names as the component for configurable applications and utilities, and to use fully qualified package names as the component for services. For each entry, the decision should be made whether to supply a default or to throw NoSuchEntryException if there is no matching entry. Components should document which configuration entries they use, as well as the expected type and default, if any, for each entry.

Example

Here is a sketch of how to use these facilities for an application with configurable exporting. The class below shows exporting an object using a Configuration:

    import java.rmi.*;
    import net.jini.config.*;
    import net.jini.export.*;
    public class Example implements Remote {
        public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
            Configuration config = ConfigurationProvider.getInstance(args);
            Exporter exporter = (Exporter) config.getEntry(
                "Example", "exporter", Exporter.class);
            Remote proxy = exporter.export(new Example());
            System.out.println(proxy);
            exporter.unexport(true);
        }
    }

Here are the contents of a ConfigurationFile source file to export the object using an JRMP exporter:

    import net.jini.jrmp.*;
    Example {
        exporter = new JrmpExporter();
    }

Here are the contents of another ConfigurationFile to export the object using a Jini(TM) extensible remote invocation (Jini ERI) exporter over HTTP on a specific port:

    import net.jini.jeri.*;
    import net.jini.jeri.http.*;
    Example {
        exporter = new BasicJeriExporter(HttpServerEndpoint.getInstance(12000));
    }

This application can be configured to export the object in either of these ways (or more with other configuration files) by passing an argument that specifies the location of one of the configuration files:

    java Example jrmp.config

    java Example jeri.config

Since:
2.0
Version:
2.0

GigaSpaces XAP 8.0 API

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