|
Java example source code file (JMXServiceURL.java)
This example Java source code file (JMXServiceURL.java) is included in the alvinalexander.com
"Java Source Code
Warehouse" project. The intent of this project is to help you "Learn
Java by Example" TM.
Learn more about this Java project at its project page.
The JMXServiceURL.java Java example source code
/*
* Copyright (c) 2002, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
* by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
* or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
* questions.
*/
package javax.management.remote;
import com.sun.jmx.remote.util.ClassLogger;
import com.sun.jmx.remote.util.EnvHelp;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InvalidObjectException;
import java.io.ObjectInputStream;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.net.InetAddress;
import java.net.MalformedURLException;
import java.net.UnknownHostException;
import java.util.BitSet;
import java.util.StringTokenizer;
/**
* <p>The address of a JMX API connector server. Instances of this class
* are immutable.</p>
*
* <p>The address is an Abstract Service URL for SLP, as
* defined in RFC 2609 and amended by RFC 3111. It must look like
* this:</p>
*
* <blockquote>
*
* <code>service:jmx:protocol:sap
*
* </blockquote>
*
* <p>Here, protocol is the transport
* protocol to be used to connect to the connector server. It is
* a string of one or more ASCII characters, each of which is a
* letter, a digit, or one of the characters <code>+ or
* <code>-. The first character must be a letter.
* Uppercase letters are converted into lowercase ones.</p>
*
* <p>sap is the address at which the connector
* server is found. This address uses a subset of the syntax defined
* by RFC 2609 for IP-based protocols. It is a subset because the
* <code>user@host syntax is not supported.
*
* <p>The other syntaxes defined by RFC 2609 are not currently
* supported by this class.</p>
*
* <p>The supported syntax is:
*
* <blockquote>
*
* <code>//[host[:port]][url-path]
*
* </blockquote>
*
* <p>Square brackets [] indicate optional parts of
* the address. Not all protocols will recognize all optional
* parts.</p>
*
* <p>The host is a host name, an IPv4 numeric
* host address, or an IPv6 numeric address enclosed in square
* brackets.</p>
*
* <p>The port is a decimal port number. 0
* means a default or anonymous port, depending on the protocol.</p>
*
* <p>The host and port
* can be omitted. The <code>port cannot be supplied
* without a <code>host.
*
* <p>The url-path , if any, begins with a slash
* (<code>/) or a semicolon (; ) and continues to
* the end of the address. It can contain attributes using the
* semicolon syntax specified in RFC 2609. Those attributes are not
* parsed by this class and incorrect attribute syntax is not
* detected.</p>
*
* <p>Although it is legal according to RFC 2609 to have a
* <code>url-path that begins with a semicolon, not
* all implementations of SLP allow it, so it is recommended to avoid
* that syntax.</p>
*
* <p>Case is not significant in the initial
* <code>service:jmx:protocol string or in the host
* part of the address. Depending on the protocol, case can be
* significant in the <code>url-path.
*
* @see <a
* href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2609.txt">RFC 2609,
* "Service Templates and <code>Service: Schemes"
* @see <a
* href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3111.txt">RFC 3111,
* "Service Location Protocol Modifications for IPv6"</a>
*
* @since 1.5
*/
public class JMXServiceURL implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 8173364409860779292L;
/**
* <p>Constructs a JMXServiceURL by parsing a Service URL
* string.</p>
*
* @param serviceURL the URL string to be parsed.
*
* @exception NullPointerException if <code>serviceURL is
* null.
*
* @exception MalformedURLException if <code>serviceURL
* does not conform to the syntax for an Abstract Service URL or
* if it is not a valid name for a JMX Remote API service. A
* <code>JMXServiceURL must begin with the string
* <code>"service:jmx:" (case-insensitive). It must not
* contain any characters that are not printable ASCII characters.
*/
public JMXServiceURL(String serviceURL) throws MalformedURLException {
final int serviceURLLength = serviceURL.length();
/* Check that there are no non-ASCII characters in the URL,
following RFC 2609. */
for (int i = 0; i < serviceURLLength; i++) {
char c = serviceURL.charAt(i);
if (c < 32 || c >= 127) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Service URL contains " +
"non-ASCII character 0x" +
Integer.toHexString(c));
}
}
// Parse the required prefix
final String requiredPrefix = "service:jmx:";
final int requiredPrefixLength = requiredPrefix.length();
if (!serviceURL.regionMatches(true, // ignore case
0, // serviceURL offset
requiredPrefix,
0, // requiredPrefix offset
requiredPrefixLength)) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Service URL must start with " +
requiredPrefix);
}
// Parse the protocol name
final int protoStart = requiredPrefixLength;
final int protoEnd = indexOf(serviceURL, ':', protoStart);
this.protocol =
serviceURL.substring(protoStart, protoEnd).toLowerCase();
if (!serviceURL.regionMatches(protoEnd, "://", 0, 3)) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Missing \"://\" after " +
"protocol name");
}
// Parse the host name
final int hostStart = protoEnd + 3;
final int hostEnd;
if (hostStart < serviceURLLength
&& serviceURL.charAt(hostStart) == '[') {
hostEnd = serviceURL.indexOf(']', hostStart) + 1;
if (hostEnd == 0)
throw new MalformedURLException("Bad host name: [ without ]");
this.host = serviceURL.substring(hostStart + 1, hostEnd - 1);
if (!isNumericIPv6Address(this.host)) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Address inside [...] must " +
"be numeric IPv6 address");
}
} else {
hostEnd =
indexOfFirstNotInSet(serviceURL, hostNameBitSet, hostStart);
this.host = serviceURL.substring(hostStart, hostEnd);
}
// Parse the port number
final int portEnd;
if (hostEnd < serviceURLLength && serviceURL.charAt(hostEnd) == ':') {
if (this.host.length() == 0) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Cannot give port number " +
"without host name");
}
final int portStart = hostEnd + 1;
portEnd =
indexOfFirstNotInSet(serviceURL, numericBitSet, portStart);
final String portString = serviceURL.substring(portStart, portEnd);
try {
this.port = Integer.parseInt(portString);
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Bad port number: \"" +
portString + "\": " + e);
}
} else {
portEnd = hostEnd;
this.port = 0;
}
// Parse the URL path
final int urlPathStart = portEnd;
if (urlPathStart < serviceURLLength)
this.urlPath = serviceURL.substring(urlPathStart);
else
this.urlPath = "";
validate();
}
/**
* <p>Constructs a JMXServiceURL with the given protocol,
* host, and port. This constructor is equivalent to
* {@link #JMXServiceURL(String, String, int, String)
* JMXServiceURL(protocol, host, port, null)}.</p>
*
* @param protocol the protocol part of the URL. If null, defaults
* to <code>jmxmp.
*
* @param host the host part of the URL. If null, defaults to the
* local host name, as determined by
* <code>InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName(). If it
* is a numeric IPv6 address, it can optionally be enclosed in
* square brackets <code>[].
*
* @param port the port part of the URL.
*
* @exception MalformedURLException if one of the parts is
* syntactically incorrect, or if <code>host is null and it
* is not possible to find the local host name, or if
* <code>port is negative.
*/
public JMXServiceURL(String protocol, String host, int port)
throws MalformedURLException {
this(protocol, host, port, null);
}
/**
* <p>Constructs a JMXServiceURL with the given parts.
*
* @param protocol the protocol part of the URL. If null, defaults
* to <code>jmxmp.
*
* @param host the host part of the URL. If null, defaults to the
* local host name, as determined by
* <code>InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName(). If it
* is a numeric IPv6 address, it can optionally be enclosed in
* square brackets <code>[].
*
* @param port the port part of the URL.
*
* @param urlPath the URL path part of the URL. If null, defaults to
* the empty string.
*
* @exception MalformedURLException if one of the parts is
* syntactically incorrect, or if <code>host is null and it
* is not possible to find the local host name, or if
* <code>port is negative.
*/
public JMXServiceURL(String protocol, String host, int port,
String urlPath)
throws MalformedURLException {
if (protocol == null)
protocol = "jmxmp";
if (host == null) {
InetAddress local;
try {
local = InetAddress.getLocalHost();
} catch (UnknownHostException e) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Local host name unknown: " +
e);
}
host = local.getHostName();
/* We might have a hostname that violates DNS naming
rules, for example that contains an `_'. While we
could be strict and throw an exception, this is rather
user-hostile. Instead we use its numerical IP address.
We can only reasonably do this for the host==null case.
If we're given an explicit host name that is illegal we
have to reject it. (Bug 5057532.) */
try {
validateHost(host, port);
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
if (logger.fineOn()) {
logger.fine("JMXServiceURL",
"Replacing illegal local host name " +
host + " with numeric IP address " +
"(see RFC 1034)", e);
}
host = local.getHostAddress();
/* Use the numeric address, which could be either IPv4
or IPv6. validateHost will accept either. */
}
}
if (host.startsWith("[")) {
if (!host.endsWith("]")) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Host starts with [ but " +
"does not end with ]");
}
host = host.substring(1, host.length() - 1);
if (!isNumericIPv6Address(host)) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Address inside [...] must " +
"be numeric IPv6 address");
}
if (host.startsWith("["))
throw new MalformedURLException("More than one [[...]]");
}
this.protocol = protocol.toLowerCase();
this.host = host;
this.port = port;
if (urlPath == null)
urlPath = "";
this.urlPath = urlPath;
validate();
}
private static final String INVALID_INSTANCE_MSG =
"Trying to deserialize an invalid instance of JMXServiceURL";
private void readObject(ObjectInputStream inputStream) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException {
ObjectInputStream.GetField gf = inputStream.readFields();
String h = (String)gf.get("host", null);
int p = (int)gf.get("port", -1);
String proto = (String)gf.get("protocol", null);
String url = (String)gf.get("urlPath", null);
if (proto == null || url == null || h == null) {
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(INVALID_INSTANCE_MSG).append('[');
boolean empty = true;
if (proto == null) {
sb.append("protocol=null");
empty = false;
}
if (h == null) {
sb.append(empty ? "" : ",").append("host=null");
empty = false;
}
if (url == null) {
sb.append(empty ? "" : ",").append("urlPath=null");
}
sb.append(']');
throw new InvalidObjectException(sb.toString());
}
if (h.contains("[") || h.contains("]")) {
throw new InvalidObjectException("Invalid host name: " + h);
}
try {
validate(proto, h, p, url);
this.protocol = proto;
this.host = h;
this.port = p;
this.urlPath = url;
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
throw new InvalidObjectException(INVALID_INSTANCE_MSG + ": " +
e.getMessage());
}
}
private void validate(String proto, String h, int p, String url)
throws MalformedURLException {
// Check protocol
final int protoEnd = indexOfFirstNotInSet(proto, protocolBitSet, 0);
if (protoEnd == 0 || protoEnd < proto.length()
|| !alphaBitSet.get(proto.charAt(0))) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Missing or invalid protocol " +
"name: \"" + proto + "\"");
}
// Check host
validateHost(h, p);
// Check port
if (p < 0)
throw new MalformedURLException("Bad port: " + p);
// Check URL path
if (url.length() > 0) {
if (!url.startsWith("/") && !url.startsWith(";"))
throw new MalformedURLException("Bad URL path: " + url);
}
}
private void validate() throws MalformedURLException {
validate(this.protocol, this.host, this.port, this.urlPath);
}
private static void validateHost(String h, int port)
throws MalformedURLException {
if (h.length() == 0) {
if (port != 0) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Cannot give port number " +
"without host name");
}
return;
}
if (isNumericIPv6Address(h)) {
/* We assume J2SE >= 1.4 here. Otherwise you can't
use the address anyway. We can't call
InetAddress.getByName without checking for a
numeric IPv6 address, because we mustn't try to do
a DNS lookup in case the address is not actually
numeric. */
try {
InetAddress.getByName(h);
} catch (Exception e) {
/* We should really catch UnknownHostException
here, but a bug in JDK 1.4 causes it to throw
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException, e.g. if the
string is ":". */
MalformedURLException bad =
new MalformedURLException("Bad IPv6 address: " + h);
EnvHelp.initCause(bad, e);
throw bad;
}
} else {
/* Tiny state machine to check valid host name. This
checks the hostname grammar from RFC 1034 (DNS),
page 11. A hostname is a dot-separated list of one
or more labels, where each label consists of
letters, numbers, or hyphens. A label cannot begin
or end with a hyphen. Empty hostnames are not
allowed. Note that numeric IPv4 addresses are a
special case of this grammar.
The state is entirely captured by the last
character seen, with a virtual `.' preceding the
name. We represent any alphanumeric character by
`a'.
We need a special hack to check, as required by the
RFC 2609 (SLP) grammar, that the last component of
the hostname begins with a letter. Respecting the
intent of the RFC, we only do this if there is more
than one component. If your local hostname begins
with a digit, we don't reject it. */
final int hostLen = h.length();
char lastc = '.';
boolean sawDot = false;
char componentStart = 0;
loop:
for (int i = 0; i < hostLen; i++) {
char c = h.charAt(i);
boolean isAlphaNumeric = alphaNumericBitSet.get(c);
if (lastc == '.')
componentStart = c;
if (isAlphaNumeric)
lastc = 'a';
else if (c == '-') {
if (lastc == '.')
break; // will throw exception
lastc = '-';
} else if (c == '.') {
sawDot = true;
if (lastc != 'a')
break; // will throw exception
lastc = '.';
} else {
lastc = '.'; // will throw exception
break;
}
}
try {
if (lastc != 'a')
throw randomException;
if (sawDot && !alphaBitSet.get(componentStart)) {
/* Must be a numeric IPv4 address. In addition to
the explicitly-thrown exceptions, we can get
NoSuchElementException from the calls to
tok.nextToken and NumberFormatException from
the call to Integer.parseInt. Using exceptions
for control flow this way is a bit evil but it
does simplify things enormously. */
StringTokenizer tok = new StringTokenizer(h, ".", true);
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
String ns = tok.nextToken();
int n = Integer.parseInt(ns);
if (n < 0 || n > 255)
throw randomException;
if (i < 3 && !tok.nextToken().equals("."))
throw randomException;
}
if (tok.hasMoreTokens())
throw randomException;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new MalformedURLException("Bad host: \"" + h + "\"");
}
}
}
private static final Exception randomException = new Exception();
/**
* <p>The protocol part of the Service URL.
*
* @return the protocol part of the Service URL. This is never null.
*/
public String getProtocol() {
return protocol;
}
/**
* <p>The host part of the Service URL. If the Service URL was
* constructed with the constructor that takes a URL string
* parameter, the result is the substring specifying the host in
* that URL. If the Service URL was constructed with a
* constructor that takes a separate host parameter, the result is
* the string that was specified. If that string was null, the
* result is
* <code>InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName().
*
* <p>In either case, if the host was specified using the
* <code>[...] syntax for numeric IPv6 addresses, the
* square brackets are not included in the return value here.</p>
*
* @return the host part of the Service URL. This is never null.
*/
public String getHost() {
return host;
}
/**
* <p>The port of the Service URL. If no port was
* specified, the returned value is 0.</p>
*
* @return the port of the Service URL, or 0 if none.
*/
public int getPort() {
return port;
}
/**
* <p>The URL Path part of the Service URL. This is an empty
* string, or a string beginning with a slash (<code>/), or
* a string beginning with a semicolon (<code>;).
*
* @return the URL Path part of the Service URL. This is never
* null.
*/
public String getURLPath() {
return urlPath;
}
/**
* <p>The string representation of this Service URL. If the value
* returned by this method is supplied to the
* <code>JMXServiceURL constructor, the resultant object is
* equal to this one.</p>
*
* <p>The host part of the returned string
* is the value returned by {@link #getHost()}. If that value
* specifies a numeric IPv6 address, it is surrounded by square
* brackets <code>[].
*
* <p>The port part of the returned string
* is the value returned by {@link #getPort()} in its shortest
* decimal form. If the value is zero, it is omitted.</p>
*
* @return the string representation of this Service URL.
*/
public String toString() {
/* We don't bother synchronizing the access to toString. At worst,
n threads will independently compute and store the same value. */
if (toString != null)
return toString;
StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder("service:jmx:");
buf.append(getProtocol()).append("://");
final String getHost = getHost();
if (isNumericIPv6Address(getHost))
buf.append('[').append(getHost).append(']');
else
buf.append(getHost);
final int getPort = getPort();
if (getPort != 0)
buf.append(':').append(getPort);
buf.append(getURLPath());
toString = buf.toString();
return toString;
}
/**
* <p>Indicates whether some other object is equal to this one.
* This method returns true if and only if <code>obj is an
* instance of <code>JMXServiceURL whose {@link
* #getProtocol()}, {@link #getHost()}, {@link #getPort()}, and
* {@link #getURLPath()} methods return the same values as for
* this object. The values for {@link #getProtocol()} and {@link
* #getHost()} can differ in case without affecting equality.
*
* @param obj the reference object with which to compare.
*
* @return <code>true if this object is the same as the
* <code>obj argument; false otherwise.
*/
public boolean equals(Object obj) {
if (!(obj instanceof JMXServiceURL))
return false;
JMXServiceURL u = (JMXServiceURL) obj;
return
(u.getProtocol().equalsIgnoreCase(getProtocol()) &&
u.getHost().equalsIgnoreCase(getHost()) &&
u.getPort() == getPort() &&
u.getURLPath().equals(getURLPath()));
}
public int hashCode() {
return toString().hashCode();
}
/* True if this string, assumed to be a valid argument to
* InetAddress.getByName, is a numeric IPv6 address.
*/
private static boolean isNumericIPv6Address(String s) {
// address contains colon if and only if it's a numeric IPv6 address
return (s.indexOf(':') >= 0);
}
// like String.indexOf but returns string length not -1 if not present
private static int indexOf(String s, char c, int fromIndex) {
int index = s.indexOf(c, fromIndex);
if (index < 0)
return s.length();
else
return index;
}
private static int indexOfFirstNotInSet(String s, BitSet set,
int fromIndex) {
final int slen = s.length();
int i = fromIndex;
while (true) {
if (i >= slen)
break;
char c = s.charAt(i);
if (c >= 128)
break; // not ASCII
if (!set.get(c))
break;
i++;
}
return i;
}
private final static BitSet alphaBitSet = new BitSet(128);
private final static BitSet numericBitSet = new BitSet(128);
private final static BitSet alphaNumericBitSet = new BitSet(128);
private final static BitSet protocolBitSet = new BitSet(128);
private final static BitSet hostNameBitSet = new BitSet(128);
static {
/* J2SE 1.4 adds lots of handy methods to BitSet that would
allow us to simplify here, e.g. by not writing loops, but
we want to work on J2SE 1.3 too. */
for (char c = '0'; c <= '9'; c++)
numericBitSet.set(c);
for (char c = 'A'; c <= 'Z'; c++)
alphaBitSet.set(c);
for (char c = 'a'; c <= 'z'; c++)
alphaBitSet.set(c);
alphaNumericBitSet.or(alphaBitSet);
alphaNumericBitSet.or(numericBitSet);
protocolBitSet.or(alphaNumericBitSet);
protocolBitSet.set('+');
protocolBitSet.set('-');
hostNameBitSet.or(alphaNumericBitSet);
hostNameBitSet.set('-');
hostNameBitSet.set('.');
}
/**
* The value returned by {@link #getProtocol()}.
*/
private String protocol;
/**
* The value returned by {@link #getHost()}.
*/
private String host;
/**
* The value returned by {@link #getPort()}.
*/
private int port;
/**
* The value returned by {@link #getURLPath()}.
*/
private String urlPath;
/**
* Cached result of {@link #toString()}.
*/
private transient String toString;
private static final ClassLogger logger =
new ClassLogger("javax.management.remote.misc", "JMXServiceURL");
}
Other Java examples (source code examples)
Here is a short list of links related to this Java JMXServiceURL.java source code file:
|