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Java example source code file (NamingException.java)

This example Java source code file (NamingException.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.

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Java - Java tags/keywords

compositename, name, namingexception, object, root, string, throwable

The NamingException.java Java example source code

/*
 * Copyright (c) 1999, 2003, 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.naming;

/**
  * This is the superclass of all exceptions thrown by
  * operations in the Context and DirContext interfaces.
  * The nature of the failure is described by the name of the subclass.
  * This exception captures the information pinpointing where the operation
  * failed, such as where resolution last proceeded to.
  * <ul>
  * <li> Resolved Name. Portion of name that has been resolved.
  * <li> Resolved Object. Object to which resolution of name proceeded.
  * <li> Remaining Name. Portion of name that has not been resolved.
  * <li> Explanation. Detail explaining why name resolution failed.
  * <li> Root Exception. The exception that caused this naming exception
  *                     to be thrown.
  *</ul>
  * null is an acceptable value for any of these fields. When null,
  * it means that no such information has been recorded for that field.
  *<p>
  * A NamingException instance is not synchronized against concurrent
  * multithreaded access. Multiple threads trying to access and modify
  * a single NamingException instance should lock the object.
  *<p>
  * This exception has been retrofitted to conform to
  * the general purpose exception-chaining mechanism.  The
  * <i>root exception (or root cause) is the same object as the
  * <i>cause returned by the {@link Throwable#getCause()} method.
  *
  * @author Rosanna Lee
  * @author Scott Seligman
  * @since 1.3
  */


public class NamingException extends Exception {
    /**
     * Contains the part of the name that has been successfully resolved.
     * It is a composite name and can be null.
     * This field is initialized by the constructors.
     * You should access and manipulate this field
     * through its get and set methods.
     * @serial
     * @see #getResolvedName
     * @see #setResolvedName
     */
    protected Name resolvedName;
    /**
      * Contains the object to which resolution of the part of the name was
      * successful. Can be null.
      * This field is initialized by the constructors.
      * You should access and manipulate this field
      * through its get and set methods.
      * @serial
      * @see #getResolvedObj
      * @see #setResolvedObj
      */
    protected Object resolvedObj;
    /**
     * Contains the remaining name that has not been resolved yet.
     * It is a composite name and can be null.
     * This field is initialized by the constructors.
     * You should access and manipulate this field
     * through its get, set, "append" methods.
     * @serial
     * @see #getRemainingName
     * @see #setRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingComponent
     */
    protected Name remainingName;

    /**
     * Contains the original exception that caused this NamingException to
     * be thrown. This field is set if there is additional
     * information that could be obtained from the original
     * exception, or if the original exception could not be
     * mapped to a subclass of NamingException.
     * Can be null.
     *<p>
     * This field predates the general-purpose exception chaining facility.
     * The {@link #initCause(Throwable)} and {@link #getCause()} methods
     * are now the preferred means of accessing this information.
     *
     * @serial
     * @see #getRootCause
     * @see #setRootCause(Throwable)
     * @see #initCause(Throwable)
     * @see #getCause
     */
    protected Throwable rootException = null;

    /**
     * Constructs a new NamingException with an explanation.
     * All unspecified fields are set to null.
     *
     * @param   explanation     A possibly null string containing
     *                          additional detail about this exception.
     * @see java.lang.Throwable#getMessage
     */
    public NamingException(String explanation) {
        super(explanation);
        resolvedName = remainingName = null;
        resolvedObj = null;
    }

    /**
      * Constructs a new NamingException.
      * All fields are set to null.
      */
    public NamingException() {
        super();
        resolvedName = remainingName = null;
        resolvedObj = null;
    }

    /**
     * Retrieves the leading portion of the name that was resolved
     * successfully.
     *
     * @return The part of the name that was resolved successfully.
     *          It is a composite name. It can be null, which means
     *          the resolved name field has not been set.
     * @see #getResolvedObj
     * @see #setResolvedName
     */
    public Name getResolvedName() {
        return resolvedName;
    }

    /**
     * Retrieves the remaining unresolved portion of the name.
     * @return The part of the name that has not been resolved.
     *          It is a composite name. It can be null, which means
     *          the remaining name field has not been set.
     * @see #setRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingComponent
     */
    public Name getRemainingName() {
        return remainingName;
    }

    /**
     * Retrieves the object to which resolution was successful.
     * This is the object to which the resolved name is bound.
     *
     * @return The possibly null object that was resolved so far.
     *  null means that the resolved object field has not been set.
     * @see #getResolvedName
     * @see #setResolvedObj
     */
    public Object getResolvedObj() {
        return resolvedObj;
    }

    /**
      * Retrieves the explanation associated with this exception.
      *
      * @return The possibly null detail string explaining more
      *         about this exception. If null, it means there is no
      *         detail message for this exception.
      *
      * @see java.lang.Throwable#getMessage
      */
    public String getExplanation() {
        return getMessage();
    }

    /**
     * Sets the resolved name field of this exception.
     *<p>
     * <tt>name is a composite name. If the intent is to set
     * this field using a compound name or string, you must
     * "stringify" the compound name, and create a composite
     * name with a single component using the string. You can then
     * invoke this method using the resulting composite name.
     *<p>
     * A copy of <code>name is made and stored.
     * Subsequent changes to <code>name does not
     * affect the copy in this NamingException and vice versa.
     *
     * @param name The possibly null name to set resolved name to.
     *          If null, it sets the resolved name field to null.
     * @see #getResolvedName
     */
    public void setResolvedName(Name name) {
        if (name != null)
            resolvedName = (Name)(name.clone());
        else
            resolvedName = null;
    }

    /**
     * Sets the remaining name field of this exception.
     *<p>
     * <tt>name is a composite name. If the intent is to set
     * this field using a compound name or string, you must
     * "stringify" the compound name, and create a composite
     * name with a single component using the string. You can then
     * invoke this method using the resulting composite name.
     *<p>
     * A copy of <code>name is made and stored.
     * Subsequent changes to <code>name does not
     * affect the copy in this NamingException and vice versa.
     * @param name The possibly null name to set remaining name to.
     *          If null, it sets the remaining name field to null.
     * @see #getRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingName
     * @see #appendRemainingComponent
     */
    public void setRemainingName(Name name) {
        if (name != null)
            remainingName = (Name)(name.clone());
        else
            remainingName = null;
    }

    /**
     * Sets the resolved object field of this exception.
     * @param obj The possibly null object to set resolved object to.
     *            If null, the resolved object field is set to null.
     * @see #getResolvedObj
     */
    public void setResolvedObj(Object obj) {
        resolvedObj = obj;
    }

    /**
      * Add name as the last component in remaining name.
      * @param name The component to add.
      *         If name is null, this method does not do anything.
      * @see #setRemainingName
      * @see #getRemainingName
      * @see #appendRemainingName
      */
    public void appendRemainingComponent(String name) {
        if (name != null) {
            try {
                if (remainingName == null) {
                    remainingName = new CompositeName();
                }
                remainingName.add(name);
            } catch (NamingException e) {
                throw new IllegalArgumentException(e.toString());
            }
        }
    }

    /**
      * Add components from 'name' as the last components in
      * remaining name.
      *<p>
      * <tt>name is a composite name. If the intent is to append
      * a compound name, you should "stringify" the compound name
      * then invoke the overloaded form that accepts a String parameter.
      *<p>
      * Subsequent changes to <code>name does not
      * affect the remaining name field in this NamingException and vice versa.
      * @param name The possibly null name containing ordered components to add.
      *                 If name is null, this method does not do anything.
      * @see #setRemainingName
      * @see #getRemainingName
      * @see #appendRemainingComponent
      */
    public void appendRemainingName(Name name) {
        if (name == null) {
            return;
        }
        if (remainingName != null) {
            try {
                remainingName.addAll(name);
            } catch (NamingException e) {
                throw new IllegalArgumentException(e.toString());
            }
        } else {
            remainingName = (Name)(name.clone());
        }
    }

    /**
      * Retrieves the root cause of this NamingException, if any.
      * The root cause of a naming exception is used when the service provider
      * wants to indicate to the caller a non-naming related exception
      * but at the same time wants to use the NamingException structure
      * to indicate how far the naming operation proceeded.
      *<p>
      * This method predates the general-purpose exception chaining facility.
      * The {@link #getCause()} method is now the preferred means of obtaining
      * this information.
      *
      * @return The possibly null exception that caused this naming
      *    exception. If null, it means no root cause has been
      *    set for this naming exception.
      * @see #setRootCause
      * @see #rootException
      * @see #getCause
      */
    public Throwable getRootCause() {
        return rootException;
    }

    /**
      * Records the root cause of this NamingException.
      * If <tt>e is this, this method does not do anything.
      *<p>
      * This method predates the general-purpose exception chaining facility.
      * The {@link #initCause(Throwable)} method is now the preferred means
      * of recording this information.
      *
      * @param e The possibly null exception that caused the naming
      *          operation to fail. If null, it means this naming
      *          exception has no root cause.
      * @see #getRootCause
      * @see #rootException
      * @see #initCause
      */
    public void setRootCause(Throwable e) {
        if (e != this) {
            rootException = e;
        }
    }

    /**
      * Returns the cause of this exception.  The cause is the
      * throwable that caused this naming exception to be thrown.
      * Returns <code>null if the cause is nonexistent or
      * unknown.
      *
      * @return  the cause of this exception, or <code>null if the
      *          cause is nonexistent or unknown.
      * @see #initCause(Throwable)
      * @since 1.4
      */
    public Throwable getCause() {
        return getRootCause();
    }

    /**
      * Initializes the cause of this exception to the specified value.
      * The cause is the throwable that caused this naming exception to be
      * thrown.
      *<p>
      * This method may be called at most once.
      *
      * @param  cause   the cause, which is saved for later retrieval by
      *         the {@link #getCause()} method.  A <tt>null value
      *         indicates that the cause is nonexistent or unknown.
      * @return a reference to this <code>NamingException instance.
      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if <code>cause is this
      *         exception.  (A throwable cannot be its own cause.)
      * @throws IllegalStateException if this method has already
      *         been called on this exception.
      * @see #getCause
      * @since 1.4
      */
    public Throwable initCause(Throwable cause) {
        super.initCause(cause);
        setRootCause(cause);
        return this;
    }

    /**
     * Generates the string representation of this exception.
     * The string representation consists of this exception's class name,
     * its detailed message, and if it has a root cause, the string
     * representation of the root cause exception, followed by
     * the remaining name (if it is not null).
     * This string is used for debugging and not meant to be interpreted
     * programmatically.
     *
     * @return The non-null string containing the string representation
     * of this exception.
     */
    public String toString() {
        String answer = super.toString();

        if (rootException != null) {
            answer += " [Root exception is " + rootException + "]";
        }
        if (remainingName != null) {
            answer += "; remaining name '" + remainingName + "'";
        }
        return answer;
    }

    /**
      * Generates the string representation in more detail.
      * This string representation consists of the information returned
      * by the toString() that takes no parameters, plus the string
      * representation of the resolved object (if it is not null).
      * This string is used for debugging and not meant to be interpreted
      * programmatically.
      *
      * @param detail If true, include details about the resolved object
      *                 in addition to the other information.
      * @return The non-null string containing the string representation.
      */
    public String toString(boolean detail) {
        if (!detail || resolvedObj == null) {
            return toString();
        } else {
            return (toString() + "; resolved object " + resolvedObj);
        }
    }

    /**
     * Use serialVersionUID from JNDI 1.1.1 for interoperability
     */
    private static final long serialVersionUID = -1299181962103167177L;
};

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