src/share/jaxws_classes/javax/xml/bind/JAXBContext.java

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1 /*
2 * Copyright (c) 2003, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
3 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
4 *
5 * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
6 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
7 * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
8 * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
9 * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
10 *
11 * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
12 * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
13 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
14 * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
15 * accompanied this code).
16 *
17 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
18 * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
19 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
20 *
21 * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
22 * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
23 * questions.
24 */
25
26 package javax.xml.bind;
27
28 import org.w3c.dom.Node;
29
30 import java.util.Collections;
31 import java.util.Map;
32 import java.util.Properties;
33 import java.io.IOException;
34 import java.io.InputStream;
35
36 /**
37 * <p>
38 * The <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class provides the client's entry point to the
39 * JAXB API. It provides an abstraction for managing the XML/Java binding
40 * information necessary to implement the JAXB binding framework operations:
41 * unmarshal, marshal and validate.
42 *
43 * <p>A client application normally obtains new instances of this class using
44 * one of these two styles for newInstance methods, although there are other
45 * specialized forms of the method available:
46 *
47 * <ul>
48 * <li>{@link #newInstance(String,ClassLoader) JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo:com.acme.bar" )} <br/>
49 * The JAXBContext instance is initialized from a list of colon
50 * separated Java package names. Each java package contains
51 * JAXB mapped classes, schema-derived classes and/or user annotated
52 * classes. Additionally, the java package may contain JAXB package annotations
53 * that must be processed. (see JLS, Section 7.4.1 "Named Packages").
54 * </li>
55 * <li>{@link #newInstance(Class...) JAXBContext.newInstance( com.acme.foo.Foo.class )} <br/>
56 * The JAXBContext instance is intialized with class(es)
57 * passed as parameter(s) and classes that are statically reachable from
58 * these class(es). See {@link #newInstance(Class...)} for details.
59 * </li>
60 * </ul>
61 *
62 * <p>
63 * <i><B>SPEC REQUIREMENT:</B> the provider must supply an implementation
64 * class containing the following method signatures:</i>
65 *
66 * <pre>
67 * public static JAXBContext createContext( String contextPath, ClassLoader classLoader, Map&lt;String,Object> properties ) throws JAXBException
68 * public static JAXBContext createContext( Class[] classes, Map&lt;String,Object> properties ) throws JAXBException
69 * </pre>
70 *
71 * <p><i>
72 * The following JAXB 1.0 requirement is only required for schema to
73 * java interface/implementation binding. It does not apply to JAXB annotated
74 * classes. JAXB Providers must generate a <tt>jaxb.properties</tt> file in
75 * each package containing schema derived classes. The property file must
76 * contain a property named <tt>javax.xml.bind.context.factory</tt> whose
77 * value is the name of the class that implements the <tt>createContext</tt>
78 * APIs.</i>
79 *
80 * <p><i>
81 * The class supplied by the provider does not have to be assignable to
82 * <tt>javax.xml.bind.JAXBContext</tt>, it simply has to provide a class that
83 * implements the <tt>createContext</tt> APIs.</i>
84 *
85 * <p><i>
86 * In addition, the provider must call the
87 * {@link DatatypeConverter#setDatatypeConverter(DatatypeConverterInterface)
88 * DatatypeConverter.setDatatypeConverter} api prior to any client
89 * invocations of the marshal and unmarshal methods. This is necessary to
90 * configure the datatype converter that will be used during these operations.</i>
91 *
92 * <a name="Unmarshalling"></a>
93 * <h3>Unmarshalling</h3>
94 * <p>
95 * The {@link Unmarshaller} class provides the client application the ability
96 * to convert XML data into a tree of Java content objects.
97 * The unmarshal method allows for
98 * any global XML element declared in the schema to be unmarshalled as
99 * the root of an instance document.
100 * Additionally, the unmarshal method allows for an unrecognized root element that
101 * has an xsi:type attribute's value that references a type definition declared in
102 * the schema to be unmarshalled as the root of an instance document.
103 * The <tt>JAXBContext</tt> object
104 * allows the merging of global elements and type definitions across a set of schemas (listed
105 * in the <tt>contextPath</tt>). Since each schema in the schema set can belong
106 * to distinct namespaces, the unification of schemas to an unmarshalling
107 * context should be namespace independent. This means that a client
108 * application is able to unmarshal XML documents that are instances of
109 * any of the schemas listed in the <tt>contextPath</tt>. For example:
110 *
111 * <pre>
112 * JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo:com.acme.bar" );
113 * Unmarshaller u = jc.createUnmarshaller();
114 * FooObject fooObj = (FooObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "foo.xml" ) ); // ok
115 * BarObject barObj = (BarObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "bar.xml" ) ); // ok
116 * BazObject bazObj = (BazObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "baz.xml" ) ); // error, "com.acme.baz" not in contextPath
117 * </pre>
118 *
119 * <p>
120 * The client application may also generate Java content trees explicitly rather
121 * than unmarshalling existing XML data. For all JAXB-annotated value classes,
122 * an application can create content using constructors.
123 * For schema-derived interface/implementation classes and for the
124 * creation of elements that are not bound to a JAXB-annotated
125 * class, an application needs to have access and knowledge about each of
126 * the schema derived <tt> ObjectFactory</tt> classes that exist in each of
127 * java packages contained in the <tt>contextPath</tt>. For each schema
128 * derived java class, there is a static factory method that produces objects
129 * of that type. For example,
130 * assume that after compiling a schema, you have a package <tt>com.acme.foo</tt>
131 * that contains a schema derived interface named <tt>PurchaseOrder</tt>. In
132 * order to create objects of that type, the client application would use the
133 * factory method like this:
134 *
135 * <pre>
136 * com.acme.foo.PurchaseOrder po =
137 * com.acme.foo.ObjectFactory.createPurchaseOrder();
138 * </pre>
139 *
140 * <p>
141 * Once the client application has an instance of the the schema derived object,
142 * it can use the mutator methods to set content on it.
143 *
144 * <p>
145 * For more information on the generated <tt>ObjectFactory</tt> classes, see
146 * Section 4.2 <i>Java Package</i> of the specification.
147 *
148 * <p>
149 * <i><B>SPEC REQUIREMENT:</B> the provider must generate a class in each
150 * package that contains all of the necessary object factory methods for that
151 * package named ObjectFactory as well as the static
152 * <tt>newInstance( javaContentInterface )</tt> method</i>
153 *
154 * <h3>Marshalling</h3>
155 * <p>
156 * The {@link Marshaller} class provides the client application the ability
157 * to convert a Java content tree back into XML data. There is no difference
158 * between marshalling a content tree that is created manually using the factory
159 * methods and marshalling a content tree that is the result an <tt>unmarshal
160 * </tt> operation. Clients can marshal a java content tree back to XML data
161 * to a <tt>java.io.OutputStream</tt> or a <tt>java.io.Writer</tt>. The
162 * marshalling process can alternatively produce SAX2 event streams to a
163 * registered <tt>ContentHandler</tt> or produce a DOM Node object.
164 * Client applications have control over the output encoding as well as
165 * whether or not to marshal the XML data as a complete document or
166 * as a fragment.
167 *
168 * <p>
169 * Here is a simple example that unmarshals an XML document and then marshals
170 * it back out:
171 *
172 * <pre>
173 * JAXBContext jc = JAXBContext.newInstance( "com.acme.foo" );
174 *
175 * // unmarshal from foo.xml
176 * Unmarshaller u = jc.createUnmarshaller();
177 * FooObject fooObj = (FooObject)u.unmarshal( new File( "foo.xml" ) );
178 *
179 * // marshal to System.out
180 * Marshaller m = jc.createMarshaller();
181 * m.marshal( fooObj, System.out );
182 * </pre>
183 *
184 *
185 * <h3>Validation</h3>
186 * <p>
187 * Validation has been changed significantly since JAXB 1.0. The {@link Validator}
188 * class has been deprecated and made optional. This means that you are advised
189 * not to use this class and, in fact, it may not even be available depending on
190 * your JAXB provider. JAXB 1.0 client applications that rely on <tt>Validator</tt>
191 * will still work properly when deployed with the JAXB 1.0 runtime system.
192 *
193 * In JAXB 2.0, the {@link Unmarshaller} has included convenince methods that expose
194 * the JAXP 1.3 {@link javax.xml.validation} framework. Please refer to the
195 * {@link Unmarshaller#setSchema(javax.xml.validation.Schema)} API for more
196 * information.
197 *
198 *
199 * <h3>JAXB Runtime Binding Framework Compatibility</h3>
200 * <p>
201 * The following JAXB 1.0 restriction only applies to binding schema to
202 * interfaces/implementation classes.
203 * Since this binding does not require a common runtime system, a JAXB
204 * client application must not attempt to mix runtime objects (<tt>JAXBContext,
205 * Marshaller</tt>, etc. ) from different providers. This does not
206 * mean that the client application isn't portable, it simply means that a
207 * client has to use a runtime system provided by the same provider that was
208 * used to compile the schema.
209 *
210 *
211 * <h3>Discovery of JAXB implementation</h3>
212 * <p>
213 * When one of the <tt>newInstance</tt> methods is called, a JAXB implementation is discovered
214 * by the following steps.
215 *
216 * <ol>
217 * <li>
218 * For each package/class explicitly passed in to the {@link #newInstance} method, in the order they are specified,
219 * <tt>jaxb.properties</tt> file is looked up in its package, by using the associated classloader &mdash;
220 * this is {@link Class#getClassLoader() the owner class loader} for a {@link Class} argument, and for a package
221 * the speified {@link ClassLoader}.
222 *
223 * <p>
224 * If such a file is discovered, it is {@link Properties#load(InputStream) loaded} as a property file, and
225 * the value of the {@link #JAXB_CONTEXT_FACTORY} key will be assumed to be the provider factory class.
226 * This class is then loaded by the associated classloader discussed above.
227 *
228 * <p>
229 * This phase of the look up allows some packages to force the use of a certain JAXB implementation.
230 * (For example, perhaps the schema compiler has generated some vendor extension in the code.)
231 *
232 * <li>
233 * If the system property {@link #JAXB_CONTEXT_FACTORY} exists, then its value is assumed to be the provider
234 * factory class. This phase of the look up enables per-JVM override of the JAXB implementation.
235 *
236 * <li>
237 * Look for <tt>/META-INF/services/javax.xml.bind.JAXBContext</tt> file in the associated classloader.
238 * This file follows the standard service descriptor convention, and if such a file exists, its content
239 * is assumed to be the provider factory class. This phase of the look up is for automatic discovery.
240 * It allows users to just put a JAXB implementation in a classpath and use it without any furhter configuration.
241 *
242 * <li>
243 * Finally, if all the steps above fail, then the rest of the look up is unspecified. That said,
244 * the recommended behavior is to simply look for some hard-coded platform default JAXB implementation.
245 * This phase of the look up is so that JavaSE can have its own JAXB implementation as the last resort.
246 * </ol>
247 *
248 * <p>
249 * Once the provider factory class is discovered, its
250 * <tt>public static JAXBContext createContext(String,ClassLoader,Map)</tt> method
251 * (see {@link #newInstance(String, ClassLoader, Map)} for the parameter semantics.)
252 * or <tt>public static JAXBContext createContet(Class[],Map)</tt> method
253 * (see {@link #newInstance(Class[], Map)} for the parameter semantics) are invoked
254 * to create a {@link JAXBContext}.
255 *
256 * @author <ul><li>Ryan Shoemaker, Sun Microsystems, Inc.</li><li>Kohsuke Kawaguchi, Sun Microsystems, Inc.</li><li>Joe Fialli, Sun Microsystems, Inc.</li></ul>
257 * @see Marshaller
258 * @see Unmarshaller
259 * @see S 7.4.1 "Named Packages" in Java Language Specification</a>
260 * @since JAXB1.0
261 */
262 public abstract class JAXBContext {
263
264 /**
265 * The name of the property that contains the name of the class capable
266 * of creating new <tt>JAXBContext</tt> objects.
267 */
268 public static final String JAXB_CONTEXT_FACTORY =
269 "javax.xml.bind.context.factory";
270
271
272 protected JAXBContext() {
273 }
274
275
276 /**
277 * <p>
278 * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
279 *
280 * <p>
281 * This is a convenience method to invoke the
282 * {@link #newInstance(String,ClassLoader)} method with
283 * the context class loader of the current thread.
284 *
285 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
286 * <tt>JAXBContext</tt> such as
287 * <ol>
288 * <li>failure to locate either ObjectFactory.class or jaxb.index in the packages</li>
289 * <li>an ambiguity among global elements contained in the contextPath</li>
290 * <li>failure to locate a value for the context factory provider property</li>
291 * <li>mixing schema derived packages from different providers on the same contextPath</li>
292 * </ol>
293 */
294 public static JAXBContext newInstance( String contextPath )
295 throws JAXBException {
296
297 //return newInstance( contextPath, JAXBContext.class.getClassLoader() );
298 return newInstance( contextPath, getContextClassLoader());
299 }
300
301 /**
302 * <p>
303 * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
304 *
305 * <p>
306 * The client application must supply a context path which is a list of
307 * colon (':', \u005Cu003A) separated java package names that contain
308 * schema-derived classes and/or fully qualified JAXB-annotated classes.
309 * Schema-derived
310 * code is registered with the JAXBContext by the
311 * ObjectFactory.class generated per package.
312 * Alternatively than being listed in the context path, programmer
313 * annotated JAXB mapped classes can be listed in a
314 * <tt>jaxb.index</tt> resource file, format described below.
315 * Note that a java package can contain both schema-derived classes and
316 * user annotated JAXB classes. Additionally, the java package may
317 * contain JAXB package annotations that must be processed. (see JLS,
318 * Section 7.4.1 "Named Packages").
319 * </p>
320 *
321 * <p>
322 * Every package listed on the contextPath must meet <b>one or both</b> of the
323 * following conditions otherwise a <tt>JAXBException</tt> will be thrown:
324 * </p>
325 * <ol>
326 * <li>it must contain ObjectFactory.class</li>
327 * <li>it must contain jaxb.index</li>
328 * </ol>
329 *
330 * <p>
331 * <b>Format for jaxb.index</b>
332 * <p>
333 * The file contains a newline-separated list of class names.
334 * Space and tab characters, as well as blank
335 * lines, are ignored. The comment character
336 * is '#' (0x23); on each line all characters following the first comment
337 * character are ignored. The file must be encoded in UTF-8. Classes that
338 * are reachable, as defined in {@link #newInstance(Class...)}, from the
339 * listed classes are also registered with JAXBContext.
340 * <p>
341 * Constraints on class name occuring in a <tt>jaxb.index</tt> file are:
342 * <ul>
343 * <li>Must not end with ".class".</li>
344 * <li>Class names are resolved relative to package containing
345 * <tt>jaxb.index</tt> file. Only classes occuring directly in package
346 * containing <tt>jaxb.index</tt> file are allowed.</li>
347 * <li>Fully qualified class names are not allowed.
348 * A qualified class name,relative to current package,
349 * is only allowed to specify a nested or inner class.</li>
350 * </ul>
351 *
352 * <p>
353 * To maintain compatibility with JAXB 1.0 schema to java
354 * interface/implementation binding, enabled by schema customization
355 * <tt>&lt;jaxb:globalBindings valueClass="false"></tt>,
356 * the JAXB provider will ensure that each package on the context path
357 * has a <tt>jaxb.properties</tt> file which contains a value for the
358 * <tt>javax.xml.bind.context.factory</tt> property and that all values
359 * resolve to the same provider. This requirement does not apply to
360 * JAXB annotated classes.
361 *
362 * <p>
363 * If there are any global XML element name collisions across the various
364 * packages listed on the <tt>contextPath</tt>, a <tt>JAXBException</tt>
365 * will be thrown.
366 *
367 * <p>
368 * Mixing generated interface/impl bindings from multiple JAXB Providers
369 * in the same context path may result in a <tt>JAXBException</tt>
370 * being thrown.
371 *
372 * <p>
373 * The steps involved in discovering the JAXB implementation is discussed in the class javadoc.
374 *
375 * @param contextPath list of java package names that contain schema
376 * derived class and/or java to schema (JAXB-annotated)
377 * mapped classes
378 * @param classLoader
379 * This class loader will be used to locate the implementation
380 * classes.
381 *
382 * @return a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt>
383 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
384 * <tt>JAXBContext</tt> such as
385 * <ol>
386 * <li>failure to locate either ObjectFactory.class or jaxb.index in the packages</li>
387 * <li>an ambiguity among global elements contained in the contextPath</li>
388 * <li>failure to locate a value for the context factory provider property</li>
389 * <li>mixing schema derived packages from different providers on the same contextPath</li>
390 * </ol>
391 */
392 public static JAXBContext newInstance( String contextPath, ClassLoader classLoader ) throws JAXBException {
393
394 return newInstance(contextPath,classLoader,Collections.<String,Object>emptyMap());
395 }
396
397 /**
398 * <p>
399 * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
400 *
401 * <p>
402 * This is mostly the same as {@link JAXBContext#newInstance(String, ClassLoader)},
403 * but this version allows you to pass in provider-specific properties to configure
404 * the instantiation of {@link JAXBContext}.
405 *
406 * <p>
407 * The interpretation of properties is up to implementations. Implementations should
408 * throw <tt>JAXBException</tt> if it finds properties that it doesn't understand.
409 *
410 * @param contextPath list of java package names that contain schema derived classes
411 * @param classLoader
412 * This class loader will be used to locate the implementation classes.
413 * @param properties
414 * provider-specific properties. Can be null, which means the same thing as passing
415 * in an empty map.
416 *
417 * @return a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt>
418 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
419 * <tt>JAXBContext</tt> such as
420 * <ol>
421 * <li>failure to locate either ObjectFactory.class or jaxb.index in the packages</li>
422 * <li>an ambiguity among global elements contained in the contextPath</li>
423 * <li>failure to locate a value for the context factory provider property</li>
424 * <li>mixing schema derived packages from different providers on the same contextPath</li>
425 * </ol>
426 * @since JAXB2.0
427 */
428 public static JAXBContext newInstance( String contextPath, ClassLoader classLoader, Map<String,?> properties )
429 throws JAXBException {
430
431 return ContextFinder.find(
432 /* The default property name according to the JAXB spec */
433 JAXB_CONTEXT_FACTORY,
434
435 /* the context path supplied by the client app */
436 contextPath,
437
438 /* class loader to be used */
439 classLoader,
440 properties );
441 }
442
443 // TODO: resurrect this once we introduce external annotations
444 // /**
445 // * <p>
446 // * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
447 // *
448 // * <p>
449 // * The client application must supply a list of classes that the new
450 // * context object needs to recognize.
451 // *
452 // * Not only the new context will recognize all the classes specified,
453 // * but it will also recognize any classes that are directly/indirectly
454 // * referenced statically from the specified classes.
455 // *
456 // * For example, in the following Java code, if you do
457 // * <tt>newInstance(Foo.class)</tt>, the newly created {@link JAXBContext}
458 // * will recognize both <tt>Foo</tt> and <tt>Bar</tt>, but not <tt>Zot</tt>:
459 // * <pre>
460 // * class Foo {
461 // * Bar b;
462 // * }
463 // * class Bar { int x; }
464 // * class Zot extends Bar { int y; }
465 // * </pre>
466 // *
467 // * Therefore, a typical client application only needs to specify the
468 // * top-level classes, but it needs to be careful.
469 // *
470 // * TODO: if we are to define other mechanisms, refer to them.
471 // *
472 // * @param externalBindings
473 // * list of external binding files. Can be null or empty if none is used.
474 // * when specified, those files determine how the classes are bound.
475 // *
476 // * @param classesToBeBound
477 // * list of java classes to be recognized by the new {@link JAXBContext}.
478 // * Can be empty, in which case a {@link JAXBContext} that only knows about
479 // * spec-defined classes will be returned.
480 // *
481 // * @return
482 // * A new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt>. Always non-null valid object.
483 // *
484 // * @throws JAXBException
485 // * if an error was encountered while creating the
486 // * <tt>JAXBContext</tt>, such as (but not limited to):
487 // * <ol>
488 // * <li>No JAXB implementation was discovered
489 // * <li>Classes use JAXB annotations incorrectly
490 // * <li>Classes have colliding annotations (i.e., two classes with the same type name)
491 // * <li>Specified external bindings are incorrect
492 // * <li>The JAXB implementation was unable to locate
493 // * provider-specific out-of-band information (such as additional
494 // * files generated at the development time.)
495 // * </ol>
496 // *
497 // * @throws IllegalArgumentException
498 // * if the parameter contains {@code null} (i.e., {@code newInstance(null);})
499 // *
500 // * @since JAXB2.0
501 // */
502 // public static JAXBContext newInstance( Source[] externalBindings, Class... classesToBeBound )
503 // throws JAXBException {
504 //
505 // // empty class list is not an error, because the context will still include
506 // // spec-specified classes like String and Integer.
507 // // if(classesToBeBound.length==0)
508 // // throw new IllegalArgumentException();
509 //
510 // // but it is an error to have nulls in it.
511 // for( int i=classesToBeBound.length-1; i>=0; i-- )
512 // if(classesToBeBound[i]==null)
513 // throw new IllegalArgumentException();
514 //
515 // return ContextFinder.find(externalBindings,classesToBeBound);
516 // }
517
518 /**
519 * <p>
520 * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
521 *
522 * <p>
523 * The client application must supply a list of classes that the new
524 * context object needs to recognize.
525 *
526 * Not only the new context will recognize all the classes specified,
527 * but it will also recognize any classes that are directly/indirectly
528 * referenced statically from the specified classes. Subclasses of
529 * referenced classes nor <tt>&#64;XmlTransient</tt> referenced classes
530 * are not registered with JAXBContext.
531 *
532 * For example, in the following Java code, if you do
533 * <tt>newInstance(Foo.class)</tt>, the newly created {@link JAXBContext}
534 * will recognize both <tt>Foo</tt> and <tt>Bar</tt>, but not <tt>Zot</tt> or <tt>FooBar</tt>:
535 * <pre>
536 * class Foo {
537 * &#64;XmlTransient FooBar c;
538 * Bar b;
539 * }
540 * class Bar { int x; }
541 * class Zot extends Bar { int y; }
542 * class FooBar { }
543 * </pre>
544 *
545 * Therefore, a typical client application only needs to specify the
546 * top-level classes, but it needs to be careful.
547 *
548 * <p>
549 * Note that for each java package registered with JAXBContext,
550 * when the optional package annotations exist, they must be processed.
551 * (see JLS, Section 7.4.1 "Named Packages").
552 *
553 * <p>
554 * The steps involved in discovering the JAXB implementation is discussed in the class javadoc.
555 *
556 * @param classesToBeBound
557 * list of java classes to be recognized by the new {@link JAXBContext}.
558 * Can be empty, in which case a {@link JAXBContext} that only knows about
559 * spec-defined classes will be returned.
560 *
561 * @return
562 * A new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt>. Always non-null valid object.
563 *
564 * @throws JAXBException
565 * if an error was encountered while creating the
566 * <tt>JAXBContext</tt>, such as (but not limited to):
567 * <ol>
568 * <li>No JAXB implementation was discovered
569 * <li>Classes use JAXB annotations incorrectly
570 * <li>Classes have colliding annotations (i.e., two classes with the same type name)
571 * <li>The JAXB implementation was unable to locate
572 * provider-specific out-of-band information (such as additional
573 * files generated at the development time.)
574 * </ol>
575 *
576 * @throws IllegalArgumentException
577 * if the parameter contains {@code null} (i.e., {@code newInstance(null);})
578 *
579 * @since JAXB2.0
580 */
581 public static JAXBContext newInstance( Class... classesToBeBound )
582 throws JAXBException {
583
584 return newInstance(classesToBeBound,Collections.<String,Object>emptyMap());
585 }
586
587 /**
588 * <p>
589 * Obtain a new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt> class.
590 *
591 * <p>
592 * An overloading of {@link JAXBContext#newInstance(Class...)}
593 * to configure 'properties' for this instantiation of {@link JAXBContext}.
594 *
595 * <p>
596 * The interpretation of properties is up to implementations. Implementations should
597 * throw <tt>JAXBException</tt> if it finds properties that it doesn't understand.
598 *
599 * @param classesToBeBound
600 * list of java classes to be recognized by the new {@link JAXBContext}.
601 * Can be empty, in which case a {@link JAXBContext} that only knows about
602 * spec-defined classes will be returned.
603 * @param properties
604 * provider-specific properties. Can be null, which means the same thing as passing
605 * in an empty map.
606 *
607 * @return
608 * A new instance of a <tt>JAXBContext</tt>. Always non-null valid object.
609 *
610 * @throws JAXBException
611 * if an error was encountered while creating the
612 * <tt>JAXBContext</tt>, such as (but not limited to):
613 * <ol>
614 * <li>No JAXB implementation was discovered
615 * <li>Classes use JAXB annotations incorrectly
616 * <li>Classes have colliding annotations (i.e., two classes with the same type name)
617 * <li>The JAXB implementation was unable to locate
618 * provider-specific out-of-band information (such as additional
619 * files generated at the development time.)
620 * </ol>
621 *
622 * @throws IllegalArgumentException
623 * if the parameter contains {@code null} (i.e., {@code newInstance(null,someMap);})
624 *
625 * @since JAXB2.0
626 */
627 public static JAXBContext newInstance( Class[] classesToBeBound, Map<String,?> properties )
628 throws JAXBException {
629
630 if (classesToBeBound == null) throw new IllegalArgumentException();
631
632 // but it is an error to have nulls in it.
633 for( int i=classesToBeBound.length-1; i>=0; i-- )
634 if(classesToBeBound[i]==null)
635 throw new IllegalArgumentException();
636
637 return ContextFinder.find(classesToBeBound,properties);
638 }
639
640 /**
641 * Create an <tt>Unmarshaller</tt> object that can be used to convert XML
642 * data into a java content tree.
643 *
644 * @return an <tt>Unmarshaller</tt> object
645 *
646 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
647 * <tt>Unmarshaller</tt> object
648 */
649 public abstract Unmarshaller createUnmarshaller() throws JAXBException;
650
651
652 /**
653 * Create a <tt>Marshaller</tt> object that can be used to convert a
654 * java content tree into XML data.
655 *
656 * @return a <tt>Marshaller</tt> object
657 *
658 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
659 * <tt>Marshaller</tt> object
660 */
661 public abstract Marshaller createMarshaller() throws JAXBException;
662
663
664 /**
665 * {@link Validator} has been made optional and deprecated in JAXB 2.0. Please
666 * refer to the javadoc for {@link Validator} for more detail.
667 * <p>
668 * Create a <tt>Validator</tt> object that can be used to validate a
669 * java content tree against its source schema.
670 *
671 * @return a <tt>Validator</tt> object
672 *
673 * @throws JAXBException if an error was encountered while creating the
674 * <tt>Validator</tt> object
675 * @deprecated since JAXB2.0
676 */
677 public abstract Validator createValidator() throws JAXBException;
678
679 /**
680 * Creates a <tt>Binder</tt> object that can be used for
681 * associative/in-place unmarshalling/marshalling.
682 *
683 * @param domType select the DOM API to use by passing in its DOM Node class.
684 *
685 * @return always a new valid <tt>Binder</tt> object.
686 *
687 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException
688 * if DOM API corresponding to <tt>domType</tt> is not supported by
689 * the implementation.
690 *
691 * @since JAXB2.0
692 */
693 public <T> Binder<T> createBinder(Class<T> domType) {
694 // to make JAXB 1.0 implementations work, this method must not be
695 // abstract
696 throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
697 }
698
699 /**
700 * Creates a <tt>Binder</tt> for W3C DOM.
701 *
702 * @return always a new valid <tt>Binder</tt> object.
703 *
704 * @since JAXB2.0
705 */
706 public Binder<Node> createBinder() {
707 return createBinder(Node.class);
708 }
709
710 /**
711 * Creates a <tt>JAXBIntrospector</tt> object that can be used to
712 * introspect JAXB objects.
713 *
714 * @return
715 * always return a non-null valid <tt>JAXBIntrospector</tt> object.
716 *
717 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException
718 * Calling this method on JAXB 1.0 implementations will throw
719 * an UnsupportedOperationException.
720 *
721 * @since JAXB2.0
722 */
723 public JAXBIntrospector createJAXBIntrospector() {
724 // to make JAXB 1.0 implementations work, this method must not be
725 // abstract
726 throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
727 }
728
729 /**
730 * Generates the schema documents for this context.
731 *
732 * @param outputResolver
733 * this object controls the output to which schemas
734 * will be sent.
735 *
736 * @throws IOException
737 * if {@link SchemaOutputResolver} throws an {@link IOException}.
738 *
739 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException
740 * Calling this method on JAXB 1.0 implementations will throw
741 * an UnsupportedOperationException.
742 *
743 * @since JAXB 2.0
744 */
745 public void generateSchema(SchemaOutputResolver outputResolver) throws IOException {
746 // to make JAXB 1.0 implementations work, this method must not be
747 // abstract
748 throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
749 }
750
751 private static ClassLoader getContextClassLoader() {
752 if (System.getSecurityManager() == null) {
753 return Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
754 } else {
755 return (ClassLoader) java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(
756 new java.security.PrivilegedAction() {
757 public java.lang.Object run() {
758 return Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
759 }
760 });
761 }
762 }
763
764 }

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