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/*
 * Copyright (c) 1997, 2020 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
 *
 * This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
 * terms of the Eclipse Distribution License v. 1.0, which is available at
 * http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/edl-v10.php.
 *
 * SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
 */

package com.sun.tools.xjc.runtime;

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.StringTokenizer;

import jakarta.xml.bind.JAXBContext;
import jakarta.xml.bind.JAXBException;

/**
 * This class implements the actual logic of {@link JAXBContext#newInstance}.
 *
 * 

* This class works as a facade and all the actual work is delegated to * a JAXB provider that happens to be in the runtime (not necessarily the JAXB RI.) * This allows the generated code to be run with any JAXB provider. * *

* This code is only used when XJC generates interfaces/implementations. * *

* The trick to make this work is two ObjectFactory classes that we generate * in the interface/implementation mode. * *

* The public ObjectFactory follows the spec, and this is the one that's exposed * to users. The public ObjectFactory refers to interfaces, so they aren't * directly usable by a JAXB 2.0 implementation. * *

* The private one lives in the impl package, and this one is indistinguishable * from the ObjectFactory that we generate for the value class generation mode. * This private ObjectFactory refers to implementation classes, which are * also indistinguishable from value classes that JAXB generates. * *

* All in all, the private ObjectFactory plus implementation classes give * a JAXB provider an illusion that they are dealing with value classes * that happens to implement some interfaces. * *

* In this way, the JAXB RI can provide the portability even for the * interface/implementation generation mode. * * @since 2.0 * @author Kohsuke Kawaguchi */ public class JAXBContextFactory { private static final String DOT_OBJECT_FACTORY = ".ObjectFactory"; private static final String IMPL_DOT_OBJECT_FACTORY = ".impl.ObjectFactory"; /** * The JAXB API will invoke this method via reflection */ public static JAXBContext createContext( Class[] classes, Map properties ) throws JAXBException { Class[] r = new Class[classes.length]; boolean modified = false; // find any reference to our 'public' ObjectFactory and // replace that to our 'private' ObjectFactory. for( int i=0; i classes = new ArrayList(); StringTokenizer tokens = new StringTokenizer(contextPath,":"); // each package should be pointing to a JAXB RI generated // content interface package. // // translate them into a list of private ObjectFactories. try { while(tokens.hasMoreTokens()) { String pkg = tokens.nextToken(); classes.add(classLoader.loadClass(pkg+IMPL_DOT_OBJECT_FACTORY)); } } catch (ClassNotFoundException e) { throw new JAXBException(e); } // delegate to the JAXB provider in the system return JAXBContext.newInstance(classes.toArray(new Class[classes.size()]),properties); } private static ClassLoader getClassClassLoader(final Class c) { if (System.getSecurityManager() == null) { return c.getClassLoader(); } else { return (ClassLoader) java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged( new java.security.PrivilegedAction() { public java.lang.Object run() { return c.getClassLoader(); } }); } } }





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