jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (c) 1997, 2017 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
*
* This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
* terms of the Eclipse Public License v. 2.0, which is available at
* http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-2.0.
*
* This Source Code may also be made available under the following Secondary
* Licenses when the conditions for such availability set forth in the
* Eclipse Public License v. 2.0 are satisfied: GNU General Public License,
* version 2 with the GNU Classpath Exception, which is available at
* https://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/license.html.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: EPL-2.0 OR GPL-2.0 WITH Classpath-exception-2.0
*/
package jakarta.jms;
/**
* A {@code ConnectionFactory} object encapsulates a set of connection configuration parameters that has been defined by
* an administrator. A client uses it to create a connection with a Jakarta Messaging provider.
*
*
* A {@code ConnectionFactory} object is a Jakarta Messaging administered object and supports concurrent use.
*
*
* Jakarta Messaging administered objects are objects containing configuration information that are created by an administrator and
* later used by Jakarta Messaging clients. They make it practical to administer the Jakarta Messaging API in the enterprise.
*
*
* Although the interfaces for administered objects do not explicitly depend on the Java Naming and Directory Interface
* (JNDI) API, the Jakarta Messaging API establishes the convention that Jakarta Messaging clients find administered objects by looking them up in a
* JNDI namespace.
*
*
* An administrator can place an administered object anywhere in a namespace. The Jakarta Messaging API does not define a naming
* policy.
*
*
* It is expected that Jakarta Messaging providers will provide the tools an administrator needs to create and configure administered
* objects in a JNDI namespace. Jakarta Messaging provider implementations of administered objects should be both
* {@code javax.jndi.Referenceable} and {@code java.io.Serializable} so that they can be stored in all JNDI naming
* contexts. In addition, it is recommended that these implementations follow the
* JavaBeansTM design patterns.
*
*
* This strategy provides several benefits:
*
*
* - It hides provider-specific details from Jakarta Messaging clients.
*
- It abstracts administrative information into objects in the Java programming language ("Java objects") that are
* easily organized and administered from a common management console.
*
- Since there will be JNDI providers for all popular naming services, this means that Jakarta Messaging providers can deliver one
* implementation of administered objects that will run everywhere.
*
*
*
* An administered object should not hold on to any remote resources. Its lookup should not use remote resources other
* than those used by the JNDI API itself.
*
*
* Clients should think of administered objects as local Java objects. Looking them up should not have any hidden side
* effects or use surprising amounts of local resources.
*
* @see jakarta.jms.Connection
* @see jakarta.jms.QueueConnectionFactory
* @see jakarta.jms.TopicConnectionFactory
*
* @version Jakarta Messaging 2.0
* @since JMS 1.0
*/
public interface ConnectionFactory {
/**
* Creates a connection with the default user identity. The connection is created in stopped mode. No messages will be
* delivered until the {@code Connection.start} method is explicitly called.
*
* @return a newly created connection
*
* @exception JMSException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the connection due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 1.1
*/
Connection createConnection() throws JMSException;
/**
* Creates a connection with the specified user identity. The connection is created in stopped mode. No messages will be
* delivered until the {@code Connection.start} method is explicitly called.
*
* @param userName the caller's user name
* @param password the caller's password
*
* @return a newly created connection
*
* @exception JMSException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the connection due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 1.1
*/
Connection createConnection(String userName, String password) throws JMSException;
/**
* Creates a JMSContext with the default user identity and an unspecified sessionMode.
*
*
* A connection and session are created for use by the new JMSContext. The connection is created in stopped mode but
* will be automatically started when a JMSConsumer is created.
*
*
* The behaviour of the session that is created depends on whether this method is called in a Java SE environment, in
* the Jakarta EE application client container, or in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container. If this method is called in the
* Jakarta EE web or EJB container then the behaviour of the session also depends on whether or not there is an active JTA
* transaction in progress.
*
*
* In a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container:
*
* - The session will be non-transacted and received messages will be acknowledged automatically using an
* acknowledgement mode of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} For a definition of the meaning of this acknowledgement
* mode see the link below.
*
*
*
* In a Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is an active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The session will participate in the JTA transaction and will be committed or rolled back when that transaction is
* committed or rolled back, not by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s {@code commit} or {@code rollback} methods.
*
*
*
* In the Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is no active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The session will be non-transacted and received messages will be acknowledged automatically using an
* acknowledgement mode of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} For a definition of the meaning of this acknowledgement
* mode see the link below.
*
*
* @return a newly created JMSContext
*
* @exception JMSRuntimeException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the JMSContext due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityRuntimeException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 2.0
*
* @see JMSContext#AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE
*
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(int)
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String, int)
* @see jakarta.jms.JMSContext#createContext(int)
*/
JMSContext createContext();
/**
* Creates a JMSContext with the specified user identity and an unspecified sessionMode.
*
*
* A connection and session are created for use by the new JMSContext. The connection is created in stopped mode but
* will be automatically started when a JMSConsumer.
*
*
* The behaviour of the session that is created depends on whether this method is called in a Java SE environment, in
* the Jakarta EE application client container, or in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container. If this method is called in the
* Jakarta EE web or EJB container then the behaviour of the session also depends on whether or not there is an active JTA
* transaction in progress.
*
*
* In a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container:
*
* - The session will be non-transacted and received messages will be acknowledged automatically using an
* acknowledgement mode of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} For a definition of the meaning of this acknowledgement
* mode see the link below.
*
*
*
* In a Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is an active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The session will participate in the JTA transaction and will be committed or rolled back when that transaction is
* committed or rolled back, not by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s {@code commit} or {@code rollback} methods.
*
*
*
* In the Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is no active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The session will be non-transacted and received messages will be acknowledged automatically using an
* acknowledgement mode of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} For a definition of the meaning of this acknowledgement
* mode see the link below.
*
*
* @param userName the caller's user name
* @param password the caller's password
*
* @return a newly created JMSContext
*
* @exception JMSRuntimeException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the JMSContext due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityRuntimeException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 2.0
*
* @see JMSContext#AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE
*
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext()
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(int)
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String, int)
* @see jakarta.jms.JMSContext#createContext(int)
*/
JMSContext createContext(String userName, String password);
/**
* Creates a JMSContext with the specified user identity and the specified session mode.
*
*
* A connection and session are created for use by the new JMSContext. The JMSContext is created in stopped mode but
* will be automatically started when a JMSConsumer is created.
*
*
* The effect of setting the {@code sessionMode} argument depends on whether this method is called in a Java SE
* environment, in the Jakarta EE application client container, or in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container. If this method is
* called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container then the effect of setting the {@code sessionMode} argument also depends
* on whether or not there is an active JTA transaction in progress.
*
*
* In a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container:
*
* - If {@code sessionMode} is set to {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED} then the session will use a local
* transaction which may subsequently be committed or rolled back by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s {@code commit} or
* {@code rollback} methods.
*
- If {@code sessionMode} is set to any of {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE},
* {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} or {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. then the session will be
* non-transacted and messages received by this session will be acknowledged according to the value of
* {@code sessionMode}. For a definition of the meaning of these acknowledgement modes see the links below.
*
*
*
* In a Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is an active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The argument {@code sessionMode} is ignored. The session will participate in the JTA transaction and will be
* committed or rolled back when that transaction is committed or rolled back, not by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s
* {@code commit} or {@code rollback} methods. Since the argument is ignored, developers are recommended to use
* {@code createContext(String userName, String password)} instead of this method.
*
*
*
* In the Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is no active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The argument {@code acknowledgeMode} must be set to either of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} or
* {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. The session will be non-transacted and messages received by this session will
* be acknowledged automatically according to the value of {@code acknowledgeMode}. For a definition of the meaning of
* these acknowledgement modes see the links below. The values {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED} and
* {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE} may not be used.
*
*
* @param userName the caller's user name
* @param password the caller's password
* @param sessionMode indicates which of four possible session modes will be used.
*
* - If this method is called in a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container, the permitted
* values are {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED}, {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE},
* {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} and {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}.
*
- If this method is called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container when there is an active JTA transaction in progress
* then this argument is ignored.
*
- If this method is called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container when there is no active JTA transaction in progress,
* the permitted values are {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} and {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. In this case
* the values {@code JMSContext.TRANSACTED} and {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE} are not permitted.
*
*
* @return a newly created JMSContext
*
* @exception JMSRuntimeException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the JMSContext due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityRuntimeException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 2.0
*
* @see JMSContext#SESSION_TRANSACTED
* @see JMSContext#CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE
* @see JMSContext#AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE
* @see JMSContext#DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE
*
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext()
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(int)
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
* @see jakarta.jms.JMSContext#createContext(int)
*/
JMSContext createContext(String userName, String password, int sessionMode);
/**
* Creates a JMSContext with the default user identity and the specified session mode.
*
*
* A connection and session are created for use by the new JMSContext. The JMSContext is created in stopped mode but
* will be automatically started when a JMSConsumer is created.
*
*
* The effect of setting the {@code sessionMode} argument depends on whether this method is called in a Java SE
* environment, in the Jakarta EE application client container, or in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container. If this method is
* called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container then the effect of setting the {@code sessionMode} argument also depends
* on whether or not there is an active JTA transaction in progress.
*
*
* In a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container:
*
* - If {@code sessionMode} is set to {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED} then the session will use a local
* transaction which may subsequently be committed or rolled back by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s {@code commit} or
* {@code rollback} methods.
*
- If {@code sessionMode} is set to any of {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE},
* {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} or {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. then the session will be
* non-transacted and messages received by this session will be acknowledged according to the value of
* {@code sessionMode}. For a definition of the meaning of these acknowledgement modes see the links below.
*
*
*
* In a Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is an active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The argument {@code sessionMode} is ignored. The session will participate in the JTA transaction and will be
* committed or rolled back when that transaction is committed or rolled back, not by calling the {@code JMSContext}'s
* {@code commit} or {@code rollback} methods. Since the argument is ignored, developers are recommended to use
* {@code createContext()} instead of this method.
*
*
*
* In the Jakarta EE web or EJB container, when there is no active JTA transaction in progress:
*
* - The argument {@code acknowledgeMode} must be set to either of {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} or
* {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. The session will be non-transacted and messages received by this session will
* be acknowledged automatically according to the value of {@code acknowledgeMode}. For a definition of the meaning of
* these acknowledgement modes see the links below. The values {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED} and
* {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE} may not be used.
*
*
* @param sessionMode indicates which of four possible session modes will be used.
*
* - If this method is called in a Java SE environment or in the Jakarta EE application client container, the permitted
* values are {@code JMSContext.SESSION_TRANSACTED}, {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE},
* {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} and {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}.
*
- If this method is called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container when there is an active JTA transaction in progress
* then this argument is ignored.
*
- If this method is called in the Jakarta EE web or EJB container when there is no active JTA transaction in progress,
* the permitted values are {@code JMSContext.AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE} and {@code JMSContext.DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE}. In this case
* the values {@code JMSContext.TRANSACTED} and {@code JMSContext.CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE} are not permitted.
*
*
* @return a newly created JMSContext
*
* @exception JMSRuntimeException if the Jakarta Messaging provider fails to create the JMSContext due to some internal error.
* @exception JMSSecurityRuntimeException if client authentication fails due to an invalid user name or password.
* @since JMS 2.0
*
* @see JMSContext#SESSION_TRANSACTED
* @see JMSContext#CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE
* @see JMSContext#AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE
* @see JMSContext#DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE
*
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext()
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
* @see jakarta.jms.ConnectionFactory#createContext(java.lang.String, java.lang.String, int)
* @see jakarta.jms.JMSContext#createContext(int)
*/
JMSContext createContext(int sessionMode);
}