jakarta.el.ELResolver Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (c) 1997, 2019 Oracle and/or its affiliates and others.
* All rights reserved.
* Copyright 2004 The Apache Software Foundation
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package jakarta.el;
import java.beans.FeatureDescriptor;
import java.util.Iterator;
/**
* Enables customization of variable, property, method call, and type conversion resolution behavior for Jakarta
* Expression Language expression evaluation.
*
*
* While evaluating an expression, the ELResolver
associated with the {@link ELContext} is consulted to do
* the initial resolution of the first variable of an expression. It is also consulted when a .
or
* []
operator is encountered.
*
*
* For example, in the Jakarta Expression Language expression ${employee.lastName}
, the
* ELResolver
determines what object employee
refers to, and what it means to get the
* lastName
property on that object.
*
*
* Most methods in this class accept a base
and property
parameter. In the case of variable
* resolution (e.g. determining what employee
refers to in ${employee.lastName}
), the
* base
parameter will be null
and the property
parameter will always be of type
* String
. In this case, if the property
is not a String
, the behavior of the
* ELResolver
is undefined.
*
*
* In the case of property resolution, the base
parameter identifies the base object and the
* property
object identifies the property on that base. For example, in the expression
* ${employee.lastName}
, base
is the result of the variable resolution for
* employee
and property
is the string "lastName"
. In the expression
* ${y[x]}
, base
is the result of the variable resolution for y
and
* property
is the result of the variable resolution for x
.
*
*
* In the case of method call resolution, the base
parameter identifies the base object and the
* method
parameter identifies a method on that base. In the case of overloaded methods, the
* paramTypes
parameter can be optionally used to identify a method. The params
parameter are the
* parameters for the method call, and can also be used for resolving overloaded methods when the
* paramTypes
parameter is not specified.
*
*
* In the case of type conversion resolution, the obj
parameter identifies the source object and the
* targetType
parameter identifies the target type the source to covert to.
*
*
* Though only a single ELResolver
is associated with an ELContext
, there are usually multiple
* resolvers considered for any given variable or property resolution. ELResolver
s are combined together
* using {@link CompositeELResolver}s, to define rich semantics for evaluating an expression.
*
*
*
* For the {@link #getValue}, {@link #getType}, {@link #setValue}, and {@link #isReadOnly} methods, an
* ELResolver
is not responsible for resolving all possible (base, property) pairs. In fact, most resolvers
* will only handle a base
of a single type. To indicate that a resolver has successfully resolved a
* particular (base, property) pair, it must set the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
to true
. If it could not handle the given pair, it must leave this property
* alone. The caller must ignore the return value of the method if propertyResolved
is false
.
*
*
* Similarly, for the {@link #convertToType} method an ELResolver
must set the
* propertyResolved
to true
to indicate that it handles the conversion of the object to the
* target type.
*
*
* The {@link #getFeatureDescriptors} and {@link #getCommonPropertyType} methods are primarily designed for design-time
* tool support, but must handle invocation at runtime as well. The {@link java.beans.Beans#isDesignTime} method can be
* used to determine if the resolver is being consulted at design-time or runtime.
*
* @see CompositeELResolver
* @see ELContext#getELResolver
* @since Jakarta Server Pages 2.1
*/
public abstract class ELResolver {
// --------------------------------------------------------- Constants
/**
* The attribute name of the named attribute in the FeatureDescriptor
that specifies the runtime type of
* the variable or property.
*/
public static final String TYPE = "type";
/**
* The attribute name of the named attribute in the FeatureDescriptor
that specifies whether the variable
* or property can be resolved at runtime.
*/
public static final String RESOLVABLE_AT_DESIGN_TIME = "resolvableAtDesignTime";
/**
* Attempts to resolve the given property
object on the given base
object.
*
*
* If this resolver handles the given (base, property) pair, the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
object must be set to true
by the resolver, before returning. If this property is
* not true
after this method is called, the caller should ignore the return value.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object whose property value is to be returned, or null
to resolve a top-level
* variable.
* @param property The property or variable to be resolved.
*
* @return If the propertyResolved
property of ELContext
was set to true
, then
* the result of the variable or property resolution; otherwise undefined.
*
* @throws NullPointerException if context is null
* @throws PropertyNotFoundException if the given (base, property) pair is handled by this ELResolver
but
* the specified variable or property does not exist or is not readable.
* @throws ELException if an exception was thrown while performing the property or variable resolution. The thrown
* exception must be included as the cause property of this exception, if available.
*/
public abstract Object getValue(ELContext context, Object base, Object property);
/**
* Attempts to resolve and invoke the given method
on the given base
object.
*
*
* If this resolver handles the given (base, method) pair, the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
object must be set to true
by the resolver, before returning. If this property is
* not true
after this method is called, the caller should ignore the return value.
*
*
* A default implementation is provided that returns null so that existing classes that extend ELResolver can continue
* to function.
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The bean on which to invoke the method
* @param method The simple name of the method to invoke. Will be coerced to a String
.
* @param paramTypes An array of Class objects identifying the method's formal parameter types, in declared order. Use
* an empty array if the method has no parameters. Can be null
, in which case the method's formal parameter
* types are assumed to be unknown.
* @param params The parameters to pass to the method, or null
if no parameters.
*
* @return The result of the method invocation (null
if the method has a void
return type).
*
* @throws MethodNotFoundException if no suitable method can be found.
* @throws ELException if an exception was thrown while performing (base, method) resolution. The thrown exception must
* be included as the cause property of this exception, if available. If the exception thrown is an
* InvocationTargetException
, extract its cause
and pass it to the ELException
* constructor.
*
* @since Jakarta Expression Language 2.2
*/
public Object invoke(ELContext context, Object base, Object method, Class>[] paramTypes, Object[] params) {
return null;
}
/**
* For a given base
and property
, attempts to identify the most general type that is
* acceptable for an object to be passed as the value
parameter in a future call to the {@link #setValue}
* method.
*
*
* If this resolver handles the given (base, property) pair, the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
object must be set to true
by the resolver, before returning. If this property is
* not true
after this method is called, the caller should ignore the return value.
*
*
*
* This is not always the same as getValue().getClass()
. For example, in the case of an
* {@link ArrayELResolver}, the getType
method will return the element type of the array, which might be a
* superclass of the type of the actual element that is currently in the specified array element.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object whose property value is to be analyzed, or null
to analyze a top-level
* variable.
* @param property The property or variable to return the acceptable type for.
* @return If the propertyResolved
property of ELContext
was set to true
, then
* the most general acceptable type; otherwise undefined.
* @throws PropertyNotFoundException if the given (base, property) pair is handled by this ELResolver
but
* the specified variable or property does not exist or is not readable.
* @throws ELException if an exception was thrown while performing the property or variable resolution. The thrown
* exception must be included as the cause property of this exception, if available.
*/
public abstract Class> getType(ELContext context, Object base, Object property);
/**
* Attempts to set the value of the given property
object on the given base
object.
*
*
* If this resolver handles the given (base, property) pair, the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
object must be set to true
by the resolver, before returning. If this property is
* not true
after this method is called, the caller can safely assume no value has been set.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object whose property value is to be set, or null
to set a top-level variable.
* @param property The property or variable to be set.
* @param value The value to set the property or variable to.
* @throws NullPointerException if context is null
* @throws PropertyNotFoundException if the given (base, property) pair is handled by this ELResolver
but
* the specified variable or property does not exist.
* @throws PropertyNotWritableException if the given (base, property) pair is handled by this ELResolver
* but the specified variable or property is not writable.
* @throws ELException if an exception was thrown while attempting to set the property or variable. The thrown exception
* must be included as the cause property of this exception, if available.
*/
public abstract void setValue(ELContext context, Object base, Object property, Object value);
/**
* For a given base
and property
, attempts to determine whether a call to {@link #setValue}
* will always fail.
*
*
* If this resolver handles the given (base, property) pair, the propertyResolved
property of the
* ELContext
object must be set to true
by the resolver, before returning. If this property is
* not true
after this method is called, the caller should ignore the return value.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object whose property value is to be analyzed, or null
to analyze a top-level
* variable.
* @param property The property or variable to return the read-only status for.
* @return If the propertyResolved
property of ELContext
was set to true
, then
* true
if the property is read-only or false
if not; otherwise undefined.
* @throws NullPointerException if context is null
* @throws PropertyNotFoundException if the given (base, property) pair is handled by this ELResolver
but
* the specified variable or property does not exist.
* @throws ELException if an exception was thrown while performing the property or variable resolution. The thrown
* exception must be included as the cause property of this exception, if available.
*/
public abstract boolean isReadOnly(ELContext context, Object base, Object property);
/**
* Returns information about the set of variables or properties that can be resolved for the given base
* object. One use for this method is to assist tools in auto-completion.
*
*
* If the base
parameter is null
, the resolver must enumerate the list of top-level variables
* it can resolve.
*
*
*
* The Iterator
returned must contain zero or more instances of {@link java.beans.FeatureDescriptor}, in no
* guaranteed order. In the case of primitive types such as int
, the value null
must be
* returned. This is to prevent the useless iteration through all possible primitive values. A return value of
* null
indicates that this resolver does not handle the given base
object or that the results
* are too complex to represent with this method and the {@link #getCommonPropertyType} method should be used instead.
*
*
*
* Each FeatureDescriptor
will contain information about a single variable or property. In addition to the
* standard properties, the FeatureDescriptor
must have two named attributes (as set by the
* setValue
method):
*
* - {@link #TYPE} - The value of this named attribute must be an instance of
java.lang.Class
and specify
* the runtime type of the variable or property.
* - {@link #RESOLVABLE_AT_DESIGN_TIME} - The value of this named attribute must be an instance of
*
java.lang.Boolean
and indicates whether it is safe to attempt to resolve this property at design-time.
* For instance, it may be unsafe to attempt a resolution at design time if the ELResolver
needs access to
* a resource that is only available at runtime and no acceptable simulated value can be provided.
*
*
*
* The caller should be aware that the Iterator
returned might iterate through a very large or even
* infinitely large set of properties. Care should be taken by the caller to not get stuck in an infinite loop.
*
*
* This is a "best-effort" list. Not all ELResolver
s will return completely accurate results, but all must
* be callable at both design-time and runtime (i.e. whether or not Beans.isDesignTime()
returns
* true
), without causing errors.
*
*
* The propertyResolved
property of the ELContext
is not relevant to this method. The results
* of all ELResolver
s are concatenated in the case of composite resolvers.
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object whose set of valid properties is to be enumerated, or null
to enumerate the
* set of top-level variables that this resolver can evaluate.
* @return An Iterator
containing zero or more (possibly infinitely more) FeatureDescriptor
* objects, or null
if this resolver does not handle the given base
object or that the results
* are too complex to represent with this method
* @see java.beans.FeatureDescriptor
*/
public abstract Iterator getFeatureDescriptors(ELContext context, Object base);
/**
* Returns the most general type that this resolver accepts for the property
argument, given a
* base
object. One use for this method is to assist tools in auto-completion.
*
*
* This assists tools in auto-completion and also provides a way to express that the resolver accepts a primitive value,
* such as an integer index into an array. For example, the {@link ArrayELResolver} will accept any int
as
* a property
, so the return value would be Integer.class
.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param base The base object to return the most general property type for, or null
to enumerate the set
* of top-level variables that this resolver can evaluate.
* @return null
if this ELResolver
does not know how to handle the given base
* object; otherwise Object.class
if any type of property
is accepted; otherwise the most
* general property
type accepted for the given base
.
*/
public abstract Class> getCommonPropertyType(ELContext context, Object base);
/**
* Converts an object to a specific type.
*
*
* An ELException
is thrown if an error occurs during the conversion.
*
*
* @param context The context of this evaluation.
* @param obj The object to convert.
* @param targetType The target type for the conversion.
* @return object converted to targetType
* @throws ELException thrown if errors occur.
*/
public Object convertToType(ELContext context, Object obj, Class> targetType) {
return null;
}
}