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A bundle project producing JAX-RS RI bundles. The primary artifact is an "all-in-one" OSGi-fied JAX-RS RI bundle (jaxrs-ri.jar). Attached to that are two compressed JAX-RS RI archives. The first archive (jaxrs-ri.zip) consists of binary RI bits and contains the API jar (under "api" directory), RI libraries (under "lib" directory) as well as all external RI dependencies (under "ext" directory). The secondary archive (jaxrs-ri-src.zip) contains buildable JAX-RS RI source bundle and contains the API jar (under "api" directory), RI sources (under "src" directory) as well as all external RI dependencies (under "ext" directory). The second archive also contains "build.xml" ANT script that builds the RI sources. To build the JAX-RS RI simply unzip the archive, cd to the created jaxrs-ri directory and invoke "ant" from the command line.

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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2007 The Guava Authors
 *
 * 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 org.glassfish.jersey.internal.guava;

import java.io.Serializable;

/**
 * An abstract base class for implementing the decorator pattern.
 * The {@link #delegate()} method must be overridden to return the instance
 * being decorated.
 * 

*

This class does not forward the {@code hashCode} and {@code equals} * methods through to the backing object, but relies on {@code Object}'s * implementation. This is necessary to preserve the symmetry of {@code equals}. * Custom definitions of equality are usually based on an interface, such as * {@code Set} or {@code List}, so that the implementation of {@code equals} can * cast the object being tested for equality to the custom interface. {@code * ForwardingObject} implements no such custom interfaces directly; they * are implemented only in subclasses. Therefore, forwarding {@code equals} * would break symmetry, as the forwarding object might consider itself equal to * the object being tested, but the reverse could not be true. This behavior is * consistent with the JDK's collection wrappers, such as * {@link java.util.Collections#unmodifiableCollection}. Use an * interface-specific subclass of {@code ForwardingObject}, such as {@link * ForwardingList}, to preserve equality behavior, or override {@code equals} * directly. *

*

The {@code toString} method is forwarded to the delegate. Although this * class does not implement {@link Serializable}, a serializable subclass may be * created since this class has a parameter-less constructor. * * @author Mike Bostock * @since 2.0 (imported from Google Collections Library) */ abstract class ForwardingObject { /** * Constructor for use by subclasses. */ ForwardingObject() { } /** * Returns the backing delegate instance that methods are forwarded to. * Abstract subclasses generally override this method with an abstract method * that has a more specific return type, such as {@link * ForwardingSet#delegate}. Concrete subclasses override this method to supply * the instance being decorated. */ protected abstract Object delegate(); /** * Returns the string representation generated by the delegate's * {@code toString} method. */ @Override public String toString() { return delegate().toString(); } /* No equals or hashCode. See class comments for details. */ }





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