org.springframework.mock.jndi.SimpleNamingContextBuilder Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2002-2005 the original author or 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.springframework.mock.jndi;
import java.util.Hashtable;
import javax.naming.Context;
import javax.naming.NamingException;
import javax.naming.spi.InitialContextFactory;
import javax.naming.spi.InitialContextFactoryBuilder;
import javax.naming.spi.NamingManager;
import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
/**
* Simple implementation of a JNDI naming context builder.
*
* Mainly targeted at test environments, where each test case can
* configure JNDI appropriately, so that new InitialContext()
* will expose the required objects. Also usable for standalone applications,
* e.g. for binding a JDBC DataSource to a well-known JNDI location, to be
* able to use traditional J2EE data access code outside of a J2EE container.
*
*
There are various choices for DataSource implementations:
*
* - SingleConnectionDataSource (using the same Connection for all getConnection calls);
*
- DriverManagerDataSource (creating a new Connection on each getConnection call);
*
- Apache's Jakarta Commons DBCP offers BasicDataSource (a real pool).
*
*
* Typical usage in bootstrap code:
*
*
* SimpleNamingContextBuilder builder = new SimpleNamingContextBuilder();
* DataSource ds = new DriverManagerDataSource(...);
* builder.bind("java:comp/env/jdbc/myds", ds);
* builder.activate();
*
* Note that it's impossible to activate multiple builders within the same JVM,
* due to JNDI restrictions. Thus to configure a fresh builder repeatedly, use
* the following code to get a reference to either an already activated builder
* or a newly activated one:
*
*
* SimpleNamingContextBuilder builder = SimpleNamingContextBuilder.emptyActivatedContextBuilder();
* DataSource ds = new DriverManagerDataSource(...);
* builder.bind("java:comp/env/jdbc/myds", ds);
*
* Note that you should not call activate() on a builder from this
* factory method, as there will already be an activated one in any case.
*
* An instance of this class is only necessary at setup time.
* An application does not need to keep a reference to it after activation.
*
* @author Juergen Hoeller
* @author Rod Johnson
* @see #emptyActivatedContextBuilder()
* @see #bind(String, Object)
* @see #activate()
* @see org.springframework.mock.jndi.SimpleNamingContext
* @see org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.SingleConnectionDataSource
* @see org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource
* @see org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource
*/
public class SimpleNamingContextBuilder implements InitialContextFactoryBuilder {
/** An instance of this class bound to JNDI */
private static SimpleNamingContextBuilder activated;
/**
* Checks if a SimpleNamingContextBuilder is active.
* @return the current SimpleNamingContextBuilder instance,
* or null
if none
*/
public static SimpleNamingContextBuilder getCurrentContextBuilder() {
return activated;
}
/**
* If no SimpleNamingContextBuilder is already configuring JNDI,
* create and activate one. Otherwise take the existing activate
* SimpleNamingContextBuilder, clear it and return it.
*
This is mainly intended for test suites that want to
* reinitialize JNDI bindings from scratch repeatedly.
* @return an empty SimpleNamingContextBuilder that can be used
* to control JNDI bindings
*/
public static SimpleNamingContextBuilder emptyActivatedContextBuilder() throws NamingException {
if (activated != null) {
// Clear already activated context builder.
activated.clear();
}
else {
// Create and activate new context builder.
SimpleNamingContextBuilder builder = new SimpleNamingContextBuilder();
// The activate() call will cause an assigment to the activated variable.
builder.activate();
}
return activated;
}
private final Log logger = LogFactory.getLog(getClass());
private final Hashtable boundObjects = new Hashtable();
/**
* Register the context builder by registering it with the JNDI NamingManager.
* Note that once this has been done, new InitialContext()
will always
* return a context from this factory. Use the emptyActivatedContextBuilder()
* static method to get an empty context (for example, in test methods).
* @throws IllegalStateException if there's already a naming context builder
* registered with the JNDI NamingManager
*/
public void activate() throws IllegalStateException, NamingException {
logger.info("Activating simple JNDI environment");
if (NamingManager.hasInitialContextFactoryBuilder()) {
throw new IllegalStateException(
"Cannot activate SimpleNamingContextBuilder: there is already a JNDI provider registered. " +
"Note that JNDI is a JVM-wide service, shared at the JVM system class loader level, " +
"with no reset option. As a consequence, a JNDI provider must only be registered once per JVM.");
}
NamingManager.setInitialContextFactoryBuilder(this);
activated = this;
}
/**
* Clear all bindings in this context builder.
*/
public void clear() {
this.boundObjects.clear();
}
/**
* Bind the given object under the given name, for all naming contexts
* that this context builder will generate.
* @param name the JNDI name of the object (e.g. "java:comp/env/jdbc/myds")
* @param obj the object to bind (e.g. a DataSource implementation)
*/
public void bind(String name, Object obj) {
if (logger.isInfoEnabled()) {
logger.info("Static JNDI binding: [" + name + "] = [" + obj + "]");
}
this.boundObjects.put(name, obj);
}
/**
* Simple InitialContextFactoryBuilder implementation,
* creating a new SimpleNamingContext instance.
* @see SimpleNamingContext
*/
public InitialContextFactory createInitialContextFactory(Hashtable environment) {
return new InitialContextFactory() {
public Context getInitialContext(Hashtable environment) {
return new SimpleNamingContext("", boundObjects, environment);
}
};
}
}