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This artifact provides a single jar that contains all classes required to use remote EJB and JMS, including all dependencies. It is intended for use by those not using maven, maven users should just import the EJB and JMS BOM's instead (shaded JAR's cause lots of problems with maven, as it is very easy to inadvertently end up with different versions on classes on the class path).

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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 com.google.common.collect;

import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.DoNotMock;
import java.util.Map;
import javax.annotation.CheckForNull;

/**
 * A map, each entry of which maps a Java raw type to an
 * instance of that type. In addition to implementing {@code Map}, the additional type-safe
 * operations {@link #putInstance} and {@link #getInstance} are available.
 *
 * 

Like any other {@code Map}, this map may contain entries for primitive types, * and a primitive type and its corresponding wrapper type may map to different values. * *

This class's support for {@code null} requires some explanation: From release 31.0 onward, * Guava specifies the nullness of its types through annotations. In the case of {@code * ClassToInstanceMap}, it specifies that both the key and value types are restricted to * non-nullable types. This specification is reasonable for keys, which must be non-null * classes. This is in contrast to the specification for values: Null values are * supported by the implementation {@link MutableClassToInstanceMap}, even though that * implementation and this interface specify otherwise. Thus, if you use a nullness checker, you can * safely suppress any warnings it produces when you write null values into a {@code * MutableClassToInstanceMap}. Just be sure to be prepared for null values when reading from it, * since nullness checkers will assume that vaules are non-null then, too. * *

See the Guava User Guide article on {@code * ClassToInstanceMap}. * *

To map a generic type to an instance of that type, use {@link * com.google.common.reflect.TypeToInstanceMap} instead. * * @param the common supertype that all entries must share; often this is simply {@link Object} * @author Kevin Bourrillion * @since 2.0 */ @DoNotMock("Use ImmutableClassToInstanceMap or MutableClassToInstanceMap") @GwtCompatible @ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault // If we ever support non-null projections (https://github.com/jspecify/jspecify/issues/86), we // we might annotate this as... // ClassToInstanceMap extends Map, B> // ...and change its methods similarly ( or Class<@Nonnull T>). public interface ClassToInstanceMap extends Map, B> { /** * Returns the value the specified class is mapped to, or {@code null} if no entry for this class * is present. This will only return a value that was bound to this specific class, not a value * that may have been bound to a subtype. */ @CheckForNull T getInstance(Class type); /** * Maps the specified class to the specified value. Does not associate this value with any * of the class's supertypes. * * @return the value previously associated with this class (possibly {@code null}), or {@code * null} if there was no previous entry. */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue @CheckForNull T putInstance(Class type, T value); }