Hello,
I want to bring this question again.
Why do we change NamingEntry type from REFERENCE to ENTRY? I think that each
lookup must return a new instance. But in this case, it returns the same bound
object instance.
Let's says that we have a Servlet
MyServlet{
........
private @Resource(name="MyResource") myResource;
.......
public blabla(){
new InitialContext().lookup("myResource");
}
}
myResource has injected by the container before @PostConstruct is called. After
that I would like to get a new resource object in blabla() method. It returns
the same injected resource instance instead of creating a new resource.
I think that it must return a different instance from "myResource". JNDI tree
of
the Servlet contains "MyResource/ResourceRef" binding. Therefore each lookup to
"MyResource" must return a "ResourceRef". Becuase it is a reference, context
must call NamingManager.getObjectInstance again to create a new instance.
If this is a bug, I will open an issue.
Thanks;
--Gurkan
----- Original Message ----
From: Gurkan Erdogdu <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tue, September 21, 2010 6:30:43 PM
Subject: NamingContext Possible Bug
Hello folks,
In NamingContext implementation, if "lookup()" is a Reference, current
implementation caches the result of the NamingManager # getObjectInstance via
following statements and changes the type of the entry. In the following
lookups, same object is returned. I would like to write ObjectFactory that
returns new instance for each time lookup is called on its reference. But with
the current implementation, it is not possible to write such an object factory
because of aferomentioned sitaution. I think that entry must be stay as
Reference instead of changing entry type.
WDYT?
NamingContext class:
protected Object lookup(Name name, boolean resolveLinks)
throws NamingException {
.....
} else if (entry.type == NamingEntry.REFERENCE) {
try {
Object obj = NamingManager.getObjectInstance
(entry.value, name, this, env);
if (obj != null) {
entry.value = obj;
entry.type = NamingEntry.ENTRY; ---> CHANGES type of
the naming entry
}
return obj;
} catch (NamingException e) {
throw e;
} catch (Exception e) {
log.warn(sm.getString
("namingContext.failResolvingReference"), e);
throw new NamingException(e.getMessage());
}
}
...........
}
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