| JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.5.0 
 
javax.naming
Interface Context
All Known Subinterfaces: DirContext, EventContext, EventDirContext, LdapContext 
All Known Implementing Classes: InitialContext, InitialDirContext, InitialLdapContext 
 
public interface Context 
This interface represents a naming context, which
 consists of a set of name-to-object bindings.
 It contains methods for examining and updating these bindings.
  
  NamesEach name passed as an argument to a Context method is relative
 to that context.  The empty name is used to name the context itself.
 A name parameter may never be null.
 Most of the methods have overloaded versions with one taking a
 Nameparameter and one taking aString.
 These overloaded versions are equivalent in that if
 theNameandStringparameters are just
 different representations of the same name, then the overloaded
 versions of the same methods behave the same.
 In the method descriptions below, only one version is fully documented.
 The second version instead has a link to the first:  the same
 documentation applies to both. 
 For systems that support federation, String name arguments to
 Context methods are composite names. Name arguments that are
 instances of CompositeName are treated as composite names,
 while Name arguments that are not instances of
 CompositeName are treated as compound names (which might be
 instances of CompoundName or other implementations of compound
 names). This allows the results of NameParser.parse() to be used as
 arguments to the Context methods.
 Prior to JNDI 1.2, all name arguments were treated as composite names.
 
 Furthermore, for systems that support federation, all names returned
 in a NamingEnumeration
 from list() and listBindings() are composite names
 represented as strings.
 See CompositeName for the string syntax of names.
 
 For systems that do not support federation, the name arguments (in
 either Name or String forms) and the names returned in
 NamingEnumeration may be names in their own namespace rather than
 names in a composite namespace, at the discretion of the service
 provider.
 
 ExceptionsAll the methods in this interface can throw a NamingException or
 any of its subclasses. See NamingException and their subclasses
 for details on each exception.
 Concurrent AccessA Context instance is not guaranteed to be synchronized against
 concurrent access by multiple threads.  Threads that need to access
 a single Context instance concurrently should synchronize amongst
 themselves and provide the necessary locking.  Multiple threads
 each manipulating a different Context instance need not
 synchronize.  Note that thelookupmethod, when passed an empty name, will return a new Context instance
 representing the same naming context.
 For purposes of concurrency control,
 a Context operation that returns a NamingEnumeration is
 not considered to have completed while the enumeration is still in
 use, or while any referrals generated by that operation are still
 being followed.
 
 ParametersA Name parameter passed to any method of the
 Context interface or one of its subinterfaces
 will not be modified by the service provider.
 The service provider may keep a reference to it
 for the duration of the operation, including any enumeration of the
 method's results and the processing of any referrals generated.
 The caller should not modify the object during this time.
 A Name returned by any such method is owned by the caller.
 The caller may subsequently modify it; the service provider may not.
 Environment Properties
 JNDI applications need a way to communicate various preferences
 and properties that define the environment in which naming and
 directory services are accessed. For example, a context might
 require specification of security credentials in order to access
 the service. Another context might require that server configuration
 information be supplied. These are referred to as the environment
 of a context. The Context interface provides methods for
 retrieving and updating this environment.
 
 The environment is inherited from the parent context as
 context methods proceed from one context to the next. Changes to
 the environment of one context do not directly affect those
 of other contexts.
 
 It is implementation-dependent when environment properties are used
 and/or verified for validity.  For example, some of the
 security-related properties are used by service providers to "log in"
 to the directory.  This login process might occur at the time the
 context is created, or the first time a method is invoked on the
 context.  When, and whether this occurs at all, is
 implementation-dependent.  When environment properties are added or
 removed from the context, verifying the validity of the changes is again
 implementation-dependent. For example, verification of some properties
 might occur at the time the change is made, or at the time the next
 operation is performed on the context, or not at all.
 
 Any object with a reference to a context may examine that context's
 environment.  Sensitive information such as clear-text
 passwords should not be stored there unless the implementation is
 known to protect it.
 
 Resource Files
 To simplify the task of setting up the environment
 required by a JNDI application,
 application components and service providers may be distributed
 along with resource files.
 A JNDI resource file is a file in the properties file format (see
 java.util.Properties),
 containing a list of key/value pairs.
 The key is the name of the property (e.g. "java.naming.factory.object")
 and the value is a string in the format defined
 for that property.  Here is an example of a JNDI resource file: The JNDI class library reads the resource files and makes the property
 values freely available.  Thus JNDI resource files should be considered
 to be "world readable", and sensitive information such as clear-text
 passwords should not be stored there.
 java.naming.factory.object=com.sun.jndi.ldap.AttrsToCorba:com.wiz.from.Person
 java.naming.factory.state=com.sun.jndi.ldap.CorbaToAttrs:com.wiz.from.Person
 java.naming.factory.control=com.sun.jndi.ldap.ResponseControlFactory
 
 
 There are two kinds of JNDI resource files:
 provider and application.
  Provider Resource FilesEach service provider has an optional resource that lists properties
 specific to that provider.  The name of this resource is:
 [prefix/]jndiprovider.properties
 where prefix is
 the package name of the provider's context implementation(s),
 with each period (".") converted to a slash ("/").
 For example, suppose a service provider defines a context
 implementation with class name com.sun.jndi.ldap.LdapCtx.
 The provider resource for this provider is named
 com/sun/jndi/ldap/jndiprovider.properties.  If the class is
 not in a package, the resource's name is simply
 jndiprovider.properties. 
 
 Certain methods in the JNDI class library make use of the standard
 JNDI properties that specify lists of JNDI factories:
  
 The JNDI library will consult the provider resource file
 when determining the values of these properties.
 Properties other than these may be set in the provider
 resource file at the discretion of the service provider.
 The service provider's documentation should clearly state which
 properties are allowed; other properties in the file will be ignored.java.naming.factory.object
 java.naming.factory.state
 java.naming.factory.control
 java.naming.factory.url.pkgs
  Application Resource FilesWhen an application is deployed, it will generally have several
 codebase directories and JARs in its classpath.  Similarly, when an
 applet is deployed, it will have a codebase and archives specifying
 where to find the applet's classes.  JNDI locates (usingClassLoader.getResources())
 all application resource files named jndi.properties
 in the classpath.
 In addition, if the file java.home/lib/jndi.properties
 exists and is readable,
 JNDI treats it as an additional application resource file.
 (java.home indicates the
 directory named by the java.home system property.)
 All of the properties contained in these files are placed
 into the environment of the initial context.  This environment
 is then inherited by other contexts.
 For each property found in more than one application resource file,
 JNDI uses the first value found or, in a few cases where it makes
 sense to do so, it concatenates all of the values (details are given
 below).
 For example, if the "java.naming.factory.object" property is found in
 three jndi.properties resource files, the
 list of object factories is a concatenation of the property
 values from all three files.
 Using this scheme, each deployable component is responsible for
 listing the factories that it exports.  JNDI automatically
 collects and uses all of these export lists when searching for factory
 classes.
  
 Application resource files are available beginning with the Java 2
 Platform, except that the file in
 java.home/lib may be used on earlier Java platforms as well.
  Search Algorithm for PropertiesWhen JNDI constructs an initial context, the context's environment
 is initialized with properties defined in the environment parameter
 passed to the constructor, the system properties, the applet parameters,
 and the application resource files.  See
 InitialContext
 for details.
 This initial environment is then inherited by other context instances.
 When the JNDI class library needs to determine
 the value of a property, it does so by merging
 the values from the following two sources, in order:
  
 For each property found in both of these two sources,
 JNDI determines the property's value as follows.  If the property is
 one of the standard JNDI properties that specify a list of JNDI
 factories (listed above), the values are
 concatenated into a single colon-separated list.  For other
 properties, only the first value found is used.The environment of the context being operated on.
 The provider resource file (jndiprovider.properties)
 for the context being operated on.
  
 When a service provider needs to determine the value of a property,
 it will generally take that value directly from the environment.
 A service provider may define provider-specific properties
 to be placed in its own provider resource file.  In that
 case it should merge values as described in the previous paragraph.
  
 In this way, each service provider developer can specify a list of
 factories to use with that service provider. These can be modified by
 the application resources specified by the deployer of the application
 or applet, which in turn can be modified by the user.
 
 
 
Since:1.3 
 
 
| Field Summary |  
| static String | APPLETConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying an applet for the initial context constructor to use
 when searching for other properties.
 |  
| static String | AUTHORITATIVEConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the authoritativeness of the service requested.
 |  
| static String | BATCHSIZEConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the batch size to use when returning data via the
 service's protocol.
 |  
| static String | DNS_URLConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the DNS host and domain names to use for the
 JNDI URL context (for example, "dns://somehost/wiz.com").
 |  
| static String | INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORYConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the initial context factory to use.
 |  
| static String | LANGUAGEConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the preferred language to use with the service.
 |  
| static String | OBJECT_FACTORIESConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of object factories to use.
 |  
| static String | PROVIDER_URLConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying configuration information for the service provider
 to use.
 |  
| static String | REFERRALConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying how referrals encountered by the service provider
 are to be processed.
 |  
| static String | SECURITY_AUTHENTICATIONConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the security level to use.
 |  
| static String | SECURITY_CREDENTIALSConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the credentials of the principal for authenticating
 the caller to the service.
 |  
| static String | SECURITY_PRINCIPALConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the identity of the principal for authenticating
 the caller to the service.
 |  
| static String | SECURITY_PROTOCOLConstant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the security protocol to use.
 |  
| static String | STATE_FACTORIESConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of state factories to use.
 |  
| static String | URL_PKG_PREFIXESConstant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of package prefixes to use when
 loading in URL context factories.
 |  
| Method Summary |  
|  Object | addToEnvironment(String propName,
                 Object propVal)Adds a new environment property to the environment of this
 context.
 |  
|  void | bind(Name name,
     Object obj)Binds a name to an object.
 |  
|  void | bind(String name,
     Object obj)Binds a name to an object.
 |  
|  void | close()Closes this context.
 |  
|  Name | composeName(Name name,
            Name prefix)Composes the name of this context with a name relative to
 this context.
 |  
|  String | composeName(String name,
            String prefix)Composes the name of this context with a name relative to
 this context.
 |  
|  Context | createSubcontext(Name name)Creates and binds a new context.
 |  
|  Context | createSubcontext(String name)Creates and binds a new context.
 |  
|  void | destroySubcontext(Name name)Destroys the named context and removes it from the namespace.
 |  
|  void | destroySubcontext(String name)Destroys the named context and removes it from the namespace.
 |  
|  Hashtable<?,?> | getEnvironment()Retrieves the environment in effect for this context.
 |  
|  String | getNameInNamespace()Retrieves the full name of this context within its own namespace.
 |  
|  NameParser | getNameParser(Name name)Retrieves the parser associated with the named context.
 |  
|  NameParser | getNameParser(String name)Retrieves the parser associated with the named context.
 |  
|  NamingEnumeration<NameClassPair> | list(Name name)Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 class names of objects bound to them.
 |  
|  NamingEnumeration<NameClassPair> | list(String name)Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 class names of objects bound to them.
 |  
|  NamingEnumeration<Binding> | listBindings(Name name)Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 objects bound to them.
 |  
|  NamingEnumeration<Binding> | listBindings(String name)Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 objects bound to them.
 |  
|  Object | lookup(Name name)Retrieves the named object.
 |  
|  Object | lookup(String name)Retrieves the named object.
 |  
|  Object | lookupLink(Name name)Retrieves the named object, following links except
 for the terminal atomic component of the name.
 |  
|  Object | lookupLink(String name)Retrieves the named object, following links except
 for the terminal atomic component of the name.
 |  
|  void | rebind(Name name,
       Object obj)Binds a name to an object, overwriting any existing binding.
 |  
|  void | rebind(String name,
       Object obj)Binds a name to an object, overwriting any existing binding.
 |  
|  Object | removeFromEnvironment(String propName)Removes an environment property from the environment of this
 context.
 |  
|  void | rename(Name oldName,
       Name newName)Binds a new name to the object bound to an old name, and unbinds
 the old name.
 |  
|  void | rename(String oldName,
       String newName)Binds a new name to the object bound to an old name, and unbinds
 the old name.
 |  
|  void | unbind(Name name)Unbinds the named object.
 |  
|  void | unbind(String name)Unbinds the named object.
 |  
 
INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY
static final String INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the initial context factory to use. The value
 of the property should be the fully qualified class name
 of the factory class that will create an initial context.
 This property may be specified in the environment parameter
 passed to the initial context constructor, an applet parameter,
 a system property, or an application resource file.
 If it is not specified in any of these sources,
 NoInitialContextException is thrown when an initial
 context is required to complete an operation.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.factory.initial".
 
 
See Also:InitialContext,InitialDirContext,NamingManager.getInitialContext(java.util.Hashtable, ?>),InitialContextFactory,NoInitialContextException,addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),APPLET, 
Constant Field Values 
 
OBJECT_FACTORIES
static final String OBJECT_FACTORIES 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of object factories to use. The value
 of the property should be a colon-separated list of the fully
 qualified class names of factory classes that will create an object
 given information about the object.
 This property may be specified in the environment, an applet
 parameter, a system property, or one or more resource files.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.factory.object".
 
 
See Also:NamingManager.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable, ?>),ObjectFactory,addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),APPLET, 
Constant Field Values 
 
STATE_FACTORIES
static final String STATE_FACTORIES 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of state factories to use. The value
 of the property should be a colon-separated list of the fully
 qualified class names of state factory classes that will be used
 to get an object's state given the object itself.
 This property may be specified in the environment, an applet
 parameter, a system property, or one or more resource files.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.factory.state".
 
 
Since:1.3See Also:NamingManager.getStateToBind(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable, ?>),StateFactory,addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),APPLET, 
Constant Field Values 
 
URL_PKG_PREFIXES
static final String URL_PKG_PREFIXES 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the list of package prefixes to use when
 loading in URL context factories. The value
 of the property should be a colon-separated list of package
 prefixes for the class name of the factory class that will create
 a URL context factory.
 This property may be specified in the environment,
 an applet parameter, a system property, or one or more
 resource files.
 The prefix com.sun.jndi.url is always appended to
 the possibly empty list of package prefixes.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.factory.url.pkgs".
 
 
See Also:NamingManager.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable, ?>),NamingManager.getURLContext(java.lang.String, java.util.Hashtable, ?>),ObjectFactory,addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),APPLET, 
Constant Field Values 
 
PROVIDER_URL
static final String PROVIDER_URL 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying configuration information for the service provider
 to use. The value of the property should contain a URL string
 (e.g. "ldap://somehost:389").
 This property may be specified in the environment,
 an applet parameter, a system property, or a resource file.
 If it is not specified in any of these sources,
 the default configuration is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.provider.url".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),APPLET, 
Constant Field Values 
 
DNS_URL
static final String DNS_URL 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property
 for specifying the DNS host and domain names to use for the
 JNDI URL context (for example, "dns://somehost/wiz.com").
 This property may be specified in the environment,
 an applet parameter, a system property, or a resource file.
 If it is not specified in any of these sources
 and the program attempts to use a JNDI URL containing a DNS name,
 a ConfigurationException will be thrown.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.dns.url".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
AUTHORITATIVE
static final String AUTHORITATIVE 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the authoritativeness of the service requested.
 If the value of the property is the string "true", it means
 that the access is to the most authoritative source (i.e. bypass
 any cache or replicas). If the value is anything else,
 the source need not be (but may be) authoritative.
 If unspecified, the value defaults to "false".
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.authoritative".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
BATCHSIZE
static final String BATCHSIZE 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the batch size to use when returning data via the
 service's protocol. This is a hint to the provider to return
 the results of operations in batches of the specified size, so
 the provider can optimize its performance and usage of resources.
 The value of the property is the string representation of an
 integer.
 If unspecified, the batch size is determined by the service
 provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.batchsize".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
REFERRAL
static final String REFERRAL 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying how referrals encountered by the service provider
 are to be processed. The value of the property is one of the
 following strings:
 
 If this property is not specified, the default is
 determined by the provider."follow"
 follow referrals automatically
 "ignore"
 ignore referrals
 "throw"
 throw ReferralException when a referral is encountered.
   The value of this constant is "java.naming.referral".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
SECURITY_PROTOCOL
static final String SECURITY_PROTOCOL 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the security protocol to use.
 Its value is a string determined by the service provider
 (e.g. "ssl").
 If this property is unspecified,
 the behaviour is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.security.protocol".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION
static final String SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the security level to use.
 Its value is one of the following strings:
 "none", "simple", "strong".
 If this property is unspecified,
 the behaviour is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.security.authentication".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
SECURITY_PRINCIPAL
static final String SECURITY_PRINCIPAL 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the identity of the principal for authenticating
 the caller to the service. The format of the principal
 depends on the authentication scheme.
 If this property is unspecified,
 the behaviour is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.security.principal".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
SECURITY_CREDENTIALS
static final String SECURITY_CREDENTIALS 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the credentials of the principal for authenticating
 the caller to the service. The value of the property depends
 on the authentication scheme. For example, it could be a hashed
 password, clear-text password, key, certificate, and so on.
 If this property is unspecified,
 the behaviour is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.security.credentials".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
LANGUAGE
static final String LANGUAGE 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying the preferred language to use with the service.
 The value of the property is a colon-separated list of language
 tags as defined in RFC 1766.
 If this property is unspecified,
 the language preference is determined by the service provider.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.language".
 
 
See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String), 
Constant Field Values 
 
APPLET
static final String APPLET 
Constant that holds the name of the environment property for
 specifying an applet for the initial context constructor to use
 when searching for other properties.
 The value of this property is the
 java.applet.Applet instance that is being executed.
 This property may be specified in the environment parameter
 passed to the initial context constructor.
 When this property is set, each property that the initial context
 constructor looks for in the system properties is first looked for
 in the applet's parameter list.
 If this property is unspecified, the initial context constructor
 will search for properties only in the environment parameter
 passed to it, the system properties, and application resource files.
  The value of this constant is "java.naming.applet".
 
 
Since:1.3See Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String),InitialContext, 
Constant Field Values 
lookup
Object lookup(Name name)
              throws NamingException
Retrieves the named object.
 If name is empty, returns a new instance of this context
 (which represents the same naming context as this context, but its
 environment may be modified independently and it may be accessed
 concurrently).
 
Parameters:name- the name of the object to look upReturns:the object bound to name
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:lookup(String),lookupLink(Name) 
 
lookup
Object lookup(String name)
              throws NamingException
Retrieves the named object.
 See lookup(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the object to look upReturns:the object bound to name
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
bind
void bind(Name name,
          Object obj)
          throws NamingException
Binds a name to an object.
 All intermediate contexts and the target context (that named by all
 but terminal atomic component of the name) must already exist.
 
Parameters:name- the name to bind; may not be emptyobj- the object to bind; possibly nullThrows:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if name is already boundInvalidAttributesException- if object did not supply all mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:bind(String, Object),rebind(Name, Object),DirContext.bind(Name, Object,
		javax.naming.directory.Attributes) 
 
bind
void bind(String name,
          Object obj)
          throws NamingException
Binds a name to an object.
 See bind(Name, Object)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name to bind; may not be emptyobj- the object to bind; possibly nullThrows:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if name is already boundInvalidAttributesException- if object did not supply all mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
rebind
void rebind(Name name,
            Object obj)
            throws NamingException
Binds a name to an object, overwriting any existing binding.
 All intermediate contexts and the target context (that named by all
 but terminal atomic component of the name) must already exist.
  If the object is a DirContext, any existing attributes
 associated with the name are replaced with those of the object.
 Otherwise, any existing attributes associated with the name remain
 unchanged.
 
 
Parameters:name- the name to bind; may not be emptyobj- the object to bind; possibly nullThrows:
InvalidAttributesException- if object did not supply all mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:rebind(String, Object),bind(Name, Object),DirContext.rebind(Name, Object,
		javax.naming.directory.Attributes),DirContext 
 
rebind
void rebind(String name,
            Object obj)
            throws NamingException
Binds a name to an object, overwriting any existing binding.
 See rebind(Name, Object)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name to bind; may not be emptyobj- the object to bind; possibly nullThrows:
InvalidAttributesException- if object did not supply all mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
unbind
void unbind(Name name)
            throws NamingException
Unbinds the named object.
 Removes the terminal atomic name in namefrom the target context--that named by all but the terminal
 atomic part ofname. This method is idempotent.
 It succeeds even if the terminal atomic name
 is not bound in the target context, but throws
 NameNotFoundException
 if any of the intermediate contexts do not exist.
   Any attributes associated with the name are removed.
 Intermediate contexts are not changed.
 
 
Parameters:name- the name to unbind; may not be emptyThrows:
NameNotFoundException- if an intermediate context does not existNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:unbind(String) 
 
unbind
void unbind(String name)
            throws NamingException
Unbinds the named object.
 See unbind(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name to unbind; may not be emptyThrows:
NameNotFoundException- if an intermediate context does not existNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
rename
void rename(Name oldName,
            Name newName)
            throws NamingException
Binds a new name to the object bound to an old name, and unbinds
 the old name.  Both names are relative to this context.
 Any attributes associated with the old name become associated
 with the new name.
 Intermediate contexts of the old name are not changed.
 
Parameters:oldName- the name of the existing binding; may not be emptynewName- the name of the new binding; may not be emptyThrows:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if newName is already boundNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:rename(String, String),bind(Name, Object),rebind(Name, Object) 
 
rename
void rename(String oldName,
            String newName)
            throws NamingException
Binds a new name to the object bound to an old name, and unbinds
 the old name.
 See rename(Name, Name)for details.
 
Parameters:oldName- the name of the existing binding; may not be emptynewName- the name of the new binding; may not be emptyThrows:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if newName is already boundNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
list
NamingEnumeration<NameClassPair> list(Name name)
                                      throws NamingException
Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 class names of objects bound to them.
 The contents of any subcontexts are not included.
  If a binding is added to or removed from this context,
 its effect on an enumeration previously returned is undefined.
 
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to listReturns:an enumeration of the names and class names of the
                bindings in this context.  Each element of the
                enumeration is of type NameClassPair.
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:list(String),listBindings(Name),NameClassPair 
 
list
NamingEnumeration<NameClassPair> list(String name)
                                      throws NamingException
Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 class names of objects bound to them.
 See list(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to listReturns:an enumeration of the names and class names of the
                bindings in this context.  Each element of the
                enumeration is of type NameClassPair.
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
listBindings
NamingEnumeration<Binding> listBindings(Name name)
                                        throws NamingException
Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 objects bound to them.
 The contents of any subcontexts are not included.
  If a binding is added to or removed from this context,
 its effect on an enumeration previously returned is undefined.
 
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to listReturns:an enumeration of the bindings in this context.
                Each element of the enumeration is of type
                Binding.
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:listBindings(String),list(Name),Binding 
 
listBindings
NamingEnumeration<Binding> listBindings(String name)
                                        throws NamingException
Enumerates the names bound in the named context, along with the
 objects bound to them.
 See listBindings(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to listReturns:an enumeration of the bindings in this context.
                Each element of the enumeration is of type
                Binding.
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
destroySubcontext
void destroySubcontext(Name name)
                       throws NamingException
Destroys the named context and removes it from the namespace.
 Any attributes associated with the name are also removed.
 Intermediate contexts are not destroyed.
  This method is idempotent.
 It succeeds even if the terminal atomic name
 is not bound in the target context, but throws
 NameNotFoundException
 if any of the intermediate contexts do not exist.
   In a federated naming system, a context from one naming system
 may be bound to a name in another.  One can subsequently
 look up and perform operations on the foreign context using a
 composite name.  However, an attempt destroy the context using
 this composite name will fail with
 NotContextException, because the foreign context is not
 a "subcontext" of the context in which it is bound.
 Instead, use unbind() to remove the
 binding of the foreign context.  Destroying the foreign context
 requires that the destroySubcontext() be performed
 on a context from the foreign context's "native" naming system.
 
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to be destroyed; may not be emptyThrows:
NameNotFoundException- if an intermediate context does not existNotContextException- if the name is bound but does not name a
                context, or does not name a context of the appropriate typeContextNotEmptyException- if the named context is not emptyNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:destroySubcontext(String) 
 
destroySubcontext
void destroySubcontext(String name)
                       throws NamingException
Destroys the named context and removes it from the namespace.
 See destroySubcontext(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to be destroyed; may not be emptyThrows:
NameNotFoundException- if an intermediate context does not existNotContextException- if the name is bound but does not name a
                context, or does not name a context of the appropriate typeContextNotEmptyException- if the named context is not emptyNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
createSubcontext
Context createSubcontext(Name name)
                         throws NamingException
Creates and binds a new context.
 Creates a new context with the given name and binds it in
 the target context (that named by all but terminal atomic
 component of the name).  All intermediate contexts and the
 target context must already exist.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to create; may not be emptyReturns:the newly created context
Throws:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if name is already boundInvalidAttributesException- if creation of the subcontext requires specification of
                mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:createSubcontext(String),DirContext.createSubcontext(javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.directory.Attributes) 
 
createSubcontext
Context createSubcontext(String name)
                         throws NamingException
Creates and binds a new context.
 See createSubcontext(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context to create; may not be emptyReturns:the newly created context
Throws:
NameAlreadyBoundException- if name is already boundInvalidAttributesException- if creation of the subcontext requires specification of
                mandatory attributesNamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
lookupLink
Object lookupLink(Name name)
                  throws NamingException
Retrieves the named object, following links except
 for the terminal atomic component of the name.
 If the object bound to name is not a link,
 returns the object itself.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the object to look upReturns:the object bound to name, not following the
                terminal link (if any).
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:lookupLink(String) 
 
lookupLink
Object lookupLink(String name)
                  throws NamingException
Retrieves the named object, following links except
 for the terminal atomic component of the name.
 See lookupLink(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the object to look upReturns:the object bound to name, not following the
                terminal link (if any)
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
getNameParser
NameParser getNameParser(Name name)
                         throws NamingException
Retrieves the parser associated with the named context.
 In a federation of namespaces, different naming systems will
 parse names differently.  This method allows an application
 to get a parser for parsing names into their atomic components
 using the naming convention of a particular naming system.
 Within any single naming system, NameParser objects
 returned by this method must be equal (using the equals()
 test).
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context from which to get the parserReturns:a name parser that can parse compound names into their atomic
                components
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:getNameParser(String),CompoundName 
 
getNameParser
NameParser getNameParser(String name)
                         throws NamingException
Retrieves the parser associated with the named context.
 See getNameParser(Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- the name of the context from which to get the parserReturns:a name parser that can parse compound names into their atomic
                components
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
composeName
Name composeName(Name name,
                 Name prefix)
                 throws NamingException
Composes the name of this context with a name relative to
 this context.
 Given a name (name) relative to this context, and
 the name (prefix) of this context relative to one
 of its ancestors, this method returns the composition of the
 two names using the syntax appropriate for the naming
 system(s) involved.  That is, ifnamenames an
 object relative to this context, the result is the name of the
 same object, but relative to the ancestor context.  None of the
 names may be null.
 For example, if this context is named "wiz.com" relative
 to the initial context, then
  
        composeName("east", "wiz.com")  might return"east.wiz.com".
 If instead this context is named "org/research", then
        composeName("user/jane", "org/research")        might return"org/research/user/jane"while
        composeName("user/jane", "research")    returns"research/user/jane".
 
Parameters:name- a name relative to this contextprefix- the name of this context relative to one of its ancestorsReturns:the composition of prefixandnameThrows:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:composeName(String, String) 
 
composeName
String composeName(String name,
                   String prefix)
                   throws NamingException
Composes the name of this context with a name relative to
 this context.
 See composeName(Name, Name)for details.
 
Parameters:name- a name relative to this contextprefix- the name of this context relative to one of its ancestorsReturns:the composition of prefixandnameThrows:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
addToEnvironment
Object addToEnvironment(String propName,
                        Object propVal)
                        throws NamingException
Adds a new environment property to the environment of this
 context.  If the property already exists, its value is overwritten.
 See class description for more details on environment properties.
 
Parameters:propName- the name of the environment property to add; may not be nullpropVal- the value of the property to add; may not be nullReturns:the previous value of the property, or null if the property was
                not in the environment before
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:getEnvironment(),removeFromEnvironment(String) 
 
removeFromEnvironment
Object removeFromEnvironment(String propName)
                             throws NamingException
Removes an environment property from the environment of this
 context.  See class description for more details on environment
 properties.
 
Parameters:propName- the name of the environment property to remove; may not be nullReturns:the previous value of the property, or null if the property was
                not in the environment
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:getEnvironment(),addToEnvironment(String, Object) 
 
getEnvironment
Hashtable<?,?> getEnvironment()
                              throws NamingException
Retrieves the environment in effect for this context.
 See class description for more details on environment properties.
  The caller should not make any changes to the object returned:
 their effect on the context is undefined.
 The environment of this context may be changed using
 addToEnvironment() and removeFromEnvironment().
 
 
Returns:the environment of this context; never null
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSee Also:addToEnvironment(String, Object),removeFromEnvironment(String) 
 
close
void close()
           throws NamingException
Closes this context.
 This method releases this context's resources immediately, instead of
 waiting for them to be released automatically by the garbage collector.
  This method is idempotent:  invoking it on a context that has
 already been closed has no effect.  Invoking any other method
 on a closed context is not allowed, and results in undefined behaviour.
 
 
Throws:
NamingException- if a naming exception is encountered 
 
getNameInNamespace
String getNameInNamespace()
                          throws NamingException
Retrieves the full name of this context within its own namespace.
  Many naming services have a notion of a "full name" for objects
 in their respective namespaces.  For example, an LDAP entry has
 a distinguished name, and a DNS record has a fully qualified name.
 This method allows the client application to retrieve this name.
 The string returned by this method is not a JNDI composite name
 and should not be passed directly to context methods.
 In naming systems for which the notion of full name does not
 make sense, OperationNotSupportedException is thrown.
 
 
Returns:this context's name in its own namespace; never null
Throws:
OperationNotSupportedException- if the naming system does
                not have the notion of a full nameNamingException- if a naming exception is encounteredSince:1.3 
 Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved |