/*
 * Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server Copyright(c) Microsoft Corporation All rights reserved. This program is made
 * available under the terms of the MIT License. See the LICENSE file in the project root for more information.
 */

package com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc;

import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException;
import java.util.Hashtable;

import javax.naming.Context;
import javax.naming.Name;
import javax.naming.spi.ObjectFactory;


Defines an object factory to materialize datasources from JNDI.
/** * Defines an object factory to materialize datasources from JNDI. */
public final class SQLServerDataSourceObjectFactory implements ObjectFactory { // NOTE: Per ObjectFactory spec, the ObjectFactory class requires a public // class with public constructor.
Constructs a SQLServerDataSourceObjectFactory.
/** * Constructs a SQLServerDataSourceObjectFactory. */
public SQLServerDataSourceObjectFactory() {}
Returns an reference to the SQLServerDataSource instance getObjectInstance is a factory for rehydrating references to SQLServerDataSource and its child classes. Caller gets the reference by calling SQLServerDataSource.getReference. References are used by JNDI to persist and rehydrate objects.
/** * Returns an reference to the SQLServerDataSource instance getObjectInstance is a factory for rehydrating * references to SQLServerDataSource and its child classes. Caller gets the reference by calling * SQLServerDataSource.getReference. References are used by JNDI to persist and rehydrate objects. */
public Object getObjectInstance(Object ref, Name name, Context c, Hashtable<?, ?> h) throws SQLServerException { // Create a new instance of a DataSource class from the given reference. try { javax.naming.Reference r = (javax.naming.Reference) ref; // First get "class" property from reference. javax.naming.RefAddr ra = r.get("class"); // Our reference will always have a "class" RefAddr. if (null == ra) { throwInvalidDataSourceRefException(); } String className = (String) ra.getContent(); if (null == className) { throwInvalidDataSourceRefException(); } // Check that we have the expected class name inside our reference. if (("com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDataSource").equals(className) || ("com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerConnectionPoolDataSource").equals(className) || ("com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerXADataSource").equals(className)) { // Create class instance and initialize using reference. Class<?> dataSourceClass = Class.forName(className); Object dataSourceClassInstance = dataSourceClass.getDeclaredConstructor().newInstance(); // If this class we created does not cast to SQLServerDataSource, then caller // passed in the wrong reference to our factory. SQLServerDataSource ds = (SQLServerDataSource) dataSourceClassInstance; ds.initializeFromReference(r); return dataSourceClassInstance; } // Class not found, throw invalid reference exception. throwInvalidDataSourceRefException(); } catch (ClassNotFoundException | InstantiationException | IllegalAccessException | IllegalArgumentException | InvocationTargetException | NoSuchMethodException | SecurityException e) { throwInvalidDataSourceRefException(); } // no chance of getting here but to keep the compiler happy return null; } private void throwInvalidDataSourceRefException() throws SQLServerException { SQLServerException.makeFromDriverError(null, null, SQLServerException.getErrString("R_invalidDataSourceReference"), null, true); } }