@Documented @Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Target(value=TYPE) public @interface MXBean
Annotation to mark an interface explicitly as being an MXBean
interface, or as not being an MXBean interface. By default, an
interface is an MXBean interface if it is public and its name ends
with MXBean
, as in SomethingMXBean
. The following
interfaces are MXBean interfaces:
public interface WhatsitMXBean {} @MXBean public interface Whatsit1Interface {} @MXBean(true) public interface Whatsit2Interface {}
The following interfaces are not MXBean interfaces:
interface NonPublicInterfaceNotMXBean{} public interface Whatsit3Interface{} @MXBean(false) public interface MisleadingMXBean {}
The MXBean concept provides a simple way to code an MBean
that only references a predefined set of types, the ones defined
by javax.management.openmbean
. In this way, you can be
sure that your MBean will be usable by any client, including
remote clients, without any requirement that the client have
access to model-specific classes representing the types
of your MBeans.
The concepts are easier to understand by comparison with the Standard MBean concept. Here is how a managed object might be represented as a Standard MBean, and as an MXBean:
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
public interface MemoryPoolMBean { String getName(); MemoryUsage getUsage(); // ... } |
public interface MemoryPoolMXBean { String getName(); MemoryUsage getUsage(); // ... } |
As you can see, the definitions are very similar. The only
difference is that the convention for naming the interface is to use
SomethingMXBean
for MXBeans, rather than
SomethingMBean
for Standard MBeans.
In this managed object, there is an attribute called
Usage
of type MemoryUsage
. The point of an
attribute like this is that it gives a coherent snapshot of a set
of data items. For example, it might include the current amount
of used memory in the memory pool, and the current maximum of the
memory pool. If these were separate items, obtained with separate
getAttribute
calls, then we could
get values seen at different times that were not consistent. We
might get a used
value that was greater than the
max
value.
So, we might define MemoryUsage
like this:
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
public class MemoryUsage implements Serializable { // standard JavaBean conventions with getters public MemoryUsage(long init, long used, long committed, long max) {...} long getInit() {...} long getUsed() {...} long getCommitted() {...} long getMax() {...} } |
public class MemoryUsage { // standard JavaBean conventions with getters @ConstructorProperties({"init", "used", "committed", "max"}) public MemoryUsage(long init, long used, long committed, long max) {...} long getInit() {...} long getUsed() {...} long getCommitted() {...} long getMax() {...} } |
The definitions are the same in the two cases, except
that with the MXBean, MemoryUsage
no longer needs to
be marked Serializable
(though it can be). On
the other hand, we have added a @ConstructorProperties
annotation
to link the constructor parameters to the corresponding getters.
We will see more about this below.
MemoryUsage
is a model-specific class.
With Standard MBeans, a client of the MBean Server cannot access the
Usage
attribute if it does not know the class
MemoryUsage
. Suppose the client is a generic console
based on JMX technology. Then the console would have to be
configured with the model-specific classes of every application it
might connect to. The problem is even worse for clients that are
not written in the Java language. Then there may not be any way
to tell the client what a MemoryUsage
looks like.
This is where MXBeans differ from Standard MBeans. Although we
define the management interface in almost exactly the same way,
the MXBean framework converts model-specific classes into
standard classes from the Java platform. Using arrays and the
CompositeData
and
TabularData
classes
from the standard javax.management.openmbean
package, it
is possible to build data structures of arbitrary complexity
using only standard classes.
This becomes clearer if we compare what the clients of the two models might look like:
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
String name = (String)
mbeanServer. |
String name = (String) mbeanServer. |
For attributes with simple types like String
, the
code is the same. But for attributes with complex types, the
Standard MBean code requires the client to know the model-specific
class MemoryUsage
, while the MXBean code requires no
non-standard classes.
The client code shown here is slightly more complicated for the
MXBean client. But, if the client does in fact know the model,
here the interface MemoryPoolMXBean
and the
class MemoryUsage
, then it can construct a
proxy. This is the recommended way to interact with
managed objects when you know the model beforehand, regardless
of whether you are using Standard MBeans or MXBeans:
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
MemoryPoolMBean proxy =
JMX. |
MemoryPoolMXBean proxy =
JMX. |
Implementing the MemoryPool object works similarly for both Standard MBeans and MXBeans.
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
public class MemoryPool implements MemoryPoolMBean { public String getName() {...} public MemoryUsage getUsage() {...} // ... } |
public class MemoryPool implements MemoryPoolMXBean { public String getName() {...} public MemoryUsage getUsage() {...} // ... } |
Registering the MBean in the MBean Server works in the same way in both cases:
Standard MBean | MXBean |
---|---|
{
MemoryPoolMBean pool = new MemoryPool();
mbeanServer. |
{
MemoryPoolMXBean pool = new MemoryPool();
mbeanServer. |
An MXBean is a kind of MBean. An MXBean object can be
registered directly in the MBean Server, or it can be used as an
argument to StandardMBean
and the resultant MBean
registered in the MBean Server.
When an object is registered in the MBean Server using the
registerMBean
or createMBean
methods of the
MBeanServer
interface, the object's class is examined
to determine what type of MBean it is:
DynamicMBean
then the MBean is a Dynamic MBean. Note that the class
StandardMBean
implements this interface, so this
case applies to a Standard MBean or MXBean created using
the class StandardMBean
.SMXBean
where
S
is any non-empty string, and
do not have an annotation @MXBean(false)
; and/or@MXBean(true)
or just @MXBean
.MemoryPoolMXBean
.
NotCompliantMBeanException
.
Every Java type that appears as the parameter or return type of a method in an MXBean interface must be convertible using the rules below. Additionally, parameters must be reconstructible as defined below.
An attempt to construct an MXBean that does not conform to the above rules will produce an exception.
The same naming conventions are applied to the methods in an MXBean as in a Standard MBean:
T getN()
, where
T
is a Java type (not void
)
and N
is a non-empty string, specifies
that there is a readable attribute called
N
. The Java type and Open type of the
attribute are determined by the mapping rules below.
The method final Class getClass()
inherited from Object
is ignored when looking for getters.boolean isN()
specifies that
there is a readable attribute called N
with Java type boolean
and Open type
SimpleType.Boolean
.void setN(T x)
specifies that there is a writeable attribute called
N
. The Java type and Open type of the
attribute are determined by the mapping rules below. (Of
course, the name x
of the parameter is
irrelevant.)The rules for getN
and
isN
collectively define the notion of a
getter. The rule for setN
defines
the notion of a setter.
It is an error for there to be two getters with the same name, or
two setters with the same name. If there is a getter and a setter
for the same name, then the type T
in both
must be the same. In this case the attribute is read/write. If
there is only a getter or only a setter, the attribute is
read-only or write-only respectively.
An MXBean is a kind of Open MBean, as defined by the javax.management.openmbean
package. This means that the types of
attributes, operation parameters, and operation return values must
all be describable using Open Types, that is the four
standard subclasses of OpenType
.
MXBeans achieve this by mapping Java types into Open Types.
For every Java type J, the MXBean mapping is described by the following information:
OpenType
.For example, for the Java type List<String>
:
List<String>
), is ArrayType
(1,
SimpleType.STRING
)
, representing a 1-dimensional
array of String
s.List<String>
), is String[]
.List<String>
can be converted to a String[]
using List.toArray(new
String[0])
.String[]
can be converted to a List<String>
using Arrays.asList
.If no mapping rules exist to derive opentype(J) from J, then J cannot be the type of a method parameter or return value in an MXBean interface.
If there is a way to convert
opendata(J) back to J then we say that J is
reconstructible. All method parameters in an MXBean
interface must be reconstructible, because when the MXBean
framework is invoking a method it will need to convert those
parameters from opendata(J) to J. In a proxy
generated by JMX.newMXBeanProxy
, it is the return values
of the methods in the MXBean interface that must be
reconstructible.
Null values are allowed for all Java types and Open Types, except primitive Java types where they are not possible. When converting from type J to type opendata(J) or from type opendata(J) to type J, a null value is mapped to a null value.
The following table summarizes the type mapping rules.
Java type J | opentype(J) | opendata(J) |
---|---|---|
int , boolean , etc(the 8 primitive Java types) |
SimpleType.INTEGER ,SimpleType.BOOLEAN , etc |
Integer , Boolean , etc(the corresponding boxed types) |
Integer , ObjectName , etc(the types covered by SimpleType ) |
the corresponding SimpleType |
J, the same type |
int[] etc(a one-dimensional array with primitive element type) |
ArrayType.getPrimitiveArrayType(int[].class) etc |
J, the same type |
E[] (an array with non-primitive element type E; this includes int[][] , where E is int[] ) |
ArrayType.getArrayType( opentype(E)) |
opendata(E)[] |
List< E> Set< E> SortedSet< E> (see below) |
same as for E[] |
same as for E[] |
An enumeration E (declared in Java as enum E
{...} ) |
SimpleType.STRING |
String |
Map< K,V> SortedMap< K,V> |
TabularType (see below) |
TabularData (see below) |
An MXBean interface | SimpleType.OBJECTNAME (see below) |
ObjectName (see below) |
Any other type | CompositeType ,
if possible(see below) |
CompositeData |
The following sections give further details of these rules.
The 8 primitive Java types
(boolean
, byte
, short
, int
, long
, float
, double
, char
) are mapped to the
corresponding boxed types from java.lang
, namely Boolean
, Byte
, etc. The Open Type is the corresponding
SimpleType
. Thus, opentype(long
) is SimpleType.LONG
, and
opendata(long
) is java.lang.Long
.
An array of primitive type such as long[]
can be represented
directly as an Open Type. Thus, openType(long[]
) is ArrayType.getPrimitiveArrayType(long[].class)
, and
opendata(long[]
) is long[]
.
In practice, the difference between a plain int
and Integer
, etc, does not show up because operations in the JMX API
are always on Java objects, not primitives. However, the
difference does show up with arrays.
List<
E>
etc)A List<
E>
or Set<
E>
, such as List<String>
or Set<ObjectName>
, is mapped in the same way as an array of the
same element type, such as String[]
or ObjectName[]
.
A SortedSet<
E>
is also mapped in the
same way as an E[]
, but it is only convertible if
E is a class or interface that implements Comparable
. Thus, a SortedSet<String>
or
SortedSet<Integer>
is convertible, but a SortedSet<int[]>
or SortedSet<List<String>>
is not. The
conversion of a SortedSet
instance will fail with an
IllegalArgumentException
if it has a
non-null comparator()
.
A List<
E>
is reconstructed as a
java.util.ArrayList<
E>
;
a Set<
E>
as a
java.util.HashSet<
E>
;
a SortedSet<
E>
as a
java.util.TreeSet<
E>
.
Map<
K,V>
etc)A Map<
K,V>
or SortedMap<
K,V>
, for example Map<String,ObjectName>
, has Open Type TabularType
and is mapped
to a TabularData
.
The TabularType
has two items called key
and
value
. The Open Type of key
is
opentype(K), and the Open Type of value
is
opentype(V). The index of the TabularType
is the
single item key
.
For example, the TabularType
for a Map<String,ObjectName>
might be constructed with code like
this:
String typeName = "java.util.Map<java.lang.String, javax.management.ObjectName>"; String[] keyValue = new String[] {"key", "value"}; OpenType[] openTypes = new OpenType[] {SimpleType.STRING, SimpleType.OBJECTNAME}; CompositeType rowType = new CompositeType(typeName, typeName, keyValue, keyValue, openTypes); TabularType tabularType = new TabularType(typeName, typeName, rowType, new String[] {"key"});
The typeName
here is determined by the
type name rules detailed below.
A SortedMap<
K,V>
is mapped in the
same way, but it is only convertible if
K is a class or interface that implements Comparable
. Thus, a SortedMap<String,int[]>
is convertible, but a
SortedMap<int[],String>
is not. The conversion of a
SortedMap
instance will fail with an IllegalArgumentException
if it has a non-null comparator()
.
A Map<
K,V>
is reconstructed as
a java.util.HashMap<
K,V>
;
a SortedMap<
K,V>
as
a java.util.TreeMap<
K,V>
.
TabularData
is an interface. The concrete class that is
used to represent a Map<
K,V>
as
Open Data is TabularDataSupport
,
or another class implementing TabularData
that serializes as TabularDataSupport
.
An MXBean interface, or a type referenced within an MXBean
interface, can reference another MXBean interface, J.
Then opentype(J) is SimpleType.OBJECTNAME
and
opendata(J) is ObjectName
.
For example, suppose you have two MXBean interfaces like this:
public interface ProductMXBean { public ModuleMXBean[] getModules(); } public interface ModuleMXBean { public ProductMXBean getProduct(); }
The object implementing the ModuleMXBean
interface
returns from its getProduct
method an object
implementing the ProductMXBean
interface. The
ModuleMXBean
object and the returned ProductMXBean
objects must both be registered as MXBeans in the
same MBean Server.
The method ModuleMXBean.getProduct()
defines an
attribute called Product
. The Open Type for this
attribute is SimpleType.OBJECTNAME
, and the corresponding
ObjectName
value will be the name under which the
referenced ProductMXBean
is registered in the MBean
Server.
If you make an MXBean proxy for a ModuleMXBean
and
call its getProduct()
method, the proxy will map the
ObjectName
back into a ProductMXBean
by making
another MXBean proxy. More formally, when a proxy made with
JMX.newMXBeanProxy(mbeanServerConnection, objectNameX,
interfaceX)
needs to map objectNameY
back into interfaceY
, another MXBean interface, it does so with JMX.newMXBeanProxy(mbeanServerConnection, objectNameY,
interfaceY)
. The implementation may return a proxy that was
previously created by a call to JMX.newMXBeanProxy
with the same parameters, or it may create a new proxy.
The reverse mapping is illustrated by the following change to the
ModuleMXBean
interface:
public interface ModuleMXBean { public ProductMXBean getProduct(); public void setProduct(ProductMXBean c); }
The presence of the setProduct
method now means that the
Product
attribute is read/write. As before, the value
of this attribute is an ObjectName
. When the attribute is
set, the ObjectName
must be converted into the
ProductMXBean
object that the setProduct
method
expects. This object will be an MXBean proxy for the given
ObjectName
in the same MBean Server.
If you make an MXBean proxy for a ModuleMXBean
and
call its setProduct
method, the proxy will map its
ProductMXBean
argument back into an ObjectName
.
This will only work if the argument is in fact another proxy,
for a ProductMXBean
in the same MBeanServerConnection
. The proxy can have been returned from
another proxy (like ModuleMXBean.getProduct()
which
returns a proxy for a ProductMXBean
); or it can have
been created by JMX.newMXBeanProxy
; or it can have been created using Proxy
with an invocation handler that
is MBeanServerInvocationHandler
or a subclass.
If the same MXBean were registered under two different
ObjectName
s, a reference to that MXBean from another
MXBean would be ambiguous. Therefore, if an MXBean object is
already registered in an MBean Server and an attempt is made to
register it in the same MBean Server under another name, the
result is an InstanceAlreadyExistsException
. Registering
the same MBean object under more than one name is discouraged in
general, notably because it does not work well for MBeans that are
NotificationBroadcaster
s.
Given a Java class or interface J that does not match the other
rules in the table above, the MXBean framework will attempt to map
it to a CompositeType
as follows. The type name of this
CompositeType
is determined by the
type name rules below.
The class is examined for getters using the conventions above. (Getters must be public instance methods.) If there are no getters, or if any getter has a type that is not convertible, then J is not convertible.
If there is at least one getter and every getter has a
convertible type, then opentype(J) is a CompositeType
with one item for every getter. If the getter is
T getName()
then the item in the CompositeType
is called name
and has type opentype(T). For example, if the item is
String getOwner()
then the item is called owner
and has Open Type SimpleType.STRING
. If the getter is
boolean isName()
then the item in the CompositeType
is called name
and has type SimpleType.BOOLEAN
.
Notice that the first character (or code point) is converted to
lower case. This follows the Java Beans convention, which for
historical reasons is different from the Standard MBean
convention. In a Standard MBean or MXBean interface, a method
getOwner
defines an attribute called Owner
, while
in a Java Bean or mapped CompositeType
, a method getOwner
defines a property or item called owner
.
If two methods produce the same item name (for example, getOwner
and isOwner
, or getOwner
and getowner
) then the type is not convertible.
When the Open Type is CompositeType
, the corresponding
mapped Java type (opendata(J)) is CompositeData
. The mapping from an instance of J to a
CompositeData
corresponding to the CompositeType
just described is done as follows. First, if J
implements the interface CompositeDataView
, then that
interface's toCompositeData
method is called to do the conversion.
Otherwise, the CompositeData
is constructed by calling
the getter for each item and converting it to the corresponding
Open Data type. Thus, a getter such as
List<String> getNames()
will have been mapped to an item with name "names
" and
Open Type ArrayType(1, SimpleType.STRING)
. The conversion
to CompositeData
will call getNames()
and convert
the resultant List<String>
into a String[]
for the
item "names
".
CompositeData
is an interface. The concrete class that is
used to represent a type as Open Data is CompositeDataSupport
, or another class implementing CompositeData
that serializes as CompositeDataSupport
.
CompositeData
If opendata(J) is CompositeData
for a Java type
J, then either an instance of J can be
reconstructed from a CompositeData
, or J is not
reconstructible. If any item in the CompositeData
is not
reconstructible, then J is not reconstructible either.
For any given J, the following rules are consulted to
determine how to reconstruct instances of J from
CompositeData
. The first applicable rule in the list is
the one that will be used.
If J has a method
public static
J from(CompositeData cd)
then that method is called to reconstruct an instance of
J.
Otherwise, if J has at least one public
constructor with a ConstructorProperties
annotation, then one
of those constructors (not necessarily always the same one)
will be called to reconstruct an instance of J.
Every such annotation must list as many strings as the
constructor has parameters; each string must name a property
corresponding to a getter of J; and the type of this
getter must be the same as the corresponding constructor
parameter. It is not an error for there to be getters that
are not mentioned in the ConstructorProperties
annotation
(these may correspond to information that is not needed to
reconstruct the object).
An instance of J is reconstructed by calling a
constructor with the appropriate reconstructed items from the
CompositeData
. The constructor to be called will be
determined at runtime based on the items actually present in
the CompositeData
, given that this CompositeData
might come from an earlier version of
J where not all the items were present. A
constructor is applicable if all the properties named
in its ConstructorProperties
annotation are present as items
in the CompositeData
. If no constructor is
applicable, then the attempt to reconstruct J fails.
For any possible combination of properties, it must be the case that either (a) there are no applicable constructors, or (b) there is exactly one applicable constructor, or (c) one of the applicable constructors names a proper superset of the properties named by each other applicable constructor. (In other words, there should never be ambiguity over which constructor to choose.) If this condition is not true, then J is not reconstructible.
Otherwise, if J has a public no-arg constructor, and
for every getter in J with type
T and name N there is a corresponding setter
with the same name and type, then an instance of J is
constructed with the no-arg constructor and the setters are
called with the reconstructed items from the CompositeData
to restore the values. For example, if there is a method
public List<String> getNames()
then there must also be a method
public void setNames(List<String> names)
for this rule to apply.
If the CompositeData
came from an earlier version of
J, some items might not be present. In this case,
the corresponding setters will not be called.
Otherwise, if J is an interface that has no methods
other than getters, an instance of J is constructed
using a Proxy
with a CompositeDataInvocationHandler
backed by the CompositeData
being converted.
Otherwise, J is not reconstructible.
Rule 2 is not applicable to subset Profiles of Java SE that do not
include the java.beans
package. When targeting a runtime that does
not include the java.beans
package, and where there is a mismatch
between the compile-time and runtime environment whereby J is
compiled with a public constructor and the ConstructorProperties
annotation, then J is not reconstructible unless another rule
applies.
Here are examples showing different ways to code a type NamedNumber
that consists of an int
and a String
. In each case, the CompositeType
looks like this:
CompositeType
( "NamedNumber", // typeName "NamedNumber", // description new String[] {"number", "name"}, // itemNames new String[] {"number", "name"}, // itemDescriptions new OpenType[] {SimpleType.INTEGER, SimpleType.STRING} // itemTypes );
from
method:
public class NamedNumber { public int getNumber() {return number;} public String getName() {return name;} private NamedNumber(int number, String name) { this.number = number; this.name = name; } public static NamedNumber from(CompositeData cd) { return new NamedNumber((Integer) cd.get("number"), (String) cd.get("name")); } private final int number; private final String name; }
@ConstructorProperties
annotation:
public class NamedNumber { public int getNumber() {return number;} public String getName() {return name;} @ConstructorProperties({"number", "name"}) public NamedNumber(int number, String name) { this.number = number; this.name = name; } private final int number; private final String name; }
public class NamedNumber { public int getNumber() {return number;} public void setNumber(int number) {this.number = number;} public String getName() {return name;} public void setName(String name) {this.name = name;} public NamedNumber() {} private int number; private String name; }
public interface NamedNumber { public int getNumber(); public String getName(); }
It is usually better for classes that simply represent a
collection of data to be immutable. An instance of an
immutable class cannot be changed after it has been constructed.
Notice that CompositeData
itself is immutable.
Immutability has many advantages, notably with regard to
thread-safety and security. So the approach using setters should
generally be avoided if possible.
Recursive (self-referential) types cannot be used in MXBean
interfaces. This is a consequence of the immutability of CompositeType
. For example, the following type could not be the
type of an attribute, because it refers to itself:
public interface Node { public String getName(); public int getPriority(); public Node getNext(); }
It is always possible to rewrite recursive types like this so they are no longer recursive. Doing so may require introducing new types. For example:
public interface NodeList { public List<Node> getNodes(); } public interface Node { public String getName(); public int getPriority(); }
An MXBean is a type of Open MBean. However, for compatibility
reasons, its MBeanInfo
is not an OpenMBeanInfo
.
In particular, when the type of an attribute, parameter, or
operation return value is a primitive type such as int
,
or is void
(for a return type), then the attribute,
parameter, or operation will be represented respectively by an
MBeanAttributeInfo
, MBeanParameterInfo
, or
MBeanOperationInfo
whose getType()
or getReturnType()
returns the primitive name ("int
" etc).
This is so even though the mapping rules above specify that the
opendata mapping is the wrapped type (Integer
etc).
The array of public constructors returned by MBeanInfo.getConstructors()
for an MXBean that is directly
registered in the MBean Server will contain all of the public
constructors of that MXBean. If the class of the MXBean is not
public then its constructors are not considered public either.
The list returned for an MXBean that is constructed using the
StandardMBean
class is derived in the same way as for
Standard MBeans. Regardless of how the MXBean was constructed,
its constructor parameters are not subject to MXBean mapping
rules and do not have a corresponding OpenType
.
The array of notification types returned by MBeanInfo.getNotifications()
for an MXBean that is directly
registered in the MBean Server will be empty if the MXBean does
not implement the NotificationBroadcaster
interface.
Otherwise, it will be the result of calling NotificationBroadcaster.getNotificationInfo()
at the time the MXBean
was registered. Even if the result of this method changes
subsequently, the result of MBeanInfo.getNotifications()
will not. The list returned for an MXBean that is constructed
using the StandardMBean
or StandardEmitterMBean
class is derived in the same way as for Standard MBeans.
The Descriptor
for all of the
MBeanAttributeInfo
, MBeanParameterInfo
, and
MBeanOperationInfo
objects contained in the MBeanInfo
will have a field openType
whose value is the OpenType
specified by the mapping rules above. So even when getType()
is "int
", getDescriptor().getField("openType")
will
be SimpleType.INTEGER
.
The Descriptor
for each of these objects will also have a
field originalType
that is a string representing the Java type
that appeared in the MXBean interface. The format of this string
is described in the section Type Names
below.
The Descriptor
for the MBeanInfo
will have a field
mxbean
whose value is the string "true
".
Sometimes the unmapped type T of a method parameter or
return value in an MXBean must be represented as a string. If
T is a non-generic type, this string is the value
returned by Class.getName()
. Otherwise it is the value of
genericstring(T), defined as follows:
Class.getName()
, for example "int"
or "java.lang.String"
.
"[]"
. For example, genericstring(int[]
)
is "int[]"
, and genericstring(List<String>[][]
) is "java.util.List<java.lang.String>[][]"
.
List<String>
and genericstring(T) consists of the
following: the fully-qualified name of the parameterized type as
returned by Class.getName()
; a left angle bracket ("<"
); genericstring(A) where A is the first
type parameter; if there is a second type parameter B
then ", "
(a comma and a single space) followed by
genericstring(B); a right angle bracket (">"
).
Note that if a method returns int[]
, this will be
represented by the string "[I"
returned by Class.getName()
, but if a method returns List<int[]>
,
this will be represented by the string "java.util.List<int[]>"
.
A problem with mapping from Java types to
Open types is signaled with an OpenDataException
. This
can happen when an MXBean interface is being analyzed, for
example if it references a type like java.util.Random
that has no getters. Or it can happen when an
instance is being converted (a return value from a method in an
MXBean or a parameter to a method in an MXBean proxy), for
example when converting from SortedSet<String>
to String[]
if the SortedSet
has a non-null Comparator
.
A problem with mapping to Java types from
Open types is signaled with an InvalidObjectException
.
This can happen when an MXBean interface is being analyzed, for
example if it references a type that is not
reconstructible according to the rules above, in a
context where a reconstructible type is required. Or it can
happen when an instance is being converted (a parameter to a
method in an MXBean or a return value from a method in an MXBean
proxy), for example from a String to an Enum if there is no Enum
constant with that name.
Depending on the context, the OpenDataException
or
InvalidObjectException
may be wrapped in another
exception such as RuntimeMBeanException
or UndeclaredThrowableException
. For every thrown exception,
the condition C will be true: "e is OpenDataException
or InvalidObjectException
(as
appropriate), or C is true of e.getCause()
".
Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
value
True if the annotated interface is an MXBean interface.
|
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2016, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.