001 /*
002 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
003 * or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
004 * distributed with this work for additional information
005 * regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
006 * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
007 * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
008 * with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
009 *
010 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
011 *
012 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
013 * software distributed under the License is distributed on an
014 * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
015 * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
016 * specific language governing permissions and limitations
017 * under the License.
018 *
019 */
020 package org.apache.directory.server.core.jndi;
021
022
023 import javax.naming.spi.DirObjectFactory;
024
025
026 /**
027 * A specialized ObjectFactory that is optimized for our server-side JNDI
028 * provider. This factory reports the Class of objects that it is creates as
029 * well as the objectClass corresponding to that Class. This makes it easier
030 * for the server side provider to lookup the respective factory rather than
031 * attempt several others within the list of object factories in the order of
032 * greatest specificity. JNDI SPI methods are inefficient since they are
033 * designed to try all object factories to produce the object. Our provider
034 * looks up the most specific object factory based on this additional
035 * information. This makes a huge difference when the number of ObjectFactory
036 * instances is large.
037 * <p/>
038 * Eventually, it is highly feasible for generated schemas, to also include
039 * state and object factories for various objectClasses, or domain objects.
040 * This means the number of factories will increase. By associating object and
041 * state factories with their respective objectClasses and Classes we can
042 * integrate these DAOs into the schema subsystem making factory lookups
043 * extremely fast and efficient without costing the user too much to create and
044 * store objects within the directory. At the end of the day the directory
045 * becomes a hierarchical object store where lookup, bind and rebind are the
046 * only operations besides search to access and store objects. That's pretty
047 * PHAT!
048 *
049 * @author <a href="mailto:dev@directory.apache.org">Apache Directory Project</a>
050 * @version $Rev: 679219 $
051 */
052 public interface ServerDirObjectFactory extends DirObjectFactory
053 {
054 /**
055 * Gets either the OID for the objectClass or the human readable name for
056 * the objectClass this DirStateFactory is associated with. Note
057 * that associating this factory with an objectClass automatically
058 * associates this DirObjectFactory with all descendents of the objectClass.
059 *
060 * @return the OID or human readable name of the objectClass associated with this ObjectFactory
061 */
062 String getObjectClassId();
063
064
065 /**
066 * Gets the Class instance associated with this ObjectFactory. Objects to
067 * be created by this ObjectFactory will be of this type, a subclass of
068 * this type, or implement this type if it is an interface.
069 *
070 * @return the Class associated with this factory.
071 */
072 Class<?> getAssociatedClass();
073 }