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Utilities - NetBeans Architecture Questions - NetBeans API Javadoc 5.5.1

NetBeans Architecture Answers for Utilities module

WARNING: answering questions version 1.25 rather than the current 1.26.

Interfaces table

Group of java interfaces
Interface NameIn/OutStabilitySpecified in What Document?
UtilitiesAPIExportedOfficial .../org/openide/util/doc-files/api.html

LookupAPIExportedOfficial .../util/lookup/doc-files/lookup-api.html

allows the discovery

LookupSPIExportedOfficial .../util/lookup/doc-files/lookup-spi.html

simplifies creation and registration of own lookup objects

ProviderRegistrationMechanismImportedStandard ...//java.sun.com/j2se/1.3/docs/guide/jar/jar.html

ProviderRegistrationRemovalExportedUnder Development .../org/openide/util/doc-files/api.html

AWTBridgeExportedPrivate .../modules/openide/util/AWTBridge.java

a class that is looked up in Lookup.getDefault() and if registered can provide better UI elements for Actions.

ParserFactoryImportedPrivate

The
XMLUtil class is loading a class from core/core.jar to initialize the correct parser factory. This is a fix for issue 68942.

SharedClassObject.setAccessibleExportedUnder Development .../org/openide/util/SharedClassObject.html

used to instantiate subclasses.

WeakListener.setAccessibleExportedUnder Development .../org/openide/util/WeakListeners.html

used to call the remove method using reflection

Lookups.metaInfServicesExportedUnder Development .../org/openide/util/lookup/Lookups.html

calls constructor of registered classes using reflection

Group of property interfaces
Interface NameIn/OutStabilitySpecified in What Document?
BrandingSupportExportedOfficialorg/openide/util/NbBundle.html

which is similar to localization but also supports changes of resorces for application build on top of NetBeans. This is handled by our class NbBundle which reimplements the JDK's standard ResourceBundle to to take branding into the consideration.

HelpIDExportedStandardorg/openide/util/HelpCtx.html

read from JComponent.getClientProperty to simulate the standard javahelp behaviour and extract the help id for given component.

iconBaseImportedStandard

SystemAction reacts to expected requests from UI Utilities module for iconBase property by returning value based on its result of its iconResource() method.

org.openide.util.SharedClassObject.initializeExportedPrivate

For purposes of
SystemOption the SharedClassObject handles getProperty ("org.openide.util.SharedClassObject.initialize") in a special way, by returning null if initialization is not running and Boolean.TRUE if it is.

OpenIDE-Transmodal-ActionExportedUnder Development

CallbackSystemAction checks whether action.getValue("OpenIDE-Transmodal-Action") returns Boolean.TRUE to enable it in dialogs, otherwise the action is disabled when there is an open dialog.

netbeans.screen.insetsExportedPrivate

Influences results of Utilities.getUsableScreenBounds

netbeans.taskbar.heightExportedPrivate

Influences results of Utilities.getUsableScreenBounds

line.separatorImportedStandard

used on few places

org.openide.util.LookupExportedUnder Development

checked by the initialization of the
Lookup.getDefault() and can contain name of a class that extends org.openide.util.Lookup and has public constructor, that should be instantiated and returned from Lookup.getDefault() the class will be loaded by Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader() classloader the first time Lookup.getDefault is invoked.

The property can also contain value "-" which means to completely disable the lookup instantiation and return Lookup.EMPTY from Lookup.getDefault().

If the property is unspecified, the default MetaInfServicesLookup is constructed for Thread.currentThread().getContextclassLoader() that implements the JDK's standard. If, by a chance an instance of Lookup.Provider is found in there, its lookup is returned as result. Otherwise the MetaInfServicesLookup is the result of Lookup.getDefault().

Group of java.io.File interfaces
Interface NameIn/OutStabilitySpecified in What Document?
FileLocationExportedUnder Development

the JAR file is located in platform cluster under lib/org-openide-util.jar

TranslateNamesExportedOfficialorg/openide/util/Utilities.html

Utilities.translate reads META-INF/netbeans/translate.names files from JARs

Group of lookup interfaces
Interface NameIn/OutStabilitySpecified in What Document?
ActionManagerInvocationExportedPrivate

because of the API separation,
CallableSystemAction uses lookup for ActionsBridge provided by org-openide-actions module when looking for org.openide.actions.ActionManager implementation.

LookupInitializationLookupExportedUnder Development#property-org.openide.util.Lookup

during initialization of the Lookup.getDefault() the Lookup.Provider is being searched

LookupSharedClassObjectExportedUnder Development

singleton subclasses of
SharedClassObject are searched for using Lookup.

LookupContextGlobalProviderExportedStable

actionsGlobalContext searches for ContextGlobalProvider in Lookup.getDefault(). The provider is usually provided by window system implementation.

LookupEntityCatalogExportedUnder Development

EntityCatalog delegates its methods to all instances of EntityCatalogs found in Lookup

LookupErrorManagerExportedUnder Development

ErrorManager delegates its methods to all instances of ErrorManagers found in Lookup

LookupClassLoaderExportedUnder Development

Nearly all resource looking functions and reflective code uses
ClassLoader obtained from Lookup.getDefault() for loading system wide resources.


General Information

    Question (arch-what): What is this project good for?

    Answer:

    Described in the overall answer.

    Question (arch-overall): Describe the overall architecture.

    Answer:

    This module contains general classes needed in NetBeans, extensions to basic JRE contepts, useful methods and other UtilitiesAPI classes.

    Also this module defines the Lookup which the NetBeans way for dynamic registration and lookup of components in our modularized component system. It allows lookup and discovery of features by description of their interfaces. The classes are devided into two parts. The LookupAPI - allows the discovery and the LookupSPI - simplifies creation and registration of own lookup objects.

    Question (arch-usecases): Describe the main use cases of the new API. Who will use it under what circumstances? What kind of code would typically need to be written to use the module?

    Answer: There is a great introduction to Lookup and its usage in its javadoc. Here is just a list of frequently asked or interesting questions slowly expanding as people ask them:

    Lookup faq:

    How to specify that a service in Lookup should be available only on Windows?

    Q: Most of the time I specify interfaces that I want to add to the Lookup class in the layer.xml file. But, let's say I have a platform-specific interface (something on Windows only, for instance).

    How can I specify (in the xml, or programmatically) that this service should only be added to the Lookup if the platform is Windows? >

    In general there are three ways to achieve this.
    • It is possible to write a specific module and enable it only on windows. See os specific modules documentation. Then you can put a registration of your instance into your module's META-INF/services directory and it will be available only on Windows.

    • Another possibility that does not require new module, but which executes a code on startup (which may have performance implications) is to use methodvalue attribute. Register your instance in layer using your-Object.instance file as described at services documentation and in your factory method either return the instance your want or null depending on result of Utilities.isWindows() call.

    • In some cases, the interface for which you will register an implementation permits a no-operation semantics. For example, InstalledFileLocator.locate(...) can return a valid File, or null. You could always register an InstalledFileLocator instance yet disable it on non-Windows platforms (always returning null).

    How shall I write an extension point for my module?

    Q: I have more modules one of them providing the core functionality and few more that wish to extend it. What is the right way to do it? How does the Netbeans platform declare such extension point?

    Start with declaring an extension interface in your core module and put it into the module's public packages. Imagine for example that the core module is in JAR file org-my-netbeans-coremodule.jar and already contains in manifests line like OpenIDE-Module: org.my.netbeans.coremodule/1 and wants to display various tips of the day provided by other modules and thus defines:

     
    
    package org.my.netbeans.coremodule;
    
    public interface TipsOfTheDayProvider {
        public String provideTipOfTheDay ();
    }
    
    

    And in its manifest adds line OpenIDE-Module-Public-Packages: org.my.netbeans.coremodule.* to specify that this package contains exported API and shall be accessible to other modules.

    When the core module is about to display the tip of the day it can ask the system for all registered instances of the TipsOfTheDayProvider, randomly select one of them:

    
    import java.util.Collection;
    import java.util.Collections;
    import org.openide.util.Lookup;
    
    Lookup.Result result = Lookup.getDefault ().lookup (new Lookup.Template (TipsOfTheDayProvider.class));
    Collection c = result.allInstances ();
    Collections.shuffle (c);
    TipsOfTheDayProvider selected = (TipsOfTheDayProvider)c.iterator ().next ();
    
    

    and then display the tip. Simple, trivial, just by the usage of Lookup interface once creates a registry that other modules can enhance. But such enhancing of course requires work on the other side. Each module that would like to register its TipsOfTheDayProvider needs to depend on the core module - add OpenIDE-Module-Module-Dependencies: org.my.netbeans.coremodule/1 into its manifest and write a class with its own implementation of the provider:

    
    package org.my.netbeans.extramodule;
    
    class ExtraTip implements TipsOfTheDayProvider {
        public String provideTipOfTheDay () {
            return "Do you know that in order to write extension point you should use Lookup?";
        }
    }
    
    

    Then, the only necessary thing is to register such class by using the J2SE standard ProviderRegistrationMechanism into plain text file META-INF/services/org.my.netbeans.coremodule.TipsOfTheDayProvider in the module JAR containing just one line:

    org.my.netbeans.extramodule.ExtraTip
    

    and your modules are now ready to communicate using your own extension point.

    Question (arch-time): What are the time estimates of the work?

    Answer:

    The module has been around since 1997 and is stilly improved from time to time.

    Question (arch-quality): How will the quality of your code be tested and how are future regressions going to be prevented?

    Answer:

    There is a lot of unit tests in CVS.

    Question (arch-where): Where one can find sources for your module?

    WARNING: Question with id="arch-where" has not been answered!

Project and platform dependencies

    Question (dep-nb): What other NetBeans projects and modules does this one depend on?

    Answer:

    This module is independent of other NetBeans modules and can be used independently. For better interaction with UI parts of NetBeans it however indirectly communicates with UI Utilities module using AWTBridge - a class that is looked up in Lookup.getDefault() and if registered can provide better UI elements for Actions.

    Default answer to this question is:

    These modules are required in project.xml file:

      Question (dep-non-nb): What other projects outside NetBeans does this one depend on?

      Answer:

      Reexports XML APIs so needs some XML parser implementation, but as one is provided in any 1.4 java, it in fact has no dependencies except on JRE.

      Question (dep-platform): On which platforms does your module run? Does it run in the same way on each?

      Answer:

      Platform independent.

      Question (dep-jre): Which version of JRE do you need (1.2, 1.3, 1.4, etc.)?

      Answer:

      Currently JRE 1.4 is needed.

      Question (dep-jrejdk): Do you require the JDK or is the JRE enough?

      Answer:

      JRE is enough.


    Deployment

      Question (deploy-jar): Do you deploy just module JAR file(s) or other files as well?

      Answer:

      FileLocation - the JAR file is located in platform cluster under lib/org-openide-util.jar .

      Question (deploy-nbm): Can you deploy an NBM via the Update Center?

      Answer:

      No reason to not deploy nbm.

      Question (deploy-shared): Do you need to be installed in the shared location only, or in the user directory only, or can your module be installed anywhere?

      Answer:

      Module is on real java classpath and as such it has to be in the shared directory.

      Question (deploy-packages): Are packages of your module made inaccessible by not declaring them public?

      Answer:

      Yes, public packages declared.

      Question (deploy-dependencies): What do other modules need to do to declare a dependency on this one?

      Answer:

      OpenIDE-Module-Module-Dependencies: org.openide.util > 6.8.31


    Compatibility with environment

      Question (compat-i18n): Is your module correctly internationalized?

      Answer:

      There is not much things to localize in this module, so it is properly localized. But it is good to note that the module adds BrandingSupport - which is similar to localization but also supports changes of resorces for application build on top of NetBeans. This is handled by our class NbBundle which reimplements the JDK's standard ResourceBundle to to take branding into the consideration. .

      Question (compat-standards): Does the module implement or define any standards? Is the implementation exact or does it deviate somehow?

      Answer:

      The default lookup registration follows the JDK's ProviderRegistrationMechanism but enhances it to also support the ProviderRegistrationRemoval.

      Question (compat-version): Can your module coexist with earlier and future versions of itself? Can you correctly read all old settings? Will future versions be able to read your current settings? Can you read or politely ignore settings stored by a future version?

      Answer:

      This module has no settings.


    Access to resources

      Question (resources-file): Does your module use java.io.File directly?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (resources-layer): Does your module provide own layer? Does it create any files or folders in it? What it is trying to communicate by that and with which components?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (resources-read): Does your module read any resources from layers? For what purpose?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (resources-mask): Does your module mask/hide/override any resources provided by other modules in their layers?

      Answer:

      No.


    Lookup of components


    Execution Environment


    Format of files and protocols


    Performance and Scalability

      Question (perf-startup): Does your module run any code on startup?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (perf-exit): Does your module run any code on exit?

      Answer:

      Nothing.

      Question (perf-scale): Which external criteria influence the performance of your program (size of file in editor, number of files in menu, in source directory, etc.) and how well your code scales?

      Answer:

      Lookup code scales linearily.

      Question (perf-limit): Are there any hard-coded or practical limits in the number or size of elements your code can handle?

      Answer:

      The default implementation of the MetaInfServicesLookup just keeps hashmap between queried classes and their implementations. The amount of memory is linear to amount of registered classes, but of course we are not counting the memory occupied by the instances which the lookup creates, that can be arbitrary.

      Question (perf-mem): How much memory does your component consume? Estimate with a relation to the number of windows, etc.

      Answer:

      There are no big data structures. The amount of memory occupied by instances of AbstractLookup is measured by unit tests.

      Question (perf-wakeup): Does any piece of your code wake up periodically and do something even when the system is otherwise idle (no user interaction)?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (perf-progress): Does your module execute any long-running tasks?

      Answer:

      Actions declared as CallableSystemAction.asynchronous() are executed outside of AWT thread on a dedicated request processor one.

      Question (perf-huge_dialogs): Does your module contain any dialogs or wizards with a large number of GUI controls such as combo boxes, lists, trees, or text areas?

      Answer:

      No.

      Question (perf-menus): Does your module use dynamically updated context menus, or context-sensitive actions with complicated and slow enablement logic?

      Answer:

      There are no menus.

      Question (perf-spi): How the performance of the plugged in code will be enforced?

      Answer:

      No enforcing is done.


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