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javax.naming.LinkRef

This class represents a Reference whose contents is a name, called the link name, that is bound to an atomic name in a context.

The name is a URL, or a name to be resolved relative to the initial context, or if the first character of the name is ".", the name is relative to the context in which the link is bound.

Normal resolution of names in context operations always follow links. Resolution of the link name itself may cause resolution to pass through other links. This gives rise to the possibility of a cycle of links whose resolution could not terminate normally. As a simple means to avoid such non-terminating resolutions, service providers may define limits on the number of links that may be involved in any single operation invoked by the caller.

A LinkRef contains a single StringRefAddr, whose type is "LinkAddress", and whose contents is the link name. The class name field of the Reference is that of this (LinkRef) class.

LinkRef is bound to a name using the normal Context.bind()/rebind(), and DirContext.bind()/rebind(). Context.lookupLink() is used to retrieve the link itself if the terminal atomic name is bound to a link.

Many naming systems support a native notion of link that may be used within the naming system itself. JNDI does not specify whether there is any relationship between such native links and JNDI links.

A LinkRef instance is not synchronized against concurrent access by multiple threads. Threads that need to access a LinkRef instance concurrently should synchronize amongst themselves and provide the necessary locking.

This class represents a Reference whose contents is a name, called the link name,
that is bound to an atomic name in a context.

The name is a URL, or a name to be resolved relative to the initial
context, or if the first character of the name is ".", the name
is relative to the context in which the link is bound.

Normal resolution of names in context operations always follow links.
Resolution of the link name itself may cause resolution to pass through
other  links. This gives rise to the possibility of a cycle of links whose
resolution could not terminate normally. As a simple means to avoid such
non-terminating resolutions, service providers may define limits on the
number of links that may be involved in any single operation invoked
by the caller.

A LinkRef contains a single StringRefAddr, whose type is "LinkAddress",
and whose contents is the link name. The class name field of the
Reference is that of this (LinkRef) class.

LinkRef is bound to a name using the normal Context.bind()/rebind(), and
DirContext.bind()/rebind(). Context.lookupLink() is used to retrieve the link
itself if the terminal atomic name is bound to a link.

Many naming systems support a native notion of link that may be used
within the naming system itself. JNDI does not specify whether
there is any relationship between such native links and JNDI links.

A LinkRef instance is not synchronized against concurrent access by multiple
threads. Threads that need to access a LinkRef instance concurrently should
synchronize amongst themselves and provide the necessary locking.
raw docstring

(->link-ref link-name)

Constructor.

Constructs a LinkRef for a name.

link-name - The non-null name for which to create this link. - javax.naming.Name

Constructor.

Constructs a LinkRef for a name.

link-name - The non-null name for which to create this link. - `javax.naming.Name`
raw docstring

(get-link-name this)

Retrieves the name of this link.

returns: The non-null name of this link. - java.lang.String

throws: javax.naming.MalformedLinkException - If a link name could not be extracted

Retrieves the name of this link.

returns: The non-null name of this link. - `java.lang.String`

throws: javax.naming.MalformedLinkException - If a link name could not be extracted
raw docstring

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