VariableInfo.java

/*
 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
 * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
 * the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */
package jakarta.servlet.jsp.tagext;

/**
 * Information on the scripting variables that are created/modified by a tag (at run-time). This information is provided
 * by TagExtraInfo classes and it is used by the translation phase of JSP.
 * <p>
 * Scripting variables generated by a custom action have an associated scope of either AT_BEGIN, NESTED, or AT_END.
 * <p>
 * The class name (VariableInfo.getClassName) in the returned objects is used to determine the types of the scripting
 * variables. Note that because scripting variables are assigned their values from scoped attributes which cannot be of
 * primitive types, &quot;boxed&quot; types such as <code>java.lang.Integer</code> must be used instead of primitives.
 * <p>
 * The class name may be a Fully Qualified Class Name, or a short class name.
 * <p>
 * If a Fully Qualified Class Name is provided, it should refer to a class that should be in the CLASSPATH for the Web
 * Application (see Servlet 2.4 specification - essentially it is WEB-INF/lib and WEB-INF/classes). Failure to be so
 * will lead to a translation-time error.
 * <p>
 * If a short class name is given in the VariableInfo objects, then the class name must be that of a public class in the
 * context of the import directives of the page where the custom action appears. The class must also be in the CLASSPATH
 * for the Web Application (see Servlet 2.4 specification - essentially it is WEB-INF/lib and WEB-INF/classes). Failure
 * to be so will lead to a translation-time error.
 * <p>
 * <B>Usage Comments</B>
 * <p>
 * Frequently a fully qualified class name will refer to a class that is known to the tag library and thus, delivered in
 * the same JAR file as the tag handlers. In most other remaining cases it will refer to a class that is in the platform
 * on which the JSP processor is built. Using fully qualified class names in this manner makes the usage relatively
 * resistant to configuration errors.
 * <p>
 * A short name is usually generated by the tag library based on some attributes passed through from the custom action
 * user (the author), and it is thus less robust: for instance a missing import directive in the referring JSP page will
 * lead to an invalid short name class and a translation error.
 * <p>
 * <B>Synchronization Protocol</B>
 * <p>
 * The result of the invocation on getVariableInfo is an array of VariableInfo objects. Each such object describes a
 * scripting variable by providing its name, its type, whether the variable is new or not, and what its scope is. Scope
 * is best described through a picture:
 * <p>
 * <IMG src="doc-files/VariableInfo-1.gif" alt="NESTED, AT_BEGIN and AT_END Variable Scopes">
 * <p>
 * The JSP 2.0 specification defines the interpretation of 3 values:
 * <ul>
 * <li>NESTED, if the scripting variable is available between the start tag and the end tag of the action that defines
 * it.
 * <li>AT_BEGIN, if the scripting variable is available from the start tag of the action that defines it until the end
 * of the scope.
 * <li>AT_END, if the scripting variable is available after the end tag of the action that defines it until the end of
 * the scope.
 * </ul>
 * The scope value for a variable implies what methods may affect its value and thus where synchronization is needed as
 * illustrated by the table below. <b>Note:</b> the synchronization of the variable(s) will occur <em>after</em> the
 * respective method has been called. <blockquote>
 * <table style="background-color:#999999">
 * <caption>Variable Synchronization Points</caption> <tbody>
 * <tr>
 * <td colspan="6" style="background-color:#999999"><u><b>Variable Synchronization Points</b></u><br>
 * </td>
 * </tr>
 * <tr>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">&nbsp;</th>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">doStartTag()</th>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">doInitBody()</th>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">doAfterBody()</th>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">doEndTag()</th>
 * <th style="background-color:#c0c0c0">doTag()</th>
 * </tr>
 * <tr>
 * <td style="background-color:#c0c0c0"><b>Tag<br>
 * </b></td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, AT_END<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * </tr>
 * <tr>
 * <td style="background-color:#c0c0c0"><b>IterationTag<br>
 * </b></td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, AT_END<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * </tr>
 * <tr>
 * <td style="background-color:#c0c0c0"><b>BodyTag<br>
 * </b></td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<sup>1</sup><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<sup>1</sup><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, NESTED<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, AT_END<br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * </tr>
 * <tr>
 * <td style="background-color:#c0c0c0"><b>SimpleTag<br>
 * </b></td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff"><br>
 * </td>
 * <td style="background-color:#ffffff">AT_BEGIN, AT_END<br>
 * </td>
 * </tr>
 * </tbody>
 * </table>
 * <sup>1</sup> Called after <code>doStartTag()</code> if <code>EVAL_BODY_INCLUDE</code> is returned, or after
 * <code>doInitBody()</code> otherwise. </blockquote>
 * <p>
 * <B>Variable Information in the TLD</B>
 * <p>
 * Scripting variable information can also be encoded directly for most cases into the Tag Library Descriptor using the
 * &lt;variable&gt; subelement of the &lt;tag&gt; element. See the JSP specification.
 */
public class VariableInfo {

    /**
     * Scope information that scripting variable is visible only within the start/end tags.
     */
    public static final int NESTED = 0;

    /**
     * Scope information that scripting variable is visible after start tag.
     */
    public static final int AT_BEGIN = 1;

    /**
     * Scope information that scripting variable is visible after end tag.
     */
    public static final int AT_END = 2;

    /**
     * Constructor These objects can be created (at translation time) by the TagExtraInfo instances.
     *
     * @param varName   The name of the scripting variable
     * @param className The type of this variable
     * @param declare   If true, it is a new variable (in some languages this will require a declaration)
     * @param scope     Indication on the lexical scope of the variable
     */
    public VariableInfo(String varName, String className, boolean declare, int scope) {
        this.varName = varName;
        this.className = className;
        this.declare = declare;
        this.scope = scope;
    }

    // Accessor methods

    /**
     * Returns the name of the scripting variable.
     *
     * @return the name of the scripting variable
     */
    public String getVarName() {
        return varName;
    }

    /**
     * Returns the type of this variable.
     *
     * @return the type of this variable
     */
    public String getClassName() {
        return className;
    }

    /**
     * Returns whether this is a new variable. If so, in some languages this will require a declaration.
     *
     * @return whether this is a new variable.
     */
    public boolean getDeclare() {
        return declare;
    }

    /**
     * Returns the lexical scope of the variable.
     *
     * @return the lexical scope of the variable, either AT_BEGIN, AT_END, or NESTED.
     *
     * @see #AT_BEGIN
     * @see #AT_END
     * @see #NESTED
     */
    public int getScope() {
        return scope;
    }

    // == private data
    private final String varName;
    private final String className;
    private final boolean declare;
    private final int scope;
}