Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 6

javax.management
Annotation Type DescriptorKey


@Documented
@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Target(value=METHOD)
public @interface DescriptorKey

Meta-annotation that describes how an annotation element relates to a field in a Descriptor. This can be the Descriptor for an MBean, or for an attribute, operation, or constructor in an MBean, or for a parameter of an operation or constructor.

Consider this annotation for example:

 @Documented
 @Target(ElementType.METHOD)
 @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
 public @interface Units {
     @DescriptorKey("units")
     String value();
 }
 

and this use of the annotation:

 public interface CacheControlMBean {
     @Units("bytes")
     public long getCacheSize();
 }
 

When a Standard MBean is made from the CacheControlMBean, the usual rules mean that it will have an attribute called CacheSize of type long. The @Units attribute, given the above definition, will ensure that the MBeanAttributeInfo for this attribute will have a Descriptor that has a field called units with corresponding value bytes.

Similarly, if the annotation looks like this:

 @Documented
 @Target(ElementType.METHOD)
 @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
 public @interface Units {
     @DescriptorKey("units")
     String value();

     @DescriptorKey("descriptionResourceKey")
     String resourceKey() default "";

     @DescriptorKey("descriptionResourceBundleBaseName")
     String resourceBundleBaseName() default "";
 }
 

and it is used like this:

 public interface CacheControlMBean {
     @Units("bytes",
            resourceKey="bytes.key",
            resourceBundleBaseName="com.example.foo.MBeanResources")
     public long getCacheSize();
 }
 

then the resulting Descriptor will contain the following fields:

NameValue
units"bytes"
descriptionResourceKey"bytes.key"
descriptionResourceBundleBaseName "com.example.foo.MBeanResources"

An annotation such as @Units can be applied to:

Other uses of the annotation are ignored.

Interface annotations are checked only on the exact interface that defines the management interface of a Standard MBean or an MXBean, not on its parent interfaces. Method annotations are checked only in the most specific interface in which the method appears; in other words, if a child interface overrides a method from a parent interface, only @DescriptorKey annotations in the method in the child interface are considered.

The Descriptor fields contributed in this way by different annotations on the same program element must be consistent. That is, two different annotations, or two members of the same annotation, must not define a different value for the same Descriptor field. Fields from annotations on a getter method must also be consistent with fields from annotations on the corresponding setter method.

The Descriptor resulting from these annotations will be merged with any Descriptor fields provided by the implementation, such as the immutableInfo field for an MBean. The fields from the annotations must be consistent with these fields provided by the implementation.

An annotation element to be converted into a descriptor field can be of any type allowed by the Java language, except an annotation or an array of annotations. The value of the field is derived from the value of the annotation element as follows:

Annotation elementDescriptor field
Primitive value (5, false, etc) Wrapped value (Integer.valueOf(5), Boolean.FALSE, etc)
Class constant (e.g. Thread.class) Class name from Class.getName() (e.g. "java.lang.Thread")
Enum constant (e.g. ElementType.FIELD) Constant name from Enum.name() (e.g. "FIELD")
Array of class constants or enum constants String array derived by applying these rules to each element
Value of any other type
(String, String[], int[], etc)
The same value

Since:
1.6

Required Element Summary
 String value
           
 

Element Detail

value

public abstract String value

Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 6

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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

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