[jboss-cvs] JBossAS SVN: r98811 - projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms.

jboss-cvs-commits at lists.jboss.org jboss-cvs-commits at lists.jboss.org
Tue Dec 22 13:07:11 EST 2009


Author: jaikiran
Date: 2009-12-22 13:07:10 -0500 (Tue, 22 Dec 2009)
New Revision: 98811

Removed:
   projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms/Session.java
Log:
Autoversioning commit:  a non-deltaV client made a change to
/projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms/Session.java

Deleted: projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms/Session.java
===================================================================
--- projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms/Session.java	2009-12-22 18:07:03 UTC (rev 98810)
+++ projects/javaee/tags/jboss-javaee-parent-6.0.0-alpha-1/jboss-jms-api/src/main/javax/jms/Session.java	2009-12-22 18:07:10 UTC (rev 98811)
@@ -1,739 +0,0 @@
-/*
- * JBoss, Home of Professional Open Source
- * Copyright 2005, JBoss Inc., and individual contributors as indicated
- * by the @authors tag. See the copyright.txt in the distribution for a
- * full listing of individual contributors.
- *
- * This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
- * under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as
- * published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of
- * the License, or (at your option) any later version.
- *
- * This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- * Lesser General Public License for more details.
- *
- * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
- * License along with this software; if not, write to the Free
- * Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
- * 02110-1301 USA, or see the FSF site: http://www.fsf.org.
- */
-package javax.jms;
-
-import java.io.Serializable;
-
-/** <P>A <CODE>Session</CODE> object is a single-threaded context for producing and consuming 
- * messages. Although it may allocate provider resources outside the Java 
- * virtual machine (JVM), it is considered a lightweight JMS object.
- *
- * <P>A session serves several purposes:
- *
- * <UL>
- *   <LI>It is a factory for its message producers and consumers.
- *   <LI>It supplies provider-optimized message factories.
- *   <LI>It is a factory for <CODE>TemporaryTopics</CODE> and 
- *        <CODE>TemporaryQueues</CODE>. 
- *   <LI> It provides a way to create <CODE>Queue</CODE> or <CODE>Topic</CODE>
- *      objects for those clients that need to dynamically manipulate 
- *      provider-specific destination names.
- *   <LI>It supports a single series of transactions that combine work 
- *       spanning its producers and consumers into atomic units.
- *   <LI>It defines a serial order for the messages it consumes and 
- *       the messages it produces.
- *   <LI>It retains messages it consumes until they have been 
- *       acknowledged.
- *   <LI>It serializes execution of message listeners registered with 
- *       its message consumers.
- *   <LI> It is a factory for <CODE>QueueBrowsers</CODE>.
- * </UL>
- *
- * <P>A session can create and service multiple message producers and 
- * consumers.
- *
- * <P>One typical use is to have a thread block on a synchronous 
- * <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> until a message arrives. The thread may then
- * use one or more of the <CODE>Session</CODE>'s <CODE>MessageProducer</CODE>s.
- *
- * <P>If a client desires to have one thread produce messages while others 
- * consume them, the client should use a separate session for its producing 
- * thread.
- *
- * <P>Once a connection has been started, any session with one or more 
- * registered message listeners is dedicated to the thread of control that 
- * delivers messages to it. It is erroneous for client code to use this session
- * or any of its constituent objects from another thread of control. The
- * only exception to this rule is the use of the session or connection 
- * <CODE>close</CODE> method.
- *
- * <P>It should be easy for most clients to partition their work naturally
- * into sessions. This model allows clients to start simply and incrementally
- * add message processing complexity as their need for concurrency grows.
- *
- * <P>The <CODE>close</CODE> method is the only session method that can be 
- * called while some other session method is being executed in another thread.
- *
- * <P>A session may be specified as transacted. Each transacted 
- * session supports a single series of transactions. Each transaction groups 
- * a set of message sends and a set of message receives into an atomic unit 
- * of work. In effect, transactions organize a session's input message 
- * stream and output message stream into series of atomic units. When a 
- * transaction commits, its atomic unit of input is acknowledged and its 
- * associated atomic unit of output is sent. If a transaction rollback is 
- * done, the transaction's sent messages are destroyed and the session's input 
- * is automatically recovered.
- *
- * <P>The content of a transaction's input and output units is simply those 
- * messages that have been produced and consumed within the session's current 
- * transaction.
- *
- * <P>A transaction is completed using either its session's <CODE>commit</CODE>
- * method or its session's <CODE>rollback</CODE> method. The completion of a
- * session's current transaction automatically begins the next. The result is
- * that a transacted session always has a current transaction within which its 
- * work is done.  
- *
- * <P>The Java Transaction Service (JTS) or some other transaction monitor may 
- * be used to combine a session's transaction with transactions on other 
- * resources (databases, other JMS sessions, etc.). Since Java distributed 
- * transactions are controlled via the Java Transaction API (JTA), use of the 
- * session's <CODE>commit</CODE> and <CODE>rollback</CODE> methods in 
- * this context is prohibited.
- *
- * <P>The JMS API does not require support for JTA; however, it does define 
- * how a provider supplies this support.
- *
- * <P>Although it is also possible for a JMS client to handle distributed 
- * transactions directly, it is unlikely that many JMS clients will do this.
- * Support for JTA in the JMS API is targeted at systems vendors who will be 
- * integrating the JMS API into their application server products.
- *
- * @see         javax.jms.QueueSession
- * @see         javax.jms.TopicSession
- * @see         javax.jms.XASession
- */
-
-public interface Session extends Runnable
-{
-
-   /** With this acknowledgment mode, the session automatically acknowledges
-    * a client's receipt of a message either when the session has successfully 
-    * returned from a call to <CODE>receive</CODE> or when the message 
-    * listener the session has called to process the message successfully 
-    * returns.
-    */
-
-   static final int AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE = 1;
-
-   /** With this acknowledgment mode, the client acknowledges a consumed 
-    * message by calling the message's <CODE>acknowledge</CODE> method. 
-    * Acknowledging a consumed message acknowledges all messages that the 
-    * session has consumed.
-    *
-    * <P>When client acknowledgment mode is used, a client may build up a 
-    * large number of unacknowledged messages while attempting to process 
-    * them. A JMS provider should provide administrators with a way to 
-    * limit client overrun so that clients are not driven to resource 
-    * exhaustion and ensuing failure when some resource they are using 
-    * is temporarily blocked.
-    *
-    * @see javax.jms.Message#acknowledge()
-    */
-
-   static final int CLIENT_ACKNOWLEDGE = 2;
-
-   /** This acknowledgment mode instructs the session to lazily acknowledge 
-    * the delivery of messages. This is likely to result in the delivery of 
-    * some duplicate messages if the JMS provider fails, so it should only be 
-    * used by consumers that can tolerate duplicate messages. Use of this  
-    * mode can reduce session overhead by minimizing the work the 
-    * session does to prevent duplicates.
-    */
-
-   static final int DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE = 3;
-
-   /** This value is returned from the method 
-    * <CODE>getAcknowledgeMode</CODE> if the session is transacted.
-    * If a <CODE>Session</CODE> is transacted, the acknowledgement mode
-    * is ignored.
-    */
-   static final int SESSION_TRANSACTED = 0;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>BytesMessage</CODE> object. A <CODE>BytesMessage</CODE> 
-    * object is used to send a message containing a stream of uninterpreted 
-    * bytes.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   BytesMessage createBytesMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>MapMessage</CODE> object. A <CODE>MapMessage</CODE> 
-    * object is used to send a self-defining set of name-value pairs, where 
-    * names are <CODE>String</CODE> objects and values are primitive values 
-    * in the Java programming language.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   MapMessage createMapMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>Message</CODE> object. The <CODE>Message</CODE> 
-    * interface is the root interface of all JMS messages. A 
-    * <CODE>Message</CODE> object holds all the 
-    * standard message header information. It can be sent when a message 
-    * containing only header information is sufficient.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   Message createMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates an <CODE>ObjectMessage</CODE> object. An 
-    * <CODE>ObjectMessage</CODE> object is used to send a message 
-    * that contains a serializable Java object.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   ObjectMessage createObjectMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates an initialized <CODE>ObjectMessage</CODE> object. An 
-    * <CODE>ObjectMessage</CODE> object is used 
-    * to send a message that contains a serializable Java object.
-    *  
-    * @param object the object to use to initialize this message
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   ObjectMessage createObjectMessage(Serializable object) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>StreamMessage</CODE> object. A 
-    * <CODE>StreamMessage</CODE> object is used to send a 
-    * self-defining stream of primitive values in the Java programming 
-    * language.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   StreamMessage createStreamMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>TextMessage</CODE> object. A <CODE>TextMessage</CODE> 
-    * object is used to send a message containing a <CODE>String</CODE>
-    * object.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   TextMessage createTextMessage() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates an initialized <CODE>TextMessage</CODE> object. A 
-    * <CODE>TextMessage</CODE> object is used to send 
-    * a message containing a <CODE>String</CODE>.
-    *
-    * @param text the string used to initialize this message
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to create this message
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   TextMessage createTextMessage(String text) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Indicates whether the session is in transacted mode.
-    *  
-    * @return true if the session is in transacted mode
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to return the 
-    *                         transaction mode due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   boolean getTransacted() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Returns the acknowledgement mode of the session. The acknowledgement
-    * mode is set at the time that the session is created. If the session is
-    * transacted, the acknowledgement mode is ignored.
-    *
-    *@return            If the session is not transacted, returns the 
-    *                  current acknowledgement mode for the session.
-    *                  If the session
-    *                  is transacted, returns SESSION_TRANSACTED.
-    *
-    *@exception JMSException   if the JMS provider fails to return the 
-    *                         acknowledgment mode due to some internal error.
-    *
-    *@see Connection#createSession
-    *@since 1.1
-    */
-   int getAcknowledgeMode() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Commits all messages done in this transaction and releases any locks
-    * currently held.
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to commit the
-    *                         transaction due to some internal error.
-    * @exception TransactionRolledBackException if the transaction
-    *                         is rolled back due to some internal error
-    *                         during commit.
-    * @exception IllegalStateException if the method is not called by a 
-    *                         transacted session.
-    */
-
-   void commit() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Rolls back any messages done in this transaction and releases any locks 
-    * currently held.
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to roll back the
-    *                         transaction due to some internal error.
-    * @exception IllegalStateException if the method is not called by a 
-    *                         transacted session.
-    *                                     
-    */
-
-   void rollback() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Closes the session.
-    *
-    * <P>Since a provider may allocate some resources on behalf of a session 
-    * outside the JVM, clients should close the resources when they are not 
-    * needed. 
-    * Relying on garbage collection to eventually reclaim these resources 
-    * may not be timely enough.
-    *
-    * <P>There is no need to close the producers and consumers
-    * of a closed session. 
-    *
-    * <P> This call will block until a <CODE>receive</CODE> call or message 
-    * listener in progress has completed. A blocked message consumer
-    * <CODE>receive</CODE> call returns <CODE>null</CODE> when this session 
-    * is closed.
-    *
-    * <P>Closing a transacted session must roll back the transaction
-    * in progress.
-    * 
-    * <P>This method is the only <CODE>Session</CODE> method that can 
-    * be called concurrently. 
-    *
-    * <P>Invoking any other <CODE>Session</CODE> method on a closed session 
-    * must throw a <CODE>JMSException.IllegalStateException</CODE>. Closing a 
-    * closed session must <I>not</I> throw an exception.
-    * 
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to close the
-    *                         session due to some internal error.
-    */
-
-   void close() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Stops message delivery in this session, and restarts message delivery
-    * with the oldest unacknowledged message.
-    *  
-    * <P>All consumers deliver messages in a serial order.
-    * Acknowledging a received message automatically acknowledges all 
-    * messages that have been delivered to the client.
-    *
-    * <P>Restarting a session causes it to take the following actions:
-    *
-    * <UL>
-    *   <LI>Stop message delivery
-    *   <LI>Mark all messages that might have been delivered but not 
-    *       acknowledged as "redelivered"
-    *   <LI>Restart the delivery sequence including all unacknowledged 
-    *       messages that had been previously delivered. Redelivered messages
-    *       do not have to be delivered in 
-    *       exactly their original delivery order.
-    * </UL>
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to stop and restart
-    *                         message delivery due to some internal error.
-    * @exception IllegalStateException if the method is called by a 
-    *                         transacted session.
-    */
-
-   void recover() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Returns the session's distinguished message listener (optional).
-    *
-    * @return the message listener associated with this session
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to get the message 
-    *                         listener due to an internal error.
-    *
-    * @see javax.jms.Session#setMessageListener
-    * @see javax.jms.ServerSessionPool
-    * @see javax.jms.ServerSession
-    */
-
-   MessageListener getMessageListener() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Sets the session's distinguished message listener (optional).
-    *
-    * <P>When the distinguished message listener is set, no other form of 
-    * message receipt in the session can 
-    * be used; however, all forms of sending messages are still supported.
-    * 
-    * <P>This is an expert facility not used by regular JMS clients.
-    *
-    * @param listener the message listener to associate with this session
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the JMS provider fails to set the message 
-    *                         listener due to an internal error.
-    *
-    * @see javax.jms.Session#getMessageListener
-    * @see javax.jms.ServerSessionPool
-    * @see javax.jms.ServerSession
-    */
-
-   void setMessageListener(MessageListener listener) throws JMSException;
-
-   /**
-    * Optional operation, intended to be used only by Application Servers,
-    * not by ordinary JMS clients.
-    *
-    * @see javax.jms.ServerSession
-    */
-   public void run();
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>MessageProducer</CODE> to send messages to the specified 
-    * destination.
-    *
-    * <P>A client uses a <CODE>MessageProducer</CODE> object to send 
-    * messages to a destination. Since <CODE>Queue</CODE> and <CODE>Topic</CODE> 
-    * both inherit from <CODE>Destination</CODE>, they can be used in
-    * the destination parameter to create a <CODE>MessageProducer</CODE> object.
-    * 
-    * @param destination the <CODE>Destination</CODE> to send to, 
-    * or null if this is a producer which does not have a specified 
-    * destination.
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a MessageProducer
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    * is specified.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    * 
-    */
-   public MessageProducer createProducer(Destination destination) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> for the specified destination.
-    * Since <CODE>Queue</CODE> and <CODE>Topic</CODE> 
-    * both inherit from <CODE>Destination</CODE>, they can be used in
-    * the destination parameter to create a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE>.
-    *
-    * @param destination the <CODE>Destination</CODE> to access. 
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a consumer
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination 
-    *                         is specified.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    */
-   public MessageConsumer createConsumer(Destination destination) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> for the specified destination, 
-    * using a message selector. 
-    * Since <CODE>Queue</CODE> and <CODE>Topic</CODE> 
-    * both inherit from <CODE>Destination</CODE>, they can be used in
-    * the destination parameter to create a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE>.
-    *
-    * <P>A client uses a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> object to receive 
-    * messages that have been sent to a destination.
-    *  
-    *       
-    * @param destination the <CODE>Destination</CODE> to access
-    * @param messageSelector only messages with properties matching the
-    * message selector expression are delivered. A value of null or
-    * an empty string indicates that there is no message selector 
-    * for the message consumer. 
-    * 
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a MessageConsumer
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    * is specified.
-    
-    * @exception InvalidSelectorException if the message selector is invalid.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    */
-   MessageConsumer createConsumer(Destination destination, java.lang.String messageSelector) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> for the specified destination, using a
-    * message selector. This method can specify whether messages published by 
-    * its own connection should be delivered to it, if the destination is a 
-    * topic. 
-    *<P> Since <CODE>Queue</CODE> and <CODE>Topic</CODE> 
-    * both inherit from <CODE>Destination</CODE>, they can be used in
-    * the destination parameter to create a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE>.
-    * <P>A client uses a <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE> object to receive 
-    * messages that have been published to a destination. 
-    *               
-    * <P>In some cases, a connection may both publish and subscribe to a 
-    * topic. The consumer <CODE>NoLocal</CODE> attribute allows a consumer
-    * to inhibit the delivery of messages published by its own connection.
-    * The default value for this attribute is False. The <CODE>noLocal</CODE> 
-    * value must be supported by destinations that are topics. 
-    *
-    * @param destination the <CODE>Destination</CODE> to access 
-    * @param messageSelector only messages with properties matching the
-    * message selector expression are delivered. A value of null or
-    * an empty string indicates that there is no message selector 
-    * for the message consumer.
-    * @param NoLocal  - if true, and the destination is a topic,
-    *                   inhibits the delivery of messages published
-    *                   by its own connection.  The behavior for
-    *                   <CODE>NoLocal</CODE> is 
-    *                   not specified if the destination is a queue.
-    * 
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a MessageConsumer
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    * is specified.
-    
-    * @exception InvalidSelectorException if the message selector is invalid.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    *
-    */
-   MessageConsumer createConsumer(Destination destination, java.lang.String messageSelector, boolean NoLocal)
-         throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a queue identity given a <CODE>Queue</CODE> name.
-    *
-    * <P>This facility is provided for the rare cases where clients need to
-    * dynamically manipulate queue identity. It allows the creation of a
-    * queue identity with a provider-specific name. Clients that depend 
-    * on this ability are not portable.
-    *
-    * <P>Note that this method is not for creating the physical queue. 
-    * The physical creation of queues is an administrative task and is not
-    * to be initiated by the JMS API. The one exception is the
-    * creation of temporary queues, which is accomplished with the 
-    * <CODE>createTemporaryQueue</CODE> method.
-    *
-    * @param queueName the name of this <CODE>Queue</CODE>
-    *
-    * @return a <CODE>Queue</CODE> with the given name
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a queue
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @since 1.1
-    */
-
-   Queue createQueue(String queueName) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a topic identity given a <CODE>Topic</CODE> name.
-    *
-    * <P>This facility is provided for the rare cases where clients need to
-    * dynamically manipulate topic identity. This allows the creation of a
-    * topic identity with a provider-specific name. Clients that depend 
-    * on this ability are not portable.
-    *
-    * <P>Note that this method is not for creating the physical topic. 
-    * The physical creation of topics is an administrative task and is not
-    * to be initiated by the JMS API. The one exception is the
-    * creation of temporary topics, which is accomplished with the 
-    * <CODE>createTemporaryTopic</CODE> method.
-    *  
-    * @param topicName the name of this <CODE>Topic</CODE>
-    *
-    * @return a <CODE>Topic</CODE> with the given name
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a topic
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @since 1.1
-    */
-
-   Topic createTopic(String topicName) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>QueueBrowser</CODE> object to peek at the messages on 
-    * the specified queue.
-    *
-    * @param queue the <CODE>queue</CODE> to access
-    *
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    *                         is specified 
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    */
-
-   /** Creates a durable subscriber to the specified topic.
-    *  
-    * <P>If a client needs to receive all the messages published on a 
-    * topic, including the ones published while the subscriber is inactive,
-    * it uses a durable <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE>. The JMS provider
-    * retains a record of this 
-    * durable subscription and insures that all messages from the topic's 
-    * publishers are retained until they are acknowledged by this 
-    * durable subscriber or they have expired.
-    *
-    * <P>Sessions with durable subscribers must always provide the same 
-    * client identifier. In addition, each client must specify a name that 
-    * uniquely identifies (within client identifier) each durable 
-    * subscription it creates. Only one session at a time can have a 
-    * <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE> for a particular durable subscription.
-    *
-    * <P>A client can change an existing durable subscription by creating 
-    * a durable <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE> with the same name and a new 
-    * topic and/or 
-    * message selector. Changing a durable subscriber is equivalent to 
-    * unsubscribing (deleting) the old one and creating a new one.
-    *
-    * <P>In some cases, a connection may both publish and subscribe to a 
-    * topic. The subscriber <CODE>NoLocal</CODE> attribute allows a subscriber
-    * to inhibit the delivery of messages published by its own connection.
-    * The default value for this attribute is false.
-    *
-    * @param topic the non-temporary <CODE>Topic</CODE> to subscribe to
-    * @param name the name used to identify this subscription
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a subscriber
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid topic is specified.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1
-    */
-
-   TopicSubscriber createDurableSubscriber(Topic topic, String name) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a durable subscriber to the specified topic, using a
-    * message selector and specifying whether messages published by its
-    * own connection should be delivered to it.
-    *  
-    * <P>If a client needs to receive all the messages published on a 
-    * topic, including the ones published while the subscriber is inactive,
-    * it uses a durable <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE>. The JMS provider
-    * retains a record of this 
-    * durable subscription and insures that all messages from the topic's 
-    * publishers are retained until they are acknowledged by this 
-    * durable subscriber or they have expired.
-    *
-    * <P>Sessions with durable subscribers must always provide the same
-    * client identifier. In addition, each client must specify a name which
-    * uniquely identifies (within client identifier) each durable
-    * subscription it creates. Only one session at a time can have a
-    * <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE> for a particular durable subscription.
-    * An inactive durable subscriber is one that exists but
-    * does not currently have a message consumer associated with it.
-    *
-    * <P>A client can change an existing durable subscription by creating 
-    * a durable <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE> with the same name and a new 
-    * topic and/or 
-    * message selector. Changing a durable subscriber is equivalent to 
-    * unsubscribing (deleting) the old one and creating a new one.
-    *
-    * @param topic the non-temporary <CODE>Topic</CODE> to subscribe to
-    * @param name the name used to identify this subscription
-    * @param messageSelector only messages with properties matching the
-    * message selector expression are delivered.  A value of null or
-    * an empty string indicates that there is no message selector 
-    * for the message consumer.
-    * @param noLocal if set, inhibits the delivery of messages published
-    * by its own connection
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a subscriber
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid topic is specified.
-    * @exception InvalidSelectorException if the message selector is invalid.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1
-    */
-
-   TopicSubscriber createDurableSubscriber(Topic topic, String name, String messageSelector, boolean noLocal)
-         throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>QueueBrowser</CODE> object to peek at the messages on 
-    * the specified queue.
-    *  
-    * @param queue the <CODE>queue</CODE> to access
-    *
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a browser
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    *                         is specified 
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    */
-   QueueBrowser createBrowser(Queue queue) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>QueueBrowser</CODE> object to peek at the messages on 
-    * the specified queue using a message selector.
-    *  
-    * @param queue the <CODE>queue</CODE> to access
-    *
-    * @param messageSelector only messages with properties matching the
-    * message selector expression are delivered. A value of null or
-    * an empty string indicates that there is no message selector 
-    * for the message consumer.
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a browser
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid destination
-    *                         is specified 
-    * @exception InvalidSelectorException if the message selector is invalid.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1 
-    */
-
-   QueueBrowser createBrowser(Queue queue, String messageSelector) throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>TemporaryQueue</CODE> object. Its lifetime will be that 
-    * of the <CODE>Connection</CODE> unless it is deleted earlier.
-    *
-    * @return a temporary queue identity
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a temporary queue
-    *                         due to some internal error.
-    *
-    *@since 1.1
-    */
-
-   TemporaryQueue createTemporaryQueue() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Creates a <CODE>TemporaryTopic</CODE> object. Its lifetime will be that 
-    * of the <CODE>Connection</CODE> unless it is deleted earlier.
-    *
-    * @return a temporary topic identity
-    *
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to create a temporary
-    *                         topic due to some internal error.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1  
-    */
-
-   TemporaryTopic createTemporaryTopic() throws JMSException;
-
-   /** Unsubscribes a durable subscription that has been created by a client.
-    *  
-    * <P>This method deletes the state being maintained on behalf of the 
-    * subscriber by its provider.
-    *
-    * <P>It is erroneous for a client to delete a durable subscription
-    * while there is an active <CODE>MessageConsumer</CODE>
-    * or <CODE>TopicSubscriber</CODE> for the 
-    * subscription, or while a consumed message is part of a pending 
-    * transaction or has not been acknowledged in the session.
-    *
-    * @param name the name used to identify this subscription
-    *  
-    * @exception JMSException if the session fails to unsubscribe to the 
-    *                         durable subscription due to some internal error.
-    * @exception InvalidDestinationException if an invalid subscription name
-    *                                        is specified.
-    *
-    * @since 1.1
-    */
-
-   void unsubscribe(String name) throws JMSException;
-
-}




More information about the jboss-cvs-commits mailing list