Unless you are a JDBC vendor, it is unwise to implement interfaces like this one.
Consider using a proxy to maintain compatibility across JVM versions.
Migrating to a proxy is accomplished as follows. Consider this ResultSet
implementation:
public class ResultSetFoo implements ResultSet {
public String getString(int columnIndex) throws SQLException {
return "foobar";
}
// other Java 1.4 methods
This would be changed so no classes implement ResultSet
:
public class ResultBar {
public String getString(int columnIndex) throws SQLException {
return "foobar";
}
// other method signatures matching the 1.4 ResultSet, as before
You would then need to build a mapping of methods between the two types at runtime (a primitive form of duck-typing:)
private static final Map RESULT_SET_DUCK = initResultSet();
private static Map initResultSet() {
Map map = new HashMap();
Method[] methods = ResultSet.class.getMethods();
for (int i = 0; i < methods.length; i++) {
try {
Method match =
ResultBar.class.getMethod(methods[i].getName(),
methods[i].getParameterTypes());
map.put(methods[i], match);
} catch (SecurityException e) {
throw new IllegalStateException(e);
} catch (NoSuchMethodException e) {
// OK; not supported in 1.4
}
}
return map;
}
This allows you to invoke the ResultBar
type by proxy:
/** Create a java.sql.ResultSet proxy */
public static ResultSet proxy(final ResultBar duck) {
class Handler implements InvocationHandler {
public Object invoke(Object proxy, Method method, Object[] args)
throws Throwable {
Method proxiedMethod = (Method) RESULT_SET_DUCK.get(method);
if (proxiedMethod == null) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException("TODO: method detail");
} else {
return invoke(proxiedMethod, duck, args);
}
}
private Object invoke(Method m, Object target, Object[] args)
throws Throwable {
try {
return m.invoke(target, args);
} catch (InvocationTargetException e) {
throw e.getCause();
}
}
}
return (ResultSet) Proxy.newProxyInstance(null, RSET, new Handler());
}
Such implementations should allow code compiled in one JVM to be used in future JVMs even if new methods are added. Existing method signatures are unlikely to change because it is one thing to make database vendors do some work; something else to make all API consumers change.
You may need to change how class instances are created. You can no longer use a constructor directly:
ResultSet nonPortable = new ResultSetFoo();
//becomes...
ResultSet portable = proxy(new ResultBar());
If you're already employing a factory/builder/etc. pattern this bit is easy.
Although reflection is relatively cheap in the latest JVMs it is less so in older versions; this may have a detrimental effect on performance.
rt.jar
for the class definitions. Keep using the current compiler with the-source
and-target
switches and use-bootclasspath
to point to thert.jar
of the 1.4 release.