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Posted to jdo-dev@db.apache.org by "Craig Russell (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2005/12/07 01:48:10 UTC

[jira] Updated: (JDO-178) javax.jdo.spi.I18NHelper causes NullPointerException

     [ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JDO-178?page=all ]

Craig Russell updated JDO-178:
------------------------------

    Fix Version: JDO 2 beta

> javax.jdo.spi.I18NHelper causes NullPointerException
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
>          Key: JDO-178
>          URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JDO-178
>      Project: JDO
>         Type: Bug
>   Components: api11, api20
>  Environment: Debian GNU/Linux sid
> Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.5.0_02-b09)
> Jakarta-Tomcat 5.5.9
> KODO JDO 3.3.4
>     Reporter: Marcin Owsiany
>     Assignee: Craig Russell
>     Priority: Minor
>      Fix For: JDO 2 beta
>  Attachments: i18nhelper.patch, i18nhelperpatch.txt
>
> In the above environment, I encountered exception being thrown on JDOHelper.getPersistenceManagerFactory(p) invocation. The exception was a tricky one, because .printStackTrace() called on it caused another exception to be thrown, forcing me to manually inspect it by iterating on result of .getStackTrace().
> Anyway, here is what I found after a loooong battle:
> On JDOHelper class init, an I18NHelper instance is instantiated. On that instantiation, an attempt is made to load a resource bundle, using ResourceBundle.getBundle(s, locale, classloader). The classloader is obtained by calling (javax.jdo.spi.I18NHelper.class).getClassLoader(). However in my case, this getClassLoader() call returned null, which, to my surprise, is fine according to J2SE API.
> http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/lang/Class.html#getClassLoader() says that:
>     Some implementations may use null to represent the bootstrap class loader. This
>     method will return null in such implementations if this class was loaded by the
>     bootstrap class loader.
> Anyway, when that null is passed to ResourceBundle.getBundle, it throws a NullPointerException.
> Furthermore, that exception is wrapped in another exception, JDOFatalInternalException if I recall correctly, whose superclass' toString() uses (surprise, surprise) an I18NHelper instance to get the exception description. This makes it impossible to investigate such exception using toString() (for example via log4j).
> OK, in truth, the above is a simplified version :-) In fact the exception is saved for later use by I18NHelper, and makes it to the JDO user only when the JDO implementation being used throws another, possibly unrelated, exception during its PersistenceManagerFactory instantiation (in my case it was a trial kodo version throwing a LicenseException). But the exception thrown by the JDO implementation gets lost, and the user only gets a quite unexpected JDO exception, which is hard to debug because of the aforementioned attachment of the exception to I18NHelper.
> Fortunately, the fix is quite easy:
> --- javax/jdo/spi/I18NHelper.java       2005-10-06 21:26:17.000000000 +0200
> +++ javax/jdo/spi/I18NHelper.java       2005-10-06 21:26:11.000000000 +0200
> @@ -114,7 +114,10 @@
>          ResourceBundle resourcebundle = (ResourceBundle)bundles.get(s);
>          if(resourcebundle == null)
>          {
> +            if(classloader != null)
>              resourcebundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle(s, locale, classloader);
> +            else
> +                resourcebundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle(s, locale);
>              bundles.put(s, resourcebundle);
>          }
>          return resourcebundle;
> This uses another ResourceBundle method if bootstrap classloader is to be used. Another way could possibly be to use a thread context classloader before trying the system classloader, but that's just my guess (I didn't try if the other classloader turns out non-null).
> I hope that my convoluted description can be understood. The above patch fixes the problem for me.
> regards,
> Marcin

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