Hallo,
I think, that makes no sense.
ejbCreate is called by the home and according to your program calls startup
which does something with someObject.
But someobject is not yet created.
Hermann Schmitt
-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: A mailing list for Enterprise JavaBeans development
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Im Auftrag von Rumble, Nick
Gesendet: Dienstag, 19. Oktober 1999 16:28
An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Betreff: Default class constructor verses ejbCreate() on SessionBean
Wichtigkeit: Hoch
Hi - I've a question about the legality of using a class's default
constructor to perform some initialisation. This is best explained by
example. I have an abstract Session Bean called "Adaptor" it's main task is
to call the "startup" method within subclassed "real" Session Beans:
public abstract class Adaptor implements SessionBean
{
public void ejbCreate()
throws RemoteException
{
startup();
}
// Rest of SessionBean and Remote interfaces cut out for brevity
protected abstract void startup() ;
}
Example "real" session bean that can be instantiated by an EJB client:
public class OrderTask extends Adaptor
{
Object someObject;
public OrderTask()
{
someObject = new ..... ;
}
protected void startup()
{
someObject.doSomething();
}
}
In this example, the default constructor for OrderTask() initialises/creates
someObject and the startup() method - called indirectly by the default EJB
constructor - "ejbCreate()" does something with it.
Is this acceptable/legal ?
Thanks in advance.
Nick Rumble
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