As in the case of Ice objects, a Dynamic Ice application may represent user exceptions in a native format that is not directly compatible with the Ice API. If the application needs to raise such a user exception to the Ice run time, the exception must be wrapped in a subclass of Ice.UserException. The Dynamic Ice API provides a class to simplify this process:
{zcode:java}
package Ice;
public abstract class UserExceptionWriter extends UserException {
public UserExceptionWriter(Communicator communicator);
public abstract void write(Ice.OutputStream os);
// ...
}
{zcode} |
A subclass of UserExceptionWriter is responsible for supplying a communicator to the constructor, and for implementing the following methods:
void write(OutputStream os)An application extracts a user exception by calling one of two versions of the throwException method defined in the InputStream class:
{zcode:java}
package Ice;
public interface InputStream {
void throwException() throws UserException;
void throwException(UserExceptionReaderFactory factory) throws UserException;
// ...
}
{zcode} |
The version without any arguments attempts to locate and throw a Java implementation of the encoded exception using classes generated by the Slice-to-Java compiler.
If your goal is to create an exception in another type system, such as a native PHP exception object, you must call the second version of throwException and pass an implementation of UserExceptionReaderFactory:
{zcode:java}
package Ice;
public interface UserExceptionReaderFactory {
void createAndThrow(String typeId) throws UserException;
}
{zcode} |
As the stream iterates over slices of an exception from most-derived to least-derived, it invokes createAndThrow passing the type ID of each slice, giving the application an opportunity to raise an instance of UserExceptionReader:
{zcode:java}
package Ice;
public abstract class UserExceptionReader extends UserException {
protected UserExceptionReader(Communicator communicator);
public abstract void read(InputStream is);
public abstract String ice_name();
protected Communicator _communicator;
}
{zcode} |
Subclasses of UserExceptionReader must implement the abstract functions. In particular, the implementation of read must call InputStream.startException, unmarshal the remaining slices, and then call InputStream.endException.