/* * Copyright (c) 2005, 2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. * * This code 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 General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ package java.util.spi; import java.util.Locale; /** *
* This is the super class of all the locale sensitive service provider * interfaces (SPIs). *
* Locale sensitive service provider interfaces are interfaces that * correspond to locale sensitive classes in the {@code java.text} * and {@code java.util} packages in order to provide the locale * data used for each service. The interfaces enable the * construction of locale sensitive objects and the retrieval of * localized names for these packages. Locale sensitive factory methods * and methods for name retrieval in the {@code java.text} and * {@code java.util} packages use implementations of the provider * interfaces to offer support for locales beyond the set of locales * supported by the Java runtime environment itself. Locale sensitive service * providers are deployed on the application module path or the application class * path. In order to be looked up, providers must be visible to the {@link * ClassLoader#getSystemClassLoader() system class loader}. * See {@link java.util.ServiceLoader##developing-service-providers Deploying * Service Providers} for further detail on deploying a locale sensitive service * provider as a module or on the class path. * *
For a locale sensitive service provider deployed in a module, the provides * directive must be specified in the module declaration. The provides * directive specifies both the service and the service provider. * *
For example, an implementation of the {@link java.text.spi.DateFormatProvider * DateFormatProvider} class deployed as a module might specify the following directive: *
{@code * provides java.text.spi.DateFormatProvider with com.example.ExternalDateFormatProvider; * }* *
For a Locale Service Provider deployed on the class path, the provider * identifies itself with a provider-configuration file in the resource directory * META-INF/services. The file name should be the fully fully qualified provider * interface class name. The file should contain a list of fully-qualified concrete * provider class names, one per line. A line is terminated by any one of a line * feed ('\n'), a carriage return ('\r'), or a carriage return followed immediately * by a line feed. Space and tab characters surrounding each name, as well as * blank lines, are ignored. The comment character is '#' ('\u0023'); on each line * all characters following the first comment character are ignored. The file must * be encoded in UTF-8. *
* If a particular concrete provider class is named in more than one configuration * file, or is named in the same configuration file more than once, then the * duplicates will be ignored. The configuration file naming a particular provider * need not be in the same jar file or other distribution unit as the provider itself. * The provider must be accessible from the same class loader that was initially * queried to locate the configuration file; this is not necessarily the class loader * that loaded the file. *
* For example, an implementation of the * {@link java.text.spi.DateFormatProvider DateFormatProvider} class should * take the form of a jar file which contains the file: *
* META-INF/services/java.text.spi.DateFormatProvider ** And the file {@code java.text.spi.DateFormatProvider} should have * a line such as: *
* {@code com.foo.DateFormatProviderImpl} ** which is the fully qualified class name of the class implementing * {@code DateFormatProvider}. *
* Locale sensitive factory methods and methods for name retrieval in the * {@code java.text} and {@code java.util} packages invoke * service provider methods when needed to support the requested locale. * The methods first check whether the Java runtime environment itself * supports the requested locale, and use its support if available. * Otherwise, they call the {@link #isSupportedLocale(Locale) isSupportedLocale} * methods of installed providers for the appropriate interface to find one that * supports the requested locale. If such a provider is found, its other * methods are called to obtain the requested object or name. When checking * whether a locale is supported, the {@linkplain Locale##def_extensions * locale's extensions} are ignored by default. (If a locale's extensions should * also be checked, the {@code isSupportedLocale} method must be overridden). * If neither the Java runtime environment itself nor an installed provider * supports the requested locale, the methods go through a list of candidate * locales and repeat the availability check for each until a match is found. * The algorithm used for creating a list of candidate locales is same as * the one used by {@code ResourceBundle} by default (see * {@link java.util.ResourceBundle.Control#getCandidateLocales getCandidateLocales} * for the details). Even if a locale is resolved from the candidate list, * methods that return requested objects or names are invoked with the original * requested locale including {@code Locale} extensions. The Java runtime * environment must support the root locale for all locale sensitive services in * order to guarantee that this process terminates. *
* Providers of names (but not providers of other objects) are allowed to * return null for some name requests even for locales that they claim to * support by including them in their return value for * {@code getAvailableLocales}. Similarly, the Java runtime * environment itself may not have all names for all locales that it * supports. This is because the sets of objects for which names are * requested can be large and vary over time, so that it's not always * feasible to cover them completely. If the Java runtime environment or a * provider returns null instead of a name, the lookup will proceed as * described above as if the locale was not supported. *
* The search order of locale sensitive services can * be configured by using the {@systemProperty java.locale.providers} system property. * This system property declares the user's preferred order for looking up * the locale sensitive services separated by a comma. As this property value is * read and cached only at the initialization of this class, users should specify the * property on the java launcher command line. Setting it at runtime with * {@link System#setProperty(String, String)} is discouraged and it may not affect * the order. * JDK Reference Implementation provides the following three * locale data providers: *
* For example, if the following is specified in the property: *
* java.locale.providers=SPI,CLDR ** the locale sensitive services in the SPI providers are looked up first. If the * desired locale sensitive service is not available, then the runtime looks for CLDR. *
* The default value for looking up the preferred locale data providers is "CLDR", * so specifying only "CLDR" is identical to the default behavior. Applications which * require implementations of the locale sensitive services must explicitly specify * "SPI" in order for the Java runtime to load them from the classpath. * * @implNote The JDK uses locale data from the Unicode Consortium's * Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR) * to implement locale-sensitive APIs in the {@code java.util} and * {@code java.text} packages. This locale data derives the set of locales * supported by the Java runtime environment. The following table lists the * version of CLDR used in each JDK release. Unless otherwise specified, all * update releases in a given JDK release family use the same CLDR version. * Note that the CLDR locale data are subject to change. Users should not assume * that the locale data remain the same across CLDR versions. Otherwise, unexpected * incompatible behaviors may occur, such as an exception on parsing a date. * Refer to CLDR Releases * for the deltas between their releases. *
JDK release | *CLDR version |
---|---|
JDK 24 | *CLDR 46 |
JDK 23 | *CLDR 45 |
JDK 22 | *CLDR 44 |
JDK 21 | *CLDR 43 |
JDK 20 | *CLDR 42 |
JDK 19 | *CLDR 41 |
JDK 18 | *CLDR 39 |
JDK 17 | *CLDR 39 |
JDK 16 | *CLDR 38 |
JDK 15 | *CLDR 37 |
JDK 14 | *CLDR 36 |
JDK 13 | *CLDR 35.1 |
JDK 12 | *CLDR 33 |
JDK 11 | *CLDR 33 |
JDK 10 | *CLDR 29 |
JDK 9 | *CLDR 29 |
JDK 8 | *CLDR 21.0.1 |
The array returned by this method should not include two or more * {@code Locale} objects only differing in their extensions. */ public abstract Locale[] getAvailableLocales(); /** * Returns {@code true} if the given {@code locale} is supported by * this locale service provider. The given {@code locale} may contain * {@linkplain Locale##def_extensions extensions} that should be * taken into account for the support determination. * *
The default implementation returns {@code true} if the given {@code locale} * is equal to any of the available {@code Locale}s returned by * {@link #getAvailableLocales()} with ignoring any extensions in both the * given {@code locale} and the available locales. Concrete locale service * provider implementations should override this method if those * implementations are {@code Locale} extensions-aware. For example, * {@code DecimalFormatSymbolsProvider} implementations will need to check * extensions in the given {@code locale} to see if any numbering system is * specified and can be supported. However, {@code CollatorProvider} * implementations may not be affected by any particular numbering systems, * and in that case, extensions for numbering systems should be ignored. * * @param locale a {@code Locale} to be tested * @return {@code true} if the given {@code locale} is supported by this * provider; {@code false} otherwise. * @throws NullPointerException * if the given {@code locale} is {@code null} * @see Locale#hasExtensions() * @see Locale#stripExtensions() * @since 1.8 */ public boolean isSupportedLocale(Locale locale) { locale = locale.stripExtensions(); // throws NPE if locale == null for (Locale available : getAvailableLocales()) { if (locale.equals(available.stripExtensions())) { return true; } } return false; } }