AnalyzerGuru.java revision 1073
1384N/A * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 1384N/A * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 1384N/A * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 1384N/A * language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 1384N/A * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 1384N/A * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 1384N/A * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 1384N/A * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 1384N/A * Copyright (c) 2005, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 1384N/A * Manages and porvides Analyzers as needed. Please see 1384N/A * this</a> page for a great description of the purpose of the AnalyzerGuru. 1384N/A * Created on September 22, 2005 1384N/A /** The default {@code FileAnalyzerFactory} instance. */ 1384N/A /** Map from file names to analyzer factories. */ 1384N/A /** Map from file extensions to analyzer factories. */ 1384N/A // @TODO: have a comparator 1384N/A /** Map from magic strings to analyzer factories. */ 1384N/A * List of matcher objects which can be used to determine which analyzer 1384N/A /** List of all registered {@code FileAnalyzerFactory} instances. */ 1384N/A * If you write your own analyzer please register it here * Register a {@code FileAnalyzerFactory} instance. "name '" +
name +
"' used in multiple analyzers";
"suffix '" +
suffix +
"' used in multiple analyzers";
"magic '" +
magic +
"' used in multiple analyzers";
* Instruct the AnalyzerGuru to use a given analyzer for a given * @param extension the file-extension to add * @param factory a factory which creates * the analyzer to use for the given extension * (if you pass null as the analyzer, you will disable * the analyzer used for that extension) * Get the default Analyzer. * Get an analyzer suited to analyze a file. This function will reuse * analyzers since they are costly. * @param in Input stream containing data to be analyzed * @param file Name of the file to be analyzed * @return An analyzer suited for that file content * @throws java.io.IOException If an error occurs while accessing the * data in the input stream. * Create a Lucene document and fill in the required fields * @param file The file to index * @param in The data to generate the index for * @param path Where the file is located (from source root) * @return The Lucene document to add to the index database * @throws java.io.IOException If an exception occurs while collecting the // date = hr.getLastCommentDate() //RFE * Get the content type for a named file. * @param in The input stream we want to get the content type for (if * we cannot determine the content type by the filename) * @param file The name of the file * @return The contentType suitable for printing to response.setContentType() or null * if the factory was not found * @throws java.io.IOException If an error occurs while accessing the input * Write a browsable version of the file * @param factory The analyzer factory for this filetype * @param in The input stream containing the data * @param out Where to write the result * @param annotation Annotation information for the file * @param project Project the file belongs to * @throws java.io.IOException If an error occurs while creating the // This is some kind of text file, so we need to expand tabs to // spaces to match the project's tab settings. * Get the genre of a file * @param file The file to inpect * @return The genre suitable to decide how to display the file * Get the genre of a bulk of data * @param in A stream containing the data * @return The genre suitable to decide how to display the file * @throws java.io.IOException If an error occurs while getting the content * Get the genre for a named class (this is most likely an analyzer) * @param factory the analyzer factory to get the genre for * @return The genre of this class (null if not found) * Find a {@code FileAnalyzerFactory} with the specified class name. If one * doesn't exist, create one and register it. * @param factoryClassName name of the factory class * @return a file analyzer factory * @throws ClassNotFoundException if there is no class with that name * @throws ClassCastException if the class is not a subclass of {@code * @throws IllegalAccessException if the constructor cannot be accessed * @throws InstantiationException if the class cannot be instantiated * Find a {@code FileAnalyzerFactory} which is an instance of the specified * class. If one doesn't exist, create one and register it. * @param factoryClass the factory class * @return a file analyzer factory * @throws ClassCastException if the class is not a subclass of {@code * @throws IllegalAccessException if the constructor cannot be accessed * @throws InstantiationException if the class cannot be instantiated * Finds a suitable analyser class for file name. If the analyzer cannot * be determined by the file extension, try to look at the data in the * InputStream to find a suitable analyzer. * Use if you just want to find file type. * @param in The input stream containing the data * @param file The file name to get the analyzer for * @return the analyzer factory to use * @throws java.io.IOException If a problem occurs while reading the data //TODO above is not that great, since if 2 analyzers share one extension //then only the first one registered will own it //it would be cool if above could return more analyzers and below would //then decide between them ... * Finds a suitable analyser class for file name. * @param file The file name to get the analyzer for * @return the analyzer factory to use // file doesn't have any of the extensions we know, try full match * Finds a suitable analyser class for the data in this stream * @param in The stream containing the data to analyze * @return the analyzer factory to use * @throws java.io.IOException if an error occurs while reading data from * Finds a suitable analyser class for a magic signature * @param signature the magic signature look up * @return the analyzer factory to use // XXX this assumes ISO-8859-1 encoding (and should work in most cases // for US-ASCII, UTF-8 and other ISO-8859-* encodings, but not always), // we should try to be smarter than this... // See if text files have the magic sequence if we remove the /** Byte-order markers. */ BOMS.
put(
"UTF-8",
new byte[] {(
byte)
0xEF, (
byte)
0xBB, (
byte)
0xBF});
BOMS.
put(
"UTF-16BE",
new byte[] {(
byte)
0xFE, (
byte)
0xFF});
BOMS.
put(
"UTF-16LE",
new byte[] {(
byte)
0xFF, (
byte)
0xFE});
* Strip away the byte-order marker from the string, if it has one. * @param sig a sequence of bytes from which to remove the BOM * @return a string without the byte-order marker, or <code>null</code> if * the string doesn't start with a BOM // BOM matched beginning of signature