Alexey,

Agree. I haven't noticed that RI doesn't accept invalid write method.
Then its behavior looks illogical. Actually, I asked about comments
especially because I expected a feedback from beans authors. Thank
you.

On the other hand, why don't we allow Harmony to accept invalid names
and provide a default replacements for them if there is a set/get/is
method for the specified property? It seems to me more user-friendly
then throw IntrospectionException in this situation. It looks like the
specification doesn't require PropertyDescriptor to throw an exception
in this case. This will also prevent us from breaking applications
that uses this RI behavior.
What is your opinion?

On 10/5/06, Alexei Zakharov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Oleg,

> + we need to fix in beans the fact that the following code:
> new PropertyDescriptor(propertyName, c.getClass(), "1", null);
> will throw IntrospectionException on Harmony, but will return the
> valid property descriptor with the getter method on RI.
> Any thoughts on this? Or should I proceed with a patch for the both issues?

I've already written my thoughts about this issue in [1]. In short: I
don't think we should follow the RI behavior since it is inconsistent.
Why it accepts invalid read method and throws exception on invalid
write method? No logic.

[1] 
http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/incubator-harmony-dev/200609.mbox/[EMAIL
 PROTECTED]

Thanks,

2006/10/4, Oleg Khaschansky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I found the reason of this failure. It is an IntrospectionException
> while executing a following method from the TransferHandler class:
>
>    private PropertyDescriptor getPropertyDescriptor(final JComponent c) {
>        PropertyDescriptor result = null;
>        try {
>            result = new PropertyDescriptor(propertyName, c.getClass());
>        } catch (IntrospectionException e) {
>
>        }
>        return result;
>    }
> It tries to get the PropertyDescriptor for the class JButton and
> property name "insets", but fails because there's no setInsets method.
> So, flavors array stays uninitialized and getTransferDataFlavors
> method returns null which is a cause of a NPE.
>
> The quick fix for this issue could be changing this method to the following:
>
>    private PropertyDescriptor getPropertyDescriptor(final JComponent c) {
>        PropertyDescriptor result = null;
>        try {
>            return result = new PropertyDescriptor(propertyName, c.getClass());
>        } catch (IntrospectionException e) {
>        }
>        try {
>            return result = new PropertyDescriptor(propertyName,
> c.getClass(), "1", null);
>        } catch (IntrospectionException e) {
>        }
>        return result;
>    }
>
> + we need to fix in beans the fact that the following code:
>
> new PropertyDescriptor(propertyName, c.getClass(), "1", null);
>
> will throw IntrospectionException on Harmony, but will return the
> valid property descriptor with the getter method on RI.
>
> Any thoughts on this? Or should I proceed with a patch for the both issues?
>
> Thanks,
>  Oleg
>
> On 10/4/06, Mikhail Loenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 2006/10/4, Mark Hindess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > >
> > > On 4 October 2006 at 15:41, Tim Ellison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > Excuse the change in subject line...
> > >
> > > No problem.  I was just cursing myself for having forgotten to change
> > > it.
> > >
> > > > Mark Hindess wrote:
> > > > > With this change, the awt dependencies should now be automated for
> > > > > windows and at least fairly trivial (installing a few packages on
> > > > > Linux[0]).  I think it is time we removed the with.awt.swing flag.
> > > > > Anyone object?
> > > >
> > > > To the contrary, ditch it.
> > > >
> > > > > Please test the current setup with -Dwith.awt.swing=true and report 
any
> > > > > problems.
> > > >
> > > > Problem 1:  My machine is too slow running all these tests.
> > >
> > > Mine too.  And I have wondered if the hourly builds will finish within
> > > the hour now.  We really should see if we can avoid the need to fork
> > > for every test.
> >
> > I've run the tests on my XP machine, 1 failed
> >
> > javax.swing.TransferHandlerTest#testCreateTransferable
> >
> > java.lang.NullPointerException at
> > 
javax.swing.TransferHandlerTest.testCreateTransferable(TransferHandlerTest.java:140)
> > at java.lang.reflect.AccessibleObject.invokeV(AccessibleObject.java:25)
> > at javax.swing.BasicSwingTestCase.runBareSuper(BasicSwingTestCase.java:115)
> > at javax.swing.SwingTestCase$1.run(SwingTestCase.java:44) at
> > java.awt.event.InvocationEvent.runAndNotify(InvocationEvent.java:88)
> > at java.awt.event.InvocationEvent.dispatch(InvocationEvent.java:77) at
> > java.awt.EventQueueCore.dispatchEventImpl(EventQueueCore.java:131) at
> > java.awt.EventQueue.dispatchEvent(EventQueue.java:144) at
> > java.awt.EventDispatchThread.runModalLoop(EventDispatchThread.java:75)
> > at java.awt.EventDispatchThread.run(EventDispatchThread.java:48)
> >

--
Alexei Zakharov,
Intel Middleware Product Division

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