Documentation for Ice 3.5. The latest release is Ice 3.7. Refer to the space directory for other releases.

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 22 Next »

The Slice compilers can optionally generate checksums of Slice definitions. For slice2java, the --checksum option causes the compiler to generate a new Java class that adds checksums to a static map member. Assuming we supplied the option --checksum Checksums to slice2java, the generated class Checksums.java looks like this:

Java
public class Checksums {
    public static java.util.Map<String, String> checksums;
}

The read-only map checksums is initialized automatically prior to first use; no action is required by the application.

In order to verify a server's checksums, a client could simply compare the dictionaries using the equals method. However, this is not feasible if it is possible that the server might return a superset of the client's checksums. A more general solution is to iterate over the local checksums as demonstrated below:

Java
java.util.Map<String, String> serverChecksums = ...
java.util.Iterator<java.util.Map.Entry<String, String>> i =
    Checksums.checksums.entrySet().iterator();
while(i.hasNext()) {
    java.util.Map.Entry<String, String> e = i.next();
    String id = e.getKey();
    String checksum = e.getValue();
    String serverChecksum = serverChecksums.get(id);
    if (serverChecksum == null) {
        // No match found for type id!
    } else if (!checksum.equals(serverChecksum)) {
        // Checksum mismatch!
    }
}

In this example, the client first verifies that the server's dictionary contains an entry for each Slice type ID, and then it proceeds to compare the checksums.

See Also

 

  • No labels