package org.omg.PortableInterceptor;
/**
* org/omg/PortableInterceptor/InterceptorOperations.java .
* Generated by the IDL-to-Java compiler (portable), version "3.2"
* from /Users/java_re/workspace/8-2-build-macosx-x86_64/jdk8u212/12974/corba/src/share/classes/org/omg/PortableInterceptor/Interceptors.idl
* Monday, April 1, 2019 11:12:35 PM PDT
*/
/**
* All Portable Interceptors implement Interceptor.
*/
public interface
InterceptorOperations
{
/**
* Returns the name of the interceptor.
* <p>
* Each Interceptor may have a name that may be used administratively
* to order the lists of Interceptors. Only one Interceptor of a given
* name can be registered with the ORB for each Interceptor type. An
* Interceptor may be anonymous, i.e., have an empty string as the name
* attribute. Any number of anonymous Interceptors may be registered with
* the ORB.
*
* @return the name of the interceptor.
*/
String name ();
/**
* Provides an opportunity to destroy this interceptor.
* The destroy method is called during <code>ORB.destroy</code>. When an
* application calls <code>ORB.destroy</code>, the ORB:
* <ol>
* <li>waits for all requests in progress to complete</li>
* <li>calls the <code>Interceptor.destroy</code> operation for each
* interceptor</li>
* <li>completes destruction of the ORB</li>
* </ol>
* Method invocations from within <code>Interceptor.destroy</code> on
* object references for objects implemented on the ORB being destroyed
* result in undefined behavior. However, method invocations on objects
* implemented on an ORB other than the one being destroyed are
* permitted. (This means that the ORB being destroyed is still capable
* of acting as a client, but not as a server.)
*/
void
destroy ();
} // interface InterceptorOperations