@Inherited @Documented @Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Target(value={TYPE,PACKAGE}) public @interface HasQualifierParameter
HasQualifierParameter
on a package is the same as writing it on each class in
that package.
Writing @HasQualifierParameter
on a type declaration has two effects.
@HasQualifierParameter
class StringBuffer { ... }
Then @Tainted StringBuffer
is unrelated to @Untainted StringBuffer
.
The type hierarchy looks like this:
@Tainted
Object / | \ / |@Tainted
Date / | | / | | /@Untainted
Object | / | \ |@Tainted
StringBuffer |@Untainted
Date | | |@Untainted
StringBuffer | |@Tainted
MyStringBuffer | |@Untainted
MyStringBuffer
When a class is @HasQualifierParameter
, all its subclasses are as well.
When @HasQualifierParameter
is written on a package, it is equivalent to writing that
annotation on each class in the package or in a sub-package. It can be disabled on a specific
class and its subclasses by writing @NoQualifierParameter
on that class. This annotation
may not be written on the same class as NoQualifierParameter
for the same hierarchy.
NoQualifierParameter
Modifier and Type | Required Element and Description |
---|---|
Class<? extends Annotation>[] |
value
Class of the top qualifier for the hierarchy for which this class has a qualifier parameter.
|
public abstract Class<? extends Annotation>[] value