The JNDI framework allows for object implementations to
 be loaded in dynamically via object factories.
 For example, when looking up a printer bound in the name space,
 if the print service binds printer names to References, the printer
 Reference could be used to create a printer object, so that
 the caller of lookup can directly operate on the printer object
 after the lookup.  An ObjectFactory is responsible for creating
 objects of a specific type.  JNDI uses a default policy for using
 and loading object factories.  You can override this default policy
 by calling NamingManager.setObjectFactoryBuilder() with an ObjectFactoryBuilder,
 which contains the program-defined way of creating/loading
 object factories.
 Any ObjectFactoryBuilder implementation must implement this
 interface that for creating object factories.
- Since:
 - 1.3
 - See Also:
 
- 
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptioncreateObjectFactory(Object obj, Hashtable<?, ?> environment) Creates a new object factory using the environment supplied. 
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Method Details
- 
createObjectFactory
Creates a new object factory using the environment supplied.The environment parameter is owned by the caller. The implementation will not modify the object or keep a reference to it, although it may keep a reference to a clone or copy.
- Parameters:
 obj- The possibly null object for which to create a factory.environment- Environment to use when creating the factory. Can be null.- Returns:
 - A non-null new instance of an ObjectFactory.
 - Throws:
 NamingException- If an object factory cannot be created.
 
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