/*
* @(#)InsufficientResourcesException.java 1.8 05/11/17
*
* Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
*/
package javax.naming;
/**
* This exception is thrown when resources are not available to complete
* the requested operation. This might due to a lack of resources on
* the server or on the client. There are no restrictions to resource types,
* as different services might make use of different resources. Such
* restrictions might be due to physical limits and/or adminstrative quotas.
* Examples of limited resources are internal buffers, memory, network bandwidth.
*<p>
* InsufficientResourcesException is different from LimitExceededException in that
* the latter is due to user/system specified limits. See LimitExceededException
* for details.
* <p>
* Synchronization and serialization issues that apply to NamingException
* apply directly here.
*
* @author Rosanna Lee
* @author Scott Seligman
* @version 1.8 05/11/17
* @since 1.3
*/
public class InsufficientResourcesException extends NamingException {
/**
* Constructs a new instance of InsufficientResourcesException using an
* explanation. All other fields default to null.
*
* @param explanation Possibly null additional detail about this exception.
* @see java.lang.Throwable#getMessage
*/
public InsufficientResourcesException(String explanation) {
super(explanation);
}
/**
* Constructs a new instance of InsufficientResourcesException with
* all name resolution fields and explanation initialized to null.
*/
public InsufficientResourcesException() {
super();
}
/**
* Use serialVersionUID from JNDI 1.1.1 for interoperability
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = 6227672693037844532L;
}