Class LambdaMetafactory
Methods to facilitate the creation of simple "function objects" that
implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a provided MethodHandle
,
possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. These
methods are typically used as bootstrap methods for invokedynamic
call sites, to support the lambda expression and method
reference expression features of the Java Programming Language.
Indirect access to the behavior specified by the provided MethodHandle
proceeds in order through three phases:
Linkage occurs when the methods in this class are invoked. They take as arguments an interface to be implemented (typically a functional interface, one with a single abstract method), a name and signature of a method from that interface to be implemented, a direct method handle describing the desired implementation behavior for that method, and possibly other additional metadata, and produce a
CallSite
whose target can be used to create suitable function objects.Linkage may involve dynamically loading a new class that implements the target interface, or re-using a suitable existing class.
The
CallSite
can be considered a "factory" for function objects and so these linkage methods are referred to as "metafactories".Capture occurs when the
CallSite
's target is invoked, typically through aninvokedynamic
call site, producing a function object. This may occur many times for a single factoryCallSite
.If the behavior
MethodHandle
has additional parameters beyond those of the specified interface method, these are referred to as captured parameters, which must be provided as arguments to theCallSite
target. The expected number and types of captured parameters are determined during linkage.Capture may involve allocation of a new function object, or may return a suitable existing function object. The identity of a function object produced by capture is unpredictable, and therefore identity-sensitive operations (such as reference equality, object locking, and
System.identityHashCode()
) may produce different results in different implementations, or even upon different invocations in the same implementation.Invocation occurs when an implemented interface method is invoked on a function object. This may occur many times for a single function object. The method referenced by the implementation
MethodHandle
is invoked, passing to it the captured arguments and the invocation arguments. The result of the method is returned.
It is sometimes useful to restrict the set of inputs or results permitted
at invocation. For example, when the generic interface Predicate<T>
is parameterized as Predicate<String>
, the input must be a
String
, even though the method to implement allows any Object
.
At linkage time, an additional MethodType
parameter describes the
"dynamic" method type; on invocation, the arguments and eventual result
are checked against this MethodType
.
This class provides two forms of linkage methods: a standard version
(metafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, MethodType, MethodHandle, MethodType)
)
using an optimized protocol, and an alternate version
altMetafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, Object...)
).
The alternate version is a generalization of the standard version, providing
additional control over the behavior of the generated function objects via
flags and additional arguments. The alternate version adds the ability to
manage the following attributes of function objects:
- Multiple methods. It is sometimes useful to implement multiple
variations of the method signature, involving argument or return type
adaptation. This occurs when multiple distinct VM signatures for a method
are logically considered to be the same method by the language. The
flag
FLAG_BRIDGES
indicates that a list of additionalMethodType
s will be provided, each of which will be implemented by the resulting function object. These methods will share the same name and instantiated type. - Multiple interfaces. If needed, more than one interface
can be implemented by the function object. (These additional interfaces
are typically marker interfaces with no methods.) The flag
FLAG_MARKERS
indicates that a list of additional interfaces will be provided, each of which should be implemented by the resulting function object. - Serializability. The generated function objects do not
generally support serialization. If desired,
FLAG_SERIALIZABLE
can be used to indicate that the function objects should be serializable. Serializable function objects will use, as their serialized form, instances of the classSerializedLambda
, which requires additional assistance from the capturing class (the class described by theMethodHandles.Lookup
parametercaller
); seeSerializedLambda
for details.
Assume the linkage arguments are as follows:
factoryType
(describing theCallSite
signature) has K parameters of types (D1..Dk) and return type Rd;interfaceMethodType
(describing the implemented method type) has N parameters, of types (U1..Un) and return type Ru;implementation
(theMethodHandle
providing the implementation) has M parameters, of types (A1..Am) and return type Ra (if the method describes an instance method, the method type of this method handle already includes an extra first argument corresponding to the receiver);dynamicMethodType
(allowing restrictions on invocation) has N parameters, of types (T1..Tn) and return type Rt.
Then the following linkage invariants must hold:
interfaceMethodType
anddynamicMethodType
have the same arity N, and for i=1..N, Ti and Ui are the same type, or Ti and Ui are both reference types and Ti is a subtype of Ui- Either Rt and Ru are the same type, or both are reference types and Rt is a subtype of Ru
- K + N = M
- For i=1..K, Di = Ai
- For i=1..N, Ti is adaptable to Aj, where j=i+k
- The return type Rt is void, or the return type Ra is not void and is adaptable to Rt
Further, at capture time, if implementation
corresponds to an instance
method, and there are any capture arguments (K > 0
), then the first
capture argument (corresponding to the receiver) must be non-null.
A type Q is considered adaptable to S as follows:
Q | S | Link-time checks | Invocation-time checks |
---|---|---|---|
Primitive | Primitive | Q can be converted to S via a primitive widening conversion | None |
Primitive | Reference | S is a supertype of the Wrapper(Q) | Cast from Wrapper(Q) to S |
Reference | Primitive | for parameter types: Q is a primitive wrapper and Primitive(Q)
can be widened to S
for return types: If Q is a primitive wrapper, check that Primitive(Q) can be widened to S |
If Q is not a primitive wrapper, cast Q to the base Wrapper(S); for example Number for numeric types |
Reference | Reference | for parameter types: S is a supertype of Q
for return types: none |
Cast from Q to S |
- API Note:
- These linkage methods are designed to support the evaluation
of lambda expressions and method references in the Java
Language. For every lambda expressions or method reference in the source code,
there is a target type which is a functional interface. Evaluating a lambda
expression produces an object of its target type. The recommended mechanism
for evaluating lambda expressions is to desugar the lambda body to a method,
invoke an invokedynamic call site whose static argument list describes the
sole method of the functional interface and the desugared implementation
method, and returns an object (the lambda object) that implements the target
type. (For method references, the implementation method is simply the
referenced method; no desugaring is needed.)
The argument list of the implementation method and the argument list of the interface method(s) may differ in several ways. The implementation methods may have additional arguments to accommodate arguments captured by the lambda expression; there may also be differences resulting from permitted adaptations of arguments, such as casting, boxing, unboxing, and primitive widening. (Varargs adaptations are not handled by the metafactories; these are expected to be handled by the caller.)
Invokedynamic call sites have two argument lists: a static argument list and a dynamic argument list. The static argument list is stored in the constant pool; the dynamic argument is pushed on the operand stack at capture time. The bootstrap method has access to the entire static argument list (which in this case, includes information describing the implementation method, the target interface, and the target interface method(s)), as well as a method signature describing the number and static types (but not the values) of the dynamic arguments and the static return type of the invokedynamic site.
The implementation method is described with a direct method handle referencing a method or constructor. In theory, any method handle could be used, but this is not compatible with some implementation techniques and would complicate the work implementations must do.
- Since:
- 1.8
-
Field Summary
Modifier and TypeFieldDescriptionstatic final int
Flag for alternate metafactories indicating the lambda object requires additional methods that invoke theimplementation
static final int
Flag foraltMetafactory(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, java.lang.String, java.lang.invoke.MethodType, java.lang.Object...)
indicating the lambda object implements other interfaces besidesSerializable
static final int
Flag foraltMetafactory(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, java.lang.String, java.lang.invoke.MethodType, java.lang.Object...)
indicating the lambda object must be serializable -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionstatic CallSite
altMetafactory
(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, Object... args) Facilitates the creation of simple "function objects" that implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a providedMethodHandle
, after appropriate type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments.static CallSite
metafactory
(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, MethodType interfaceMethodType, MethodHandle implementation, MethodType dynamicMethodType) Facilitates the creation of simple "function objects" that implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a providedMethodHandle
, after appropriate type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments.
-
Field Details
-
FLAG_SERIALIZABLE
public static final int FLAG_SERIALIZABLEFlag foraltMetafactory(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, java.lang.String, java.lang.invoke.MethodType, java.lang.Object...)
indicating the lambda object must be serializable- See Also:
-
FLAG_MARKERS
public static final int FLAG_MARKERSFlag foraltMetafactory(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, java.lang.String, java.lang.invoke.MethodType, java.lang.Object...)
indicating the lambda object implements other interfaces besidesSerializable
- See Also:
-
FLAG_BRIDGES
public static final int FLAG_BRIDGESFlag for alternate metafactories indicating the lambda object requires additional methods that invoke theimplementation
- See Also:
-
-
Method Details
-
metafactory
public static CallSite metafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, MethodType interfaceMethodType, MethodHandle implementation, MethodType dynamicMethodType) throws LambdaConversionException Facilitates the creation of simple "function objects" that implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a providedMethodHandle
, after appropriate type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. Typically used as a bootstrap method forinvokedynamic
call sites, to support the lambda expression and method reference expression features of the Java Programming Language.This is the standard, streamlined metafactory; additional flexibility is provided by
altMetafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, Object...)
. A general description of the behavior of this method is providedabove
.When the target of the
CallSite
returned from this method is invoked, the resulting function objects are instances of a class which implements the interface named by the return type offactoryType
, declares a method with the name given byinterfaceMethodName
and the signature given byinterfaceMethodType
. It may also override additional methods fromObject
.- Parameters:
caller
- Represents a lookup context with the accessibility privileges of the caller. Specifically, the lookup context must have full privilege access. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is stacked automatically by the VM.interfaceMethodName
- The name of the method to implement. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is provided by theNameAndType
of theInvokeDynamic
structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.factoryType
- The expected signature of theCallSite
. The parameter types represent the types of capture variables; the return type is the interface to implement. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is provided by theNameAndType
of theInvokeDynamic
structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.interfaceMethodType
- Signature and return type of method to be implemented by the function object.implementation
- A direct method handle describing the implementation method which should be called (with suitable adaptation of argument types and return types, and with captured arguments prepended to the invocation arguments) at invocation time.dynamicMethodType
- The signature and return type that should be enforced dynamically at invocation time. In simple use cases this is the same asinterfaceMethodType
.- Returns:
- a CallSite whose target can be used to perform capture, generating
instances of the interface named by
factoryType
- Throws:
LambdaConversionException
- Ifcaller
does not have full privilege access, or ifinterfaceMethodName
is not a valid JVM method name, or if the return type offactoryType
is not an interface, or ifimplementation
is not a direct method handle referencing a method or constructor, or if the linkage invariants are violated, as definedabove
.NullPointerException
- If any argument isnull
.SecurityException
- If a security manager is present, and it refuses access fromcaller
to the package ofimplementation
.
-
altMetafactory
public static CallSite altMetafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, Object... args) throws LambdaConversionException Facilitates the creation of simple "function objects" that implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a providedMethodHandle
, after appropriate type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. Typically used as a bootstrap method forinvokedynamic
call sites, to support the lambda expression and method reference expression features of the Java Programming Language.This is the general, more flexible metafactory; a streamlined version is provided by
metafactory(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, MethodType, MethodHandle, MethodType)
. A general description of the behavior of this method is providedabove
.The argument list for this method includes three fixed parameters, corresponding to the parameters automatically stacked by the VM for the bootstrap method in an
invokedynamic
invocation, and anObject[]
parameter that contains additional parameters. The declared argument list for this method is:CallSite altMetafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, Object... args)
but it behaves as if the argument list is as follows:
CallSite altMetafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup caller, String interfaceMethodName, MethodType factoryType, MethodType interfaceMethodType, MethodHandle implementation, MethodType dynamicMethodType, int flags, int altInterfaceCount, // IF flags has MARKERS set Class... altInterfaces, // IF flags has MARKERS set int altMethodCount, // IF flags has BRIDGES set MethodType... altMethods // IF flags has BRIDGES set )
Arguments that appear in the argument list for
metafactory(MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, MethodType, MethodHandle, MethodType)
have the same specification as in that method. The additional arguments are interpreted as follows:flags
indicates additional options; this is a bitwise OR of desired flags. Defined flags areFLAG_BRIDGES
,FLAG_MARKERS
, andFLAG_SERIALIZABLE
.altInterfaceCount
is the number of additional interfaces the function object should implement, and is present if and only if theFLAG_MARKERS
flag is set.altInterfaces
is a variable-length list of additional interfaces to implement, whose length equalsaltInterfaceCount
, and is present if and only if theFLAG_MARKERS
flag is set.altMethodCount
is the number of additional method signatures the function object should implement, and is present if and only if theFLAG_BRIDGES
flag is set.altMethods
is a variable-length list of additional methods signatures to implement, whose length equalsaltMethodCount
, and is present if and only if theFLAG_BRIDGES
flag is set.
Each class named by
altInterfaces
is subject to the same restrictions asRd
, the return type offactoryType
, as describedabove
. EachMethodType
named byaltMethods
is subject to the same restrictions asinterfaceMethodType
, as describedabove
.When FLAG_SERIALIZABLE is set in
flags
, the function objects will implementSerializable
, and will have awriteReplace
method that returns an appropriateSerializedLambda
. Thecaller
class must have an appropriate$deserializeLambda$
method, as described inSerializedLambda
.When the target of the
CallSite
returned from this method is invoked, the resulting function objects are instances of a class with the following properties:- The class implements the interface named by the return type
of
factoryType
and any interfaces named byaltInterfaces
- The class declares methods with the name given by
interfaceMethodName
, and the signature given byinterfaceMethodType
and additional signatures given byaltMethods
- The class may override methods from
Object
, and may implement methods related to serialization.
- Parameters:
caller
- Represents a lookup context with the accessibility privileges of the caller. Specifically, the lookup context must have full privilege access. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is stacked automatically by the VM.interfaceMethodName
- The name of the method to implement. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is provided by theNameAndType
of theInvokeDynamic
structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.factoryType
- The expected signature of theCallSite
. The parameter types represent the types of capture variables; the return type is the interface to implement. When used withinvokedynamic
, this is provided by theNameAndType
of theInvokeDynamic
structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.args
- An array ofObject
containing the required argumentsinterfaceMethodType
,implementation
,dynamicMethodType
,flags
, and any optional arguments, as described above- Returns:
- a CallSite whose target can be used to perform capture, generating
instances of the interface named by
factoryType
- Throws:
LambdaConversionException
- Ifcaller
does not have full privilege access, or ifinterfaceMethodName
is not a valid JVM method name, or if the return type offactoryType
is not an interface, or if any ofaltInterfaces
is not an interface, or ifimplementation
is not a direct method handle referencing a method or constructor, or if the linkage invariants are violated, as definedabove
.NullPointerException
- If any argument, or any component ofargs
, isnull
.IllegalArgumentException
- If the number or types of the components ofargs
do not follow the above rules, or ifaltInterfaceCount
oraltMethodCount
are negative integers.SecurityException
- If a security manager is present, and it refuses access fromcaller
to the package ofimplementation
.
-