Class MethodHandles.Lookup
- Enclosing class:
MethodHandles
A lookup class which needs to create method handles will call
MethodHandles.lookup
to create a factory for itself.
When the Lookup
factory object is created, the identity of the lookup class is
determined, and securely stored in the Lookup
object.
The lookup class (or its delegates) may then use factory methods
on the Lookup
object to create method handles for access-checked members.
This includes all methods, constructors, and fields which are allowed to the lookup class,
even private ones.
Lookup Factory Methods
The factory methods on aLookup
object correspond to all major
use cases for methods, constructors, and fields.
Each method handle created by a factory method is the functional
equivalent of a particular bytecode behavior.
(Bytecode behaviors are described in section 5.4.3.5 of
the Java Virtual Machine Specification.)
Here is a summary of the correspondence between these factory methods and
the behavior of the resulting method handles:
lookup expression | member | bytecode behavior |
---|---|---|
lookup.findGetter(C.class,"f",FT.class) |
FT f; | (T) this.f; |
lookup.findStaticGetter(C.class,"f",FT.class) |
static FT f; | (FT) C.f; |
lookup.findSetter(C.class,"f",FT.class) |
FT f; | this.f = x; |
lookup.findStaticSetter(C.class,"f",FT.class) |
static FT f; | C.f = arg; |
lookup.findVirtual(C.class,"m",MT) |
T m(A*); | (T) this.m(arg*); |
lookup.findStatic(C.class,"m",MT) |
static T m(A*); | (T) C.m(arg*); |
lookup.findSpecial(C.class,"m",MT,this.class) |
T m(A*); | (T) super.m(arg*); |
lookup.findConstructor(C.class,MT) |
C(A*); | new C(arg*); |
lookup.unreflectGetter(aField) |
(static )?FT f; | (FT) aField.get(thisOrNull); |
lookup.unreflectSetter(aField) |
(static )?FT f; | aField.set(thisOrNull, arg); |
lookup.unreflect(aMethod) |
(static )?T m(A*); | (T) aMethod.invoke(thisOrNull, arg*); |
lookup.unreflectConstructor(aConstructor) |
C(A*); | (C) aConstructor.newInstance(arg*); |
lookup.unreflectSpecial(aMethod,this.class) |
T m(A*); | (T) super.m(arg*); |
lookup.findClass("C") |
class C { ... } | C.class; |
C
is the class or interface being searched for a member,
documented as a parameter named refc
in the lookup methods.
The method type MT
is composed from the return type T
and the sequence of argument types A*
.
The constructor also has a sequence of argument types A*
and
is deemed to return the newly-created object of type C
.
Both MT
and the field type FT
are documented as a parameter named type
.
The formal parameter this
stands for the self-reference of type C
;
if it is present, it is always the leading argument to the method handle invocation.
(In the case of some protected
members, this
may be
restricted in type to the lookup class; see below.)
The name arg
stands for all the other method handle arguments.
In the code examples for the Core Reflection API, the name thisOrNull
stands for a null reference if the accessed method or field is static,
and this
otherwise.
The names aMethod
, aField
, and aConstructor
stand
for reflective objects corresponding to the given members declared in type C
.
The bytecode behavior for a findClass
operation is a load of a constant class,
as if by ldc CONSTANT_Class
.
The behavior is represented, not as a method handle, but directly as a Class
constant.
In cases where the given member is of variable arity (i.e., a method or constructor) the returned method handle will also be of variable arity. In all other cases, the returned method handle will be of fixed arity.
Discussion: The equivalence between looked-up method handles and underlying class members and bytecode behaviors can break down in a few ways:
- If
C
is not symbolically accessible from the lookup class's loader, the lookup can still succeed, even when there is no equivalent Java expression or bytecoded constant. - Likewise, if
T
orMT
is not symbolically accessible from the lookup class's loader, the lookup can still succeed. For example, lookups forMethodHandle.invokeExact
andMethodHandle.invoke
will always succeed, regardless of requested type. - If there is a security manager installed, it can forbid the lookup
on various grounds (see below).
By contrast, the
ldc
instruction on aCONSTANT_MethodHandle
constant is not subject to security manager checks. - If the looked-up method has a
very large arity,
the method handle creation may fail with an
IllegalArgumentException
, due to the method handle type having too many parameters.
Access checking
Access checks are applied in the factory methods ofLookup
,
when a method handle is created.
This is a key difference from the Core Reflection API, since
java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke
performs access checking against every caller, on every call.
All access checks start from a Lookup
object, which
compares its recorded lookup class against all requests to
create method handles.
A single Lookup
object can be used to create any number
of access-checked method handles, all checked against a single
lookup class.
A Lookup
object can be shared with other trusted code,
such as a metaobject protocol.
A shared Lookup
object delegates the capability
to create method handles on private members of the lookup class.
Even if privileged code uses the Lookup
object,
the access checking is confined to the privileges of the
original lookup class.
A lookup can fail, because
the containing class is not accessible to the lookup class, or
because the desired class member is missing, or because the
desired class member is not accessible to the lookup class, or
because the lookup object is not trusted enough to access the member.
In the case of a field setter function on a final
field,
finality enforcement is treated as a kind of access control,
and the lookup will fail, except in special cases of
Lookup.unreflectSetter
.
In any of these cases, a ReflectiveOperationException
will be
thrown from the attempted lookup. The exact class will be one of
the following:
- NoSuchMethodException — if a method is requested but does not exist
- NoSuchFieldException — if a field is requested but does not exist
- IllegalAccessException — if the member exists but an access check fails
In general, the conditions under which a method handle may be
looked up for a method M
are no more restrictive than the conditions
under which the lookup class could have compiled, verified, and resolved a call to M
.
Where the JVM would raise exceptions like NoSuchMethodError
,
a method handle lookup will generally raise a corresponding
checked exception, such as NoSuchMethodException
.
And the effect of invoking the method handle resulting from the lookup
is exactly equivalent
to executing the compiled, verified, and resolved call to M
.
The same point is true of fields and constructors.
Discussion:
Access checks only apply to named and reflected methods,
constructors, and fields.
Other method handle creation methods, such as
MethodHandle.asType
,
do not require any access checks, and are used
independently of any Lookup
object.
If the desired member is protected
, the usual JVM rules apply,
including the requirement that the lookup class must either be in the
same package as the desired member, or must inherit that member.
(See the Java Virtual Machine Specification, sections 4.9.2, 5.4.3.5, and 6.4.)
In addition, if the desired member is a non-static field or method
in a different package, the resulting method handle may only be applied
to objects of the lookup class or one of its subclasses.
This requirement is enforced by narrowing the type of the leading
this
parameter from C
(which will necessarily be a superclass of the lookup class)
to the lookup class itself.
The JVM imposes a similar requirement on invokespecial
instruction,
that the receiver argument must match both the resolved method and
the current class. Again, this requirement is enforced by narrowing the
type of the leading parameter to the resulting method handle.
(See the Java Virtual Machine Specification, section 4.10.1.9.)
The JVM represents constructors and static initializer blocks as internal methods
with special names ("<init>" and "<clinit>").
The internal syntax of invocation instructions allows them to refer to such internal
methods as if they were normal methods, but the JVM bytecode verifier rejects them.
A lookup of such an internal method will produce a NoSuchMethodException
.
If the relationship between nested types is expressed directly through the
NestHost
and NestMembers
attributes
(see the Java Virtual Machine Specification, sections 4.7.28 and 4.7.29),
then the associated Lookup
object provides direct access to
the lookup class and all of its nestmates
(see Class.getNestHost
).
Otherwise, access between nested classes is obtained by the Java compiler creating
a wrapper method to access a private method of another class in the same nest.
For example, a nested class C.D
can access private members within other related classes such as
C
, C.D.E
, or C.B
,
but the Java compiler may need to generate wrapper methods in
those related classes. In such cases, a Lookup
object on
C.E
would be unable to access those private members.
A workaround for this limitation is the Lookup.in
method,
which can transform a lookup on C.E
into one on any of those other
classes, without special elevation of privilege.
The accesses permitted to a given lookup object may be limited,
according to its set of lookupModes
,
to a subset of members normally accessible to the lookup class.
For example, the publicLookup
method produces a lookup object which is only allowed to access
public members in public classes of exported packages.
The caller sensitive method lookup
produces a lookup object with full capabilities relative to
its caller class, to emulate all supported bytecode behaviors.
Also, the Lookup.in
method may produce a lookup object
with fewer access modes than the original lookup object.
Discussion of private and module access:
We say that a lookup has private access
if its lookup modes
include the possibility of accessing private
members
(which includes the private members of nestmates).
As documented in the relevant methods elsewhere,
only lookups with private access possess the following capabilities:
- access private fields, methods, and constructors of the lookup class and its nestmates
- create method handles which
emulate invokespecial
instructions - avoid package access checks for classes accessible to the lookup class
- create
delegated lookup objects
which have private access to other classes within the same package member
Similarly, a lookup with module access ensures that the original lookup creator was a member in the same module as the lookup class.
Private and module access are independently determined modes; a lookup may have either or both or neither. A lookup which possesses both access modes is said to possess full privilege access.
A lookup with original access ensures that this lookup is created by the original lookup class and the bootstrap method invoked by the VM. Such a lookup with original access also has private and module access which has the following additional capability:
- create method handles which invoke caller sensitive methods,
such as
Class.forName
- obtain the class data associated with the lookup class
Each of these permissions is a consequence of the fact that a lookup object with private access can be securely traced back to an originating class, whose bytecode behaviors and Java language access permissions can be reliably determined and emulated by method handles.
Cross-module lookups
When a lookup class in one moduleM1
accesses a class in another module
M2
, extra access checking is performed beyond the access mode bits.
A Lookup
with PUBLIC
mode and a lookup class in M1
can access public types in M2
when M2
is readable to M1
and when the type is in a package of M2
that is exported to
at least M1
.
A Lookup
on C
can also teleport to a target class
via Lookup.in
and MethodHandles.privateLookupIn
methods.
Teleporting across modules will always record the original lookup class as
the previous lookup class
and drops MODULE
access.
If the target class is in the same module as the lookup class C
,
then the target class becomes the new lookup class
and there is no change to the previous lookup class.
If the target class is in a different module from M1
(C
's module),
C
becomes the new previous lookup class
and the target class becomes the new lookup class.
In that case, if there was already a previous lookup class in M0
,
and it differs from M1
and M2
, then the resulting lookup
drops all privileges.
For example,
Lookup lookup = MethodHandles.lookup(); // in class C
Lookup lookup2 = lookup.in(D.class);
MethodHandle mh = lookup2.findStatic(E.class, "m", MT);
The MethodHandles.lookup()
factory method produces a Lookup
object
with null
previous lookup class.
lookup.in(D.class)
transforms the lookup
on class C
to class D
without elevation of privileges.
If C
and D
are in the same module,
lookup2
records D
as the new lookup class and keeps the
same previous lookup class as the original lookup
, or
null
if not present.
When a Lookup
teleports from a class
in one nest to another nest, PRIVATE
access is dropped.
When a Lookup
teleports from a class in one package to
another package, PACKAGE
access is dropped.
When a Lookup
teleports from a class in one module to another module,
MODULE
access is dropped.
Teleporting across modules drops the ability to access non-exported classes
in both the module of the new lookup class and the module of the old lookup class
and the resulting Lookup
remains only PUBLIC
access.
A Lookup
can teleport back and forth to a class in the module of
the lookup class and the module of the previous class lookup.
Teleporting across modules can only decrease access but cannot increase it.
Teleporting to some third module drops all accesses.
In the above example, if C
and D
are in different modules,
lookup2
records D
as its lookup class and
C
as its previous lookup class and lookup2
has only
PUBLIC
access. lookup2
can teleport to other class in
C
's module and D
's module.
If class E
is in a third module, lookup2.in(E.class)
creates
a Lookup
on E
with no access and lookup2
's lookup
class D
is recorded as its previous lookup class.
Teleporting across modules restricts access to the public types that both the lookup class and the previous lookup class can equally access (see below).
MethodHandles.privateLookupIn(T.class, lookup)
can be used to teleport a lookup
from class C
to class T
and produce a new Lookup
with private access
if the lookup class is allowed to do deep reflection on T
.
The lookup
must have MODULE
and PRIVATE
access
to call privateLookupIn
.
A lookup
on C
in module M1
is allowed to do deep reflection
on all classes in M1
. If T
is in M1
, privateLookupIn
produces a new Lookup
on T
with full capabilities.
A lookup
on C
is also allowed
to do deep reflection on T
in another module M2
if
M1
reads M2
and M2
opens
the package containing T
to at least M1
.
T
becomes the new lookup class and C
becomes the new previous
lookup class and MODULE
access is dropped from the resulting Lookup
.
The resulting Lookup
can be used to do member lookup or teleport
to another lookup class by calling Lookup::in
. But
it cannot be used to obtain another private Lookup
by calling
privateLookupIn
because it has no MODULE
access.
The Lookup
object returned by privateLookupIn
is allowed to
define classes in the runtime package
of T
. Extreme caution should be taken when opening a package
to another module as such defined classes have the same full privilege
access as other members in M2
.
Cross-module access checks
ALookup
with PUBLIC
or with UNCONDITIONAL
mode
allows cross-module access. The access checking is performed with respect
to both the lookup class and the previous lookup class if present.
A Lookup
with UNCONDITIONAL
mode can access public type
in all modules when the type is in a package that is exported unconditionally.
If a Lookup
on LC
in M1
has no previous lookup class,
the lookup with PUBLIC
mode can access all public types in modules
that are readable to M1
and the type is in a package that is exported
at least to M1
.
If a Lookup
on LC
in M1
has a previous lookup class
PLC
on M0
, the lookup with PUBLIC
mode can access
the intersection of all public types that are accessible to M1
with all public types that are accessible to M0
. M0
reads M1
and hence the set of accessible types includes:
- unconditional-exported packages from
M1
- unconditional-exported packages from
M0
ifM1
readsM0
-
unconditional-exported packages from a third module
M2
if bothM0
andM1
readM2
- qualified-exported packages from
M1
toM0
- qualified-exported packages from
M0
toM1
ifM1
readsM0
-
qualified-exported packages from a third module
M2
to bothM0
andM1
if bothM0
andM1
readM2
Access modes
The table below shows the access modes of aLookup
produced by
any of the following factory or transformation methods:
MethodHandles::lookup
MethodHandles::publicLookup
MethodHandles::privateLookupIn
Lookup::in
Lookup::dropLookupMode
Lookup object | original | protected | private | package | module | public |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CL = MethodHandles.lookup() in C |
ORI | PRO | PRI | PAC | MOD | 1R |
CL.in(C1) same package |
PAC | MOD | 1R | |||
CL.in(C1) same module |
MOD | 1R | ||||
CL.in(D) different module |
2R | |||||
CL.in(D).in(C) hop back to module |
2R | |||||
PRI1 = privateLookupIn(C1,CL) |
PRO | PRI | PAC | MOD | 1R | |
PRI1a = privateLookupIn(C,PRI1) |
PRO | PRI | PAC | MOD | 1R | |
PRI1.in(C1) same package |
PAC | MOD | 1R | |||
PRI1.in(C1) different package |
MOD | 1R | ||||
PRI1.in(D) different module |
2R | |||||
PRI1.dropLookupMode(PROTECTED) |
PRI | PAC | MOD | 1R | ||
PRI1.dropLookupMode(PRIVATE) |
PAC | MOD | 1R | |||
PRI1.dropLookupMode(PACKAGE) |
MOD | 1R | ||||
PRI1.dropLookupMode(MODULE) |
1R | |||||
PRI1.dropLookupMode(PUBLIC) |
none | |||||
PRI2 = privateLookupIn(D,CL) |
PRO | PRI | PAC | 2R | ||
privateLookupIn(D,PRI1) |
PRO | PRI | PAC | 2R | ||
privateLookupIn(C,PRI2) fails |
IAE | |||||
PRI2.in(D2) same package |
PAC | 2R | ||||
PRI2.in(D2) different package |
2R | |||||
PRI2.in(C1) hop back to module |
2R | |||||
PRI2.in(E) hop to third module |
none | |||||
PRI2.dropLookupMode(PROTECTED) |
PRI | PAC | 2R | |||
PRI2.dropLookupMode(PRIVATE) |
PAC | 2R | ||||
PRI2.dropLookupMode(PACKAGE) |
2R | |||||
PRI2.dropLookupMode(MODULE) |
2R | |||||
PRI2.dropLookupMode(PUBLIC) |
none | |||||
CL.dropLookupMode(PROTECTED) |
PRI | PAC | MOD | 1R | ||
CL.dropLookupMode(PRIVATE) |
PAC | MOD | 1R | |||
CL.dropLookupMode(PACKAGE) |
MOD | 1R | ||||
CL.dropLookupMode(MODULE) |
1R | |||||
CL.dropLookupMode(PUBLIC) |
none | |||||
PUB = publicLookup() |
U | |||||
PUB.in(D) different module |
U | |||||
PUB.in(D).in(E) third module |
U | |||||
PUB.dropLookupMode(UNCONDITIONAL) |
none | |||||
privateLookupIn(C1,PUB) fails |
IAE | |||||
ANY.in(X) , for inaccessible X |
none |
Notes:
- Class
C
and classC1
are in moduleM1
, butD
andD2
are in moduleM2
, andE
is in moduleM3
.X
stands for class which is inaccessible to the lookup.ANY
stands for any of the example lookups. ORI
indicatesORIGINAL
bit set,PRO
indicatesPROTECTED
bit set,PRI
indicatesPRIVATE
bit set,PAC
indicatesPACKAGE
bit set,MOD
indicatesMODULE
bit set,1R
and2R
indicatePUBLIC
bit set,U
indicatesUNCONDITIONAL
bit set,IAE
indicatesIllegalAccessException
thrown.- Public access comes in three kinds:
- unconditional (
U
): the lookup assumes readability. The lookup hasnull
previous lookup class. - one-module-reads (
1R
): the module access checking is performed with respect to the lookup class. The lookup hasnull
previous lookup class. - two-module-reads (
2R
): the module access checking is performed with respect to the lookup class and the previous lookup class. The lookup has a non-null previous lookup class which is in a different module from the current lookup class.
- unconditional (
- Any attempt to reach a third module loses all access.
- If a target class
X
is not accessible toLookup::in
all access modes are dropped.
Security manager interactions
Although bytecode instructions can only refer to classes in a related class loader, this API can search for methods in any class, as long as a reference to itsClass
object is
available. Such cross-loader references are also possible with the
Core Reflection API, and are impossible to bytecode instructions
such as invokestatic
or getfield
.
There is a security manager API
to allow applications to check such cross-loader references.
These checks apply to both the MethodHandles.Lookup
API
and the Core Reflection API
(as found on Class
).
If a security manager is present, member and class lookups are subject to
additional checks.
From one to three calls are made to the security manager.
Any of these calls can refuse access by throwing a
SecurityException
.
Define smgr
as the security manager,
lookc
as the lookup class of the current lookup object,
refc
as the containing class in which the member
is being sought, and defc
as the class in which the
member is actually defined.
(If a class or other type is being accessed,
the refc
and defc
values are the class itself.)
The value lookc
is defined as not present
if the current lookup object does not have
full privilege access.
The calls are made according to the following rules:
- Step 1:
If
lookc
is not present, or if its class loader is not the same as or an ancestor of the class loader ofrefc
, thensmgr.checkPackageAccess(refcPkg)
is called, whererefcPkg
is the package ofrefc
. - Step 2a:
If the retrieved member is not public and
lookc
is not present, thensmgr.checkPermission
withRuntimePermission("accessDeclaredMembers")
is called. - Step 2b:
If the retrieved class has a
null
class loader, andlookc
is not present, thensmgr.checkPermission
withRuntimePermission("getClassLoader")
is called. - Step 3:
If the retrieved member is not public,
and if
lookc
is not present, and ifdefc
andrefc
are different, thensmgr.checkPackageAccess(defcPkg)
is called, wheredefcPkg
is the package ofdefc
.
If a security manager is present and the current lookup object does not have
full privilege access, then
defineClass
,
defineHiddenClass
,
defineHiddenClassWithClassData
calls smgr.checkPermission
with RuntimePermission("defineClass")
.
Caller sensitive methods
A small number of Java methods have a special property called caller sensitivity. A caller-sensitive method can behave differently depending on the identity of its immediate caller.If a method handle for a caller-sensitive method is requested, the general rules for bytecode behaviors apply, but they take account of the lookup class in a special way. The resulting method handle behaves as if it were called from an instruction contained in the lookup class, so that the caller-sensitive method detects the lookup class. (By contrast, the invoker of the method handle is disregarded.) Thus, in the case of caller-sensitive methods, different lookup classes may give rise to differently behaving method handles.
In cases where the lookup object is
publicLookup()
,
or some other lookup object without the
original access,
the lookup class is disregarded.
In such cases, no caller-sensitive method handle can be created,
access is forbidden, and the lookup fails with an
IllegalAccessException
.
Discussion:
For example, the caller-sensitive method
Class.forName(x)
can return varying classes or throw varying exceptions,
depending on the class loader of the class that calls it.
A public lookup of Class.forName
will fail, because
there is no reasonable way to determine its bytecode behavior.
If an application caches method handles for broad sharing,
it should use publicLookup()
to create them.
If there is a lookup of Class.forName
, it will fail,
and the application must take appropriate action in that case.
It may be that a later lookup, perhaps during the invocation of a
bootstrap method, can incorporate the specific identity
of the caller, making the method accessible.
The function MethodHandles.lookup
is caller sensitive
so that there can be a secure foundation for lookups.
Nearly all other methods in the JSR 292 API rely on lookup
objects to check access requests.
- Since:
- 1.7
-
Nested Class Summary
Modifier and TypeClassDescriptionstatic enum
The set of class options that specify whether a hidden class created byLookup::defineHiddenClass
method is dynamically added as a new member to the nest of a lookup class and/or whether a hidden class has a strong relationship with the class loader marked as its defining loader. -
Field Summary
Modifier and TypeFieldDescriptionstatic final int
A single-bit mask representingmodule
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingoriginal
access which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingpackage
access (default access), which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingprivate
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingprotected
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingpublic
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
.static final int
A single-bit mask representingunconditional
access which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescription<T> Class
<T> accessClass
(Class<T> targetClass) Determines if a class can be accessed from the lookup context defined by thisLookup
object.bind
(Object receiver, String name, MethodType type) Produces an early-bound method handle for a non-static method.Class
<?> defineClass
(byte[] bytes) Creates and links a class or interface frombytes
with the same class loader and in the same runtime package and protection domain as this lookup's lookup class as if callingClassLoader::defineClass
.defineHiddenClass
(byte[] bytes, boolean initialize, MethodHandles.Lookup.ClassOption... options) Creates a hidden class or interface frombytes
, returning aLookup
on the newly created class or interface.defineHiddenClassWithClassData
(byte[] bytes, Object classData, boolean initialize, MethodHandles.Lookup.ClassOption... options) Creates a hidden class or interface frombytes
with associated class data, returning aLookup
on the newly created class or interface.dropLookupMode
(int modeToDrop) Creates a lookup on the same lookup class which this lookup object finds members, but with a lookup mode that has lost the given lookup mode.<T> Class
<T> ensureInitialized
(Class<T> targetClass) Ensures thattargetClass
has been initialized.Class
<?> Looks up a class by name from the lookup context defined by thisLookup
object, as if resolved by anldc
instruction.findConstructor
(Class<?> refc, MethodType type) Produces a method handle which creates an object and initializes it, using the constructor of the specified type.findGetter
(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a method handle giving read access to a non-static field.findSetter
(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a method handle giving write access to a non-static field.findSpecial
(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type, Class<?> specialCaller) Produces an early-bound method handle for a virtual method.findStatic
(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type) Produces a method handle for a static method.findStaticGetter
(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a method handle giving read access to a static field.findStaticSetter
(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a method handle giving write access to a static field.findStaticVarHandle
(Class<?> decl, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a VarHandle giving access to a static fieldname
of typetype
declared in a class of typedecl
.findVarHandle
(Class<?> recv, String name, Class<?> type) Produces a VarHandle giving access to a non-static fieldname
of typetype
declared in a class of typerecv
.findVirtual
(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type) Produces a method handle for a virtual method.boolean
Returnstrue
if this lookup has full privilege access, i.e.boolean
Deprecated.Creates a lookup on the specified new lookup class.Class
<?> Tells which class is performing the lookup.int
Tells which access-protection classes of members this lookup object can produce.Class
<?> Reports a lookup class in another module that this lookup object was previously teleported from, ornull
.revealDirect
(MethodHandle target) Cracks a direct method handle created by this lookup object or a similar one.toString()
Displays the name of the class from which lookups are to be made, followed by "/" and the name of the previous lookup class if present.Makes a direct method handle to m, if the lookup class has permission.Produces a method handle for a reflected constructor.Produces a method handle giving read access to a reflected field.Produces a method handle giving write access to a reflected field.unreflectSpecial
(Method m, Class<?> specialCaller) Produces a method handle for a reflected method.Produces a VarHandle giving access to a reflected fieldf
of typeT
declared in a class of typeR
.
-
Field Details
-
PUBLIC
public static final int PUBLICA single-bit mask representingpublic
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value,0x01
, happens to be the same as the value of thepublic
modifier bit.A
Lookup
with this lookup mode performs cross-module access check with respect to the lookup class and previous lookup class if present.- See Also:
-
PRIVATE
public static final int PRIVATEA single-bit mask representingprivate
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value,0x02
, happens to be the same as the value of theprivate
modifier bit.- See Also:
-
PROTECTED
public static final int PROTECTEDA single-bit mask representingprotected
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value,0x04
, happens to be the same as the value of theprotected
modifier bit.- See Also:
-
PACKAGE
public static final int PACKAGEA single-bit mask representingpackage
access (default access), which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value is0x08
, which does not correspond meaningfully to any particular modifier bit.- See Also:
-
MODULE
public static final int MODULEA single-bit mask representingmodule
access, which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value is0x10
, which does not correspond meaningfully to any particular modifier bit. In conjunction with thePUBLIC
modifier bit, aLookup
with this lookup mode can access all public types in the module of the lookup class and public types in packages exported by other modules to the module of the lookup class.If this lookup mode is set, the previous lookup class is always
null
.- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
-
UNCONDITIONAL
public static final int UNCONDITIONALA single-bit mask representingunconditional
access which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value is0x20
, which does not correspond meaningfully to any particular modifier bit. ALookup
with this lookup mode assumes readability. This lookup mode can access all public members of public types of all modules when the type is in a package that isexported unconditionally
.If this lookup mode is set, the previous lookup class is always
null
.- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
-
ORIGINAL
public static final int ORIGINALA single-bit mask representingoriginal
access which may contribute to the result oflookupModes
. The value is0x40
, which does not correspond meaningfully to any particular modifier bit.If this lookup mode is set, the
Lookup
object must be created by the original lookup class by callingMethodHandles.lookup()
method or by a bootstrap method invoked by the VM. TheLookup
object with this lookup mode has full privilege access.- Since:
- 16
- See Also:
-
-
Method Details
-
lookupClass
Tells which class is performing the lookup. It is this class against which checks are performed for visibility and access permissions.If this lookup object has a previous lookup class, access checks are performed against both the lookup class and the previous lookup class.
The class implies a maximum level of access permission, but the permissions may be additionally limited by the bitmask
lookupModes
, which controls whether non-public members can be accessed.- Returns:
- the lookup class, on behalf of which this lookup object finds members
- See Also:
-
previousLookupClass
Reports a lookup class in another module that this lookup object was previously teleported from, ornull
.A
Lookup
object produced by the factory methods, such as thelookup()
andpublicLookup()
method, hasnull
previous lookup class. ALookup
object has a non-null previous lookup class when this lookup was teleported from an old lookup class in one module to a new lookup class in another module.- Returns:
- the lookup class in another module that this lookup object was
previously teleported from, or
null
- Since:
- 14
- See Also:
-
lookupModes
public int lookupModes()Tells which access-protection classes of members this lookup object can produce. The result is a bit-mask of the bits PUBLIC (0x01), PRIVATE (0x02), PROTECTED (0x04), PACKAGE (0x08), MODULE (0x10), UNCONDITIONAL (0x20), and ORIGINAL (0x40).A freshly-created lookup object on the caller's class has all possible bits set, except
UNCONDITIONAL
. A lookup object on a new lookup class created from a previous lookup object may have some mode bits set to zero. Mode bits can also be directly cleared. Once cleared, mode bits cannot be restored from the downgraded lookup object. The purpose of this is to restrict access via the new lookup object, so that it can access only names which can be reached by the original lookup object, and also by the new lookup class.- Returns:
- the lookup modes, which limit the kinds of access performed by this lookup object
- See Also:
-
in
Creates a lookup on the specified new lookup class. The resulting object will report the specified class as its ownlookupClass
.However, the resulting
Lookup
object is guaranteed to have no more access capabilities than the original. In particular, access capabilities can be lost as follows:- If the new lookup class is different from the old lookup class,
i.e.
ORIGINAL
access is lost. - If the new lookup class is in a different module from the old one,
i.e.
MODULE
access is lost. - If the new lookup class is in a different package
than the old one, protected and default (package) members will not be accessible,
i.e.
PROTECTED
andPACKAGE
access are lost. - If the new lookup class is not within the same package member
as the old one, private members will not be accessible, and protected members
will not be accessible by virtue of inheritance,
i.e.
PRIVATE
access is lost. (Protected members may continue to be accessible because of package sharing.) - If the new lookup class is not accessible to this lookup, then no members, not even public members, will be accessible i.e. all access modes are lost.
- If the new lookup class, the old lookup class and the previous lookup class are all in different modules i.e. teleporting to a third module, all access modes are lost.
The new previous lookup class is chosen as follows:
- If the new lookup object has
UNCONDITIONAL
bit, the new previous lookup class isnull
. - If the new lookup class is in the same module as the old lookup class, the new previous lookup class is the old previous lookup class.
- If the new lookup class is in a different module from the old lookup class, the new previous lookup class is the old lookup class.
The resulting lookup's capabilities for loading classes (used during
findClass(java.lang.String)
invocations) are determined by the lookup class' loader, which may change due to this operation.- Parameters:
requestedLookupClass
- the desired lookup class for the new lookup object- Returns:
- a lookup object which reports the desired lookup class, or the same object if there is no change
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException
- ifrequestedLookupClass
is a primitive type or void or array classNullPointerException
- if the argument is null- See Also:
- If the new lookup class is different from the old lookup class,
i.e.
-
dropLookupMode
Creates a lookup on the same lookup class which this lookup object finds members, but with a lookup mode that has lost the given lookup mode. The lookup mode to drop is one ofPUBLIC
,MODULE
,PACKAGE
,PROTECTED
,PRIVATE
,ORIGINAL
, orUNCONDITIONAL
.If this lookup is a public lookup, this lookup has
UNCONDITIONAL
mode set and it has no other mode set. When droppingUNCONDITIONAL
on a public lookup then the resulting lookup has no access.If this lookup is not a public lookup, then the following applies regardless of its lookup modes.
PROTECTED
andORIGINAL
are always dropped and so the resulting lookup mode will never have these access capabilities. When droppingPACKAGE
then the resulting lookup will not havePACKAGE
orPRIVATE
access. When droppingMODULE
then the resulting lookup will not haveMODULE
,PACKAGE
, orPRIVATE
access. When droppingPUBLIC
then the resulting lookup has no access.- API Note:
- A lookup with
PACKAGE
but notPRIVATE
mode can safely delegate non-public access within the package of the lookup class without conferring private access. A lookup withMODULE
but notPACKAGE
mode can safely delegatePUBLIC
access within the module of the lookup class without conferring package access. A lookup with a previous lookup class (andPUBLIC
but notMODULE
mode) can safely delegate access to public classes accessible to both the module of the lookup class and the module of the previous lookup class. - Parameters:
modeToDrop
- the lookup mode to drop- Returns:
- a lookup object which lacks the indicated mode, or the same object if there is no change
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException
- ifmodeToDrop
is not one ofPUBLIC
,MODULE
,PACKAGE
,PROTECTED
,PRIVATE
,ORIGINAL
orUNCONDITIONAL
- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
-
defineClass
Creates and links a class or interface frombytes
with the same class loader and in the same runtime package and protection domain as this lookup's lookup class as if callingClassLoader::defineClass
.The lookup modes for this lookup must include
PACKAGE
access as default (package) members will be accessible to the class. ThePACKAGE
lookup mode serves to authenticate that the lookup object was created by a caller in the runtime package (or derived from a lookup originally created by suitably privileged code to a target class in the runtime package).The
bytes
parameter is the class bytes of a valid class file (as defined by the The Java Virtual Machine Specification) with a class name in the same package as the lookup class.This method does not run the class initializer. The class initializer may run at a later time, as detailed in section 12.4 of the The Java Language Specification.
If there is a security manager and this lookup does not have full privilege access, its
checkPermission
method is first called to checkRuntimePermission("defineClass")
.- Parameters:
bytes
- the class bytes- Returns:
- the
Class
object for the class - Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if this lookup does not havePACKAGE
accessClassFormatError
- ifbytes
is not aClassFile
structureIllegalArgumentException
- ifbytes
denotes a class in a different package than the lookup class orbytes
is not a class or interface (ACC_MODULE
flag is set in the value of theaccess_flags
item)VerifyError
- if the newly created class cannot be verifiedLinkageError
- if the newly created class cannot be linked for any other reasonSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- ifbytes
isnull
- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
-
defineHiddenClass
public MethodHandles.Lookup defineHiddenClass(byte[] bytes, boolean initialize, MethodHandles.Lookup.ClassOption... options) throws IllegalAccessException Creates a hidden class or interface frombytes
, returning aLookup
on the newly created class or interface.Ordinarily, a class or interface
C
is created by a class loader, which either definesC
directly or delegates to another class loader. A class loader definesC
directly by invokingClassLoader::defineClass
, which causes the Java Virtual Machine to deriveC
from a purported representation inclass
file format. In situations where use of a class loader is undesirable, a class or interfaceC
can be created by this method instead. This method is capable of definingC
, and thereby creating it, without invokingClassLoader::defineClass
. Instead, this method definesC
as if by arranging for the Java Virtual Machine to derive a nonarray class or interfaceC
from a purported representation inclass
file format using the following rules:- The lookup modes for this
Lookup
must include full privilege access. This level of access is needed to createC
in the module of the lookup class of thisLookup
. - The purported representation in
bytes
must be aClassFile
structure (JVMS 4.1) of a supported major and minor version. The major and minor version may differ from theclass
file version of the lookup class of thisLookup
. - The value of
this_class
must be a valid index in theconstant_pool
table, and the entry at that index must be a validCONSTANT_Class_info
structure. LetN
be the binary name encoded in internal form that is specified by this structure.N
must denote a class or interface in the same package as the lookup class. - Let
CN
be the stringN + "." + <suffix>
, where<suffix>
is an unqualified name.Let
newBytes
be theClassFile
structure given bybytes
with an additional entry in theconstant_pool
table, indicating aCONSTANT_Utf8_info
structure forCN
, and where theCONSTANT_Class_info
structure indicated bythis_class
refers to the newCONSTANT_Utf8_info
structure.Let
L
be the defining class loader of the lookup class of thisLookup
.C
is derived with nameCN
, class loaderL
, and purported representationnewBytes
as if by the rules of JVMS 5.3.5, with the following adjustments:- The constant indicated by
this_class
is permitted to specify a name that includes a single"."
character, even though this is not a valid binary class or interface name in internal form. - The Java Virtual Machine marks
L
as the defining class loader ofC
, but no class loader is recorded as an initiating class loader ofC
. -
C
is considered to have the same runtime package, module and protection domain as the lookup class of thisLookup
. - Let
GN
be the binary name obtained by takingN
(a binary name encoded in internal form) and replacing ASCII forward slashes with ASCII periods. For the instance ofClass
representingC
:-
Class.getName()
returns the stringGN + "/" + <suffix>
, even though this is not a valid binary class or interface name. -
Class.descriptorString()
returns the string"L" + N + "." + <suffix> + ";"
, even though this is not a valid type descriptor name. -
Class.describeConstable()
returns an empty optional asC
cannot be described in nominal form.
-
- The constant indicated by
After
C
is derived, it is linked by the Java Virtual Machine. Linkage occurs as specified in JVMS 5.4.3, with the following adjustments:- During verification, whenever it is necessary to load the class named
CN
, the attempt succeeds, producing classC
. No request is made of any class loader. - On any attempt to resolve the entry in the run-time constant pool indicated
by
this_class
, the symbolic reference is considered to be resolved toC
and resolution always succeeds immediately.
If the
initialize
parameter istrue
, thenC
is initialized by the Java Virtual Machine.The newly created class or interface
C
serves as the lookup class of theLookup
object returned by this method.C
is hidden in the sense that no other class or interface can refer toC
via a constant pool entry. That is, a hidden class or interface cannot be named as a supertype, a field type, a method parameter type, or a method return type by any other class. This is because a hidden class or interface does not have a binary name, so there is no internal form available to record in any class's constant pool. A hidden class or interface is not discoverable byClass.forName(String, boolean, ClassLoader)
,ClassLoader.loadClass(String, boolean)
, orfindClass(String)
, and is not modifiable by Java agents or tool agents using the JVM Tool Interface.A class or interface created by a class loader has a strong relationship with that class loader. That is, every
Class
object contains a reference to theClassLoader
that defined it. This means that a class created by a class loader may be unloaded if and only if its defining loader is not reachable and thus may be reclaimed by a garbage collector (JLS 12.7). By default, however, a hidden class or interface may be unloaded even if the class loader that is marked as its defining loader is reachable. This behavior is useful when a hidden class or interface serves multiple classes defined by arbitrary class loaders. In other cases, a hidden class or interface may be linked to a single class (or a small number of classes) with the same defining loader as the hidden class or interface. In such cases, where the hidden class or interface must be coterminous with a normal class or interface, theSTRONG
option may be passed inoptions
. This arranges for a hidden class to have the same strong relationship with the class loader marked as its defining loader, as a normal class or interface has with its own defining loader. IfSTRONG
is not used, then the invoker ofdefineHiddenClass
may still prevent a hidden class or interface from being unloaded by ensuring that theClass
object is reachable.The unloading characteristics are set for each hidden class when it is defined, and cannot be changed later. An advantage of allowing hidden classes to be unloaded independently of the class loader marked as their defining loader is that a very large number of hidden classes may be created by an application. In contrast, if
STRONG
is used, then the JVM may run out of memory, just as if normal classes were created by class loaders.Classes and interfaces in a nest are allowed to have mutual access to their private members. The nest relationship is determined by the
NestHost
attribute (JVMS 4.7.28) and theNestMembers
attribute (JVMS 4.7.29) in aclass
file. By default, a hidden class belongs to a nest consisting only of itself because a hidden class has no binary name. TheNESTMATE
option can be passed inoptions
to create a hidden class or interfaceC
as a member of a nest. The nest to whichC
belongs is not based on anyNestHost
attribute in theClassFile
structure from whichC
was derived. Instead, the following rules determine the nest host ofC
:- If the nest host of the lookup class of this
Lookup
has previously been determined, then letH
be the nest host of the lookup class. Otherwise, the nest host of the lookup class is determined using the algorithm in JVMS 5.4.4, yieldingH
. - The nest host of
C
is determined to beH
, the nest host of the lookup class.
A hidden class or interface may be serializable, but this requires a custom serialization mechanism in order to ensure that instances are properly serialized and deserialized. The default serialization mechanism supports only classes and interfaces that are discoverable by their class name.
- Parameters:
bytes
- the bytes that make up the class data, in the format of a validclass
file as defined by The Java Virtual Machine Specification.initialize
- iftrue
the class will be initialized.options
- class options- Returns:
- the
Lookup
object on the hidden class, with original and full privilege access - Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if thisLookup
does not have full privilege accessSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessClassFormatError
- ifbytes
is not aClassFile
structureUnsupportedClassVersionError
- ifbytes
is not of a supported major or minor versionIllegalArgumentException
- ifbytes
denotes a class in a different package than the lookup class orbytes
is not a class or interface (ACC_MODULE
flag is set in the value of theaccess_flags
item)IncompatibleClassChangeError
- if the class or interface named as the direct superclass ofC
is in fact an interface, or if any of the classes or interfaces named as direct superinterfaces ofC
are not in fact interfacesClassCircularityError
- if any of the superclasses or superinterfaces ofC
isC
itselfVerifyError
- if the newly created class cannot be verifiedLinkageError
- if the newly created class cannot be linked for any other reasonNullPointerException
- if any parameter isnull
- See Java Language Specification:
-
12.7 Unloading of Classes and Interfaces
- See Java Virtual Machine Specification:
-
4.2.1 Binary Class and Interface Names
4.2.2 Unqualified Names
4.7.28 TheNestHost
Attribute
4.7.29 TheNestMembers
Attribute
5.4.3.1 Class and Interface Resolution
5.4.4 Access Control
5.3.5 Deriving aClass
from aclass
File Representation
5.4 Linking
5.5 Initialization - Since:
- 15
- See Also:
- The lookup modes for this
-
defineHiddenClassWithClassData
public MethodHandles.Lookup defineHiddenClassWithClassData(byte[] bytes, Object classData, boolean initialize, MethodHandles.Lookup.ClassOption... options) throws IllegalAccessException Creates a hidden class or interface frombytes
with associated class data, returning aLookup
on the newly created class or interface.This method is equivalent to calling
defineHiddenClass(bytes, initialize, options)
as if the hidden class is injected with a private static final unnamed field which is initialized with the givenclassData
at the first instruction of the class initializer. The newly created class is linked by the Java Virtual Machine.The
MethodHandles::classData
andMethodHandles::classDataAt
methods can be used to retrieve theclassData
.- API Note:
- A framework can create a hidden class with class data with one or more
objects and load the class data as dynamically-computed constant(s)
via a bootstrap method.
Class data
is accessible only to the lookup object created by the newly defined hidden class but inaccessible to other members in the same nest (unlike private static fields that are accessible to nestmates). Care should be taken w.r.t. mutability for example when passing an array or other mutable structure through the class data. Changing any value stored in the class data at runtime may lead to unpredictable behavior. If the class data is aList
, it is good practice to make it unmodifiable for example viaList::of
. - Parameters:
bytes
- the class bytesclassData
- pre-initialized class datainitialize
- iftrue
the class will be initialized.options
- class options- Returns:
- the
Lookup
object on the hidden class, with original and full privilege access - Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if thisLookup
does not have full privilege accessSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessClassFormatError
- ifbytes
is not aClassFile
structureUnsupportedClassVersionError
- ifbytes
is not of a supported major or minor versionIllegalArgumentException
- ifbytes
denotes a class in a different package than the lookup class orbytes
is not a class or interface (ACC_MODULE
flag is set in the value of theaccess_flags
item)IncompatibleClassChangeError
- if the class or interface named as the direct superclass ofC
is in fact an interface, or if any of the classes or interfaces named as direct superinterfaces ofC
are not in fact interfacesClassCircularityError
- if any of the superclasses or superinterfaces ofC
isC
itselfVerifyError
- if the newly created class cannot be verifiedLinkageError
- if the newly created class cannot be linked for any other reasonNullPointerException
- if any parameter isnull
- See Java Language Specification:
-
12.7 Unloading of Classes and Interfaces
- See Java Virtual Machine Specification:
-
4.2.1 Binary Class and Interface Names
4.2.2 Unqualified Names
4.7.28 TheNestHost
Attribute
4.7.29 TheNestMembers
Attribute
5.4.3.1 Class and Interface Resolution
5.4.4 Access Control
5.3.5 Deriving aClass
from aclass
File Representation
5.4 Linking
5.5 Initialization - Since:
- 16
- See Also:
-
toString
Displays the name of the class from which lookups are to be made, followed by "/" and the name of the previous lookup class if present. (The name is the one reported byClass.getName
.) If there are restrictions on the access permitted to this lookup, this is indicated by adding a suffix to the class name, consisting of a slash and a keyword. The keyword represents the strongest allowed access, and is chosen as follows:- If no access is allowed, the suffix is "/noaccess".
- If only unconditional access is allowed, the suffix is "/publicLookup".
- If only public access to types in exported packages is allowed, the suffix is "/public".
- If only public and module access are allowed, the suffix is "/module".
- If public and package access are allowed, the suffix is "/package".
- If public, package, and private access are allowed, the suffix is "/private".
MethodHandles.lookup
. Objects created byLookup.in
always have restricted access, and will display a suffix.(It may seem strange that protected access should be stronger than private access. Viewed independently from package access, protected access is the first to be lost, because it requires a direct subclass relationship between caller and callee.)
-
findStatic
public MethodHandle findStatic(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type) throws NoSuchMethodException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle for a static method. The type of the method handle will be that of the method. (Since static methods do not take receivers, there is no additional receiver argument inserted into the method handle type, as there would be withfindVirtual
orfindSpecial
.) The method and all its argument types must be accessible to the lookup object.The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.If the returned method handle is invoked, the method's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle MH_asList = publicLookup().findStatic(Arrays.class, "asList", methodType(List.class, Object[].class)); assertEquals("[x, y]", MH_asList.invoke("x", "y").toString());
- Parameters:
refc
- the class from which the method is accessedname
- the name of the methodtype
- the type of the method- Returns:
- the desired method handle
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodException
- if the method does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the method is notstatic
, or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findVirtual
public MethodHandle findVirtual(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type) throws NoSuchMethodException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle for a virtual method. The type of the method handle will be that of the method, with the receiver type (usuallyrefc
) prepended. The method and all its argument types must be accessible to the lookup object.When called, the handle will treat the first argument as a receiver and, for non-private methods, dispatch on the receiver's type to determine which method implementation to enter. For private methods the named method in
refc
will be invoked on the receiver. (The dispatching action is identical with that performed by aninvokevirtual
orinvokeinterface
instruction.)The first argument will be of type
refc
if the lookup class has full privileges to access the member. Otherwise the member must beprotected
and the first argument will be restricted in type to the lookup class.The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.Because of the general equivalence between
invokevirtual
instructions and method handles produced byfindVirtual
, if the class isMethodHandle
and the name string isinvokeExact
orinvoke
, the resulting method handle is equivalent to one produced byMethodHandles.exactInvoker
orMethodHandles.invoker
with the sametype
argument.If the class is
VarHandle
and the name string corresponds to the name of a signature-polymorphic access mode method, the resulting method handle is equivalent to one produced byMethodHandles.varHandleInvoker(java.lang.invoke.VarHandle.AccessMode, java.lang.invoke.MethodType)
with the access mode corresponding to the name string and with the sametype
arguments.Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle MH_concat = publicLookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); MethodHandle MH_hashCode = publicLookup().findVirtual(Object.class, "hashCode", methodType(int.class)); MethodHandle MH_hashCode_String = publicLookup().findVirtual(String.class, "hashCode", methodType(int.class)); assertEquals("xy", (String) MH_concat.invokeExact("x", "y")); assertEquals("xy".hashCode(), (int) MH_hashCode.invokeExact((Object)"xy")); assertEquals("xy".hashCode(), (int) MH_hashCode_String.invokeExact("xy")); // interface method: MethodHandle MH_subSequence = publicLookup().findVirtual(CharSequence.class, "subSequence", methodType(CharSequence.class, int.class, int.class)); assertEquals("def", MH_subSequence.invoke("abcdefghi", 3, 6).toString()); // constructor "internal method" must be accessed differently: MethodType MT_newString = methodType(void.class); //()V for new String() try { assertEquals("impossible", lookup() .findVirtual(String.class, "<init>", MT_newString)); } catch (NoSuchMethodException ex) { } // OK MethodHandle MH_newString = publicLookup() .findConstructor(String.class, MT_newString); assertEquals("", (String) MH_newString.invokeExact());
- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the name of the methodtype
- the type of the method, with the receiver argument omitted- Returns:
- the desired method handle
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodException
- if the method does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the method isstatic
, or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findConstructor
public MethodHandle findConstructor(Class<?> refc, MethodType type) throws NoSuchMethodException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle which creates an object and initializes it, using the constructor of the specified type. The parameter types of the method handle will be those of the constructor, while the return type will be a reference to the constructor's class. The constructor and all its argument types must be accessible to the lookup object.The requested type must have a return type of
void
. (This is consistent with the JVM's treatment of constructor type descriptors.)The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the constructor's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.If the returned method handle is invoked, the constructor's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle MH_newArrayList = publicLookup().findConstructor( ArrayList.class, methodType(void.class, Collection.class)); Collection orig = Arrays.asList("x", "y"); Collection copy = (ArrayList) MH_newArrayList.invokeExact(orig); assert(orig != copy); assertEquals(orig, copy); // a variable-arity constructor: MethodHandle MH_newProcessBuilder = publicLookup().findConstructor( ProcessBuilder.class, methodType(void.class, String[].class)); ProcessBuilder pb = (ProcessBuilder) MH_newProcessBuilder.invoke("x", "y", "z"); assertEquals("[x, y, z]", pb.command().toString());
- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedtype
- the type of the method, with the receiver argument omitted, and a void return type- Returns:
- the desired method handle
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodException
- if the constructor does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findClass
Looks up a class by name from the lookup context defined by thisLookup
object, as if resolved by anldc
instruction. Such a resolution, as specified in JVMS 5.4.3.1, attempts to locate and load the class, and then determines whether the class is accessible to this lookup object.For a class or an interface, the name is the binary name. For an array class of
n
dimensions, the name begins withn
occurrences of'['
and followed by the element type as encoded in the table specified inClass.getName()
.The lookup context here is determined by the lookup class, its class loader, and the lookup modes.
- Parameters:
targetName
- the binary name of the class or the string representing an array class- Returns:
- the requested class.
- Throws:
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessLinkageError
- if the linkage failsClassNotFoundException
- if the class cannot be loaded by the lookup class' loader.IllegalAccessException
- if the class is not accessible, using the allowed access modes.NullPointerException
- iftargetName
is null- See Java Virtual Machine Specification:
-
5.4.3.1 Class and Interface Resolution
- Since:
- 9
-
ensureInitialized
Ensures thattargetClass
has been initialized. The class to be initialized must be accessible to thisLookup
object. This method causestargetClass
to be initialized if it has not been already initialized, as specified in JVMS 5.5.This method returns when
targetClass
is fully initialized, or whentargetClass
is being initialized by the current thread.- Type Parameters:
T
- the type of the class to be initialized- Parameters:
targetClass
- the class to be initialized- Returns:
targetClass
that has been initialized, or that is being initialized by the current thread.- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException
- iftargetClass
is a primitive type orvoid
or array classIllegalAccessException
- iftargetClass
is not accessible to this lookupExceptionInInitializerError
- if the class initialization provoked by this method failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses access- See Java Virtual Machine Specification:
-
5.5 Initialization
- Since:
- 15
-
accessClass
Determines if a class can be accessed from the lookup context defined by thisLookup
object. The static initializer of the class is not run. IftargetClass
is an array class,targetClass
is accessible if the element type of the array class is accessible. Otherwise,targetClass
is determined as accessible as follows.If
targetClass
is in the same module as the lookup class, the lookup class isLC
in moduleM1
and the previous lookup class is in moduleM0
ornull
if not present,targetClass
is accessible if and only if one of the following is true:- If this lookup has
PRIVATE
access,targetClass
isLC
or other class in the same nest ofLC
. - If this lookup has
PACKAGE
access,targetClass
is in the same runtime package ofLC
. - If this lookup has
MODULE
access,targetClass
is a public type inM1
. - If this lookup has
PUBLIC
access,targetClass
is a public type in a package exported byM1
to at leastM0
if the previous lookup class is present; otherwise,targetClass
is a public type in a package exported byM1
unconditionally.
Otherwise, if this lookup has
UNCONDITIONAL
access, this lookup can access public types in all modules when the type is in a package that is exported unconditionally.Otherwise,
targetClass
is in a different module fromlookupClass
, and if this lookup does not havePUBLIC
access,lookupClass
is inaccessible.Otherwise, if this lookup has no previous lookup class,
M1
is the module containinglookupClass
andM2
is the module containingtargetClass
, thentargetClass
is accessible if and only ifM1
readsM2
, andtargetClass
is public and in a package exported byM2
at least toM1
.
Otherwise, if this lookup has a previous lookup class,
M1
andM2
are as before, andM0
is the module containing the previous lookup class, thentargetClass
is accessible if and only if one of the following is true:targetClass
is inM0
andM1
readsM0
and the type is in a package that is exported to at leastM1
.targetClass
is inM1
andM0
readsM1
and the type is in a package that is exported to at leastM0
.targetClass
is in a third moduleM2
and bothM0
andM1
readsM2
and the type is in a package that is exported to at least bothM0
andM2
.
Otherwise,
targetClass
is not accessible.- Type Parameters:
T
- the type of the class to be access-checked- Parameters:
targetClass
- the class to be access-checked- Returns:
targetClass
that has been access-checked- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if the class is not accessible from the lookup class and previous lookup class, if present, using the allowed access modes.SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- iftargetClass
isnull
- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
- If this lookup has
-
findSpecial
public MethodHandle findSpecial(Class<?> refc, String name, MethodType type, Class<?> specialCaller) throws NoSuchMethodException, IllegalAccessException Produces an early-bound method handle for a virtual method. It will bypass checks for overriding methods on the receiver, as if called from aninvokespecial
instruction from within the explicitly specifiedspecialCaller
. The type of the method handle will be that of the method, with a suitably restricted receiver type prepended. (The receiver type will bespecialCaller
or a subtype.) The method and all its argument types must be accessible to the lookup object.Before method resolution, if the explicitly specified caller class is not identical with the lookup class, or if this lookup object does not have private access privileges, the access fails.
The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.(Note: JVM internal methods named "<init>" are not visible to this API, even though the
invokespecial
instruction can refer to them in special circumstances. UsefindConstructor
to access instance initialization methods in a safe manner.)Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... static class Listie extends ArrayList { public String toString() { return "[wee Listie]"; } static Lookup lookup() { return MethodHandles.lookup(); } } ... // no access to constructor via invokeSpecial: MethodHandle MH_newListie = Listie.lookup() .findConstructor(Listie.class, methodType(void.class)); Listie l = (Listie) MH_newListie.invokeExact(); try { assertEquals("impossible", Listie.lookup().findSpecial( Listie.class, "<init>", methodType(void.class), Listie.class)); } catch (NoSuchMethodException ex) { } // OK // access to super and self methods via invokeSpecial: MethodHandle MH_super = Listie.lookup().findSpecial( ArrayList.class, "toString" , methodType(String.class), Listie.class); MethodHandle MH_this = Listie.lookup().findSpecial( Listie.class, "toString" , methodType(String.class), Listie.class); MethodHandle MH_duper = Listie.lookup().findSpecial( Object.class, "toString" , methodType(String.class), Listie.class); assertEquals("[]", (String) MH_super.invokeExact(l)); assertEquals(""+l, (String) MH_this.invokeExact(l)); assertEquals("[]", (String) MH_duper.invokeExact(l)); // ArrayList method try { assertEquals("inaccessible", Listie.lookup().findSpecial( String.class, "toString", methodType(String.class), Listie.class)); } catch (IllegalAccessException ex) { } // OK Listie subl = new Listie() { public String toString() { return "[subclass]"; } }; assertEquals(""+l, (String) MH_this.invokeExact(subl)); // Listie method
- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the name of the method (which must not be "<init>")type
- the type of the method, with the receiver argument omittedspecialCaller
- the proposed calling class to perform theinvokespecial
- Returns:
- the desired method handle
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodException
- if the method does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the method isstatic
, or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findGetter
public MethodHandle findGetter(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle giving read access to a non-static field. The type of the method handle will have a return type of the field's value type. The method handle's single argument will be the instance containing the field. Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type- Returns:
- a method handle which can load values from the field
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field isstatic
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null- See Also:
-
findSetter
public MethodHandle findSetter(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle giving write access to a non-static field. The type of the method handle will have a void return type. The method handle will take two arguments, the instance containing the field, and the value to be stored. The second argument will be of the field's value type. Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type- Returns:
- a method handle which can store values into the field
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field isstatic
orfinal
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null- See Also:
-
findVarHandle
public VarHandle findVarHandle(Class<?> recv, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a VarHandle giving access to a non-static fieldname
of typetype
declared in a class of typerecv
. The VarHandle's variable type istype
and it has one coordinate type,recv
.Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.
Certain access modes of the returned VarHandle are unsupported under the following conditions:
- if the field is declared
final
, then the write, atomic update, numeric atomic update, and bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
byte
,short
,char
,int
,long
,float
, ordouble
then numeric atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
boolean
,byte
,short
,char
,int
orlong
then bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported.
If the field is declared
volatile
then the returned VarHandle will override access to the field (effectively ignore thevolatile
declaration) in accordance to its specified access modes.If the field type is
float
ordouble
then numeric and atomic update access modes compare values using their bitwise representation (seeFloat.floatToRawIntBits(float)
andDouble.doubleToRawLongBits(double)
, respectively).- API Note:
- Bitwise comparison of
float
values ordouble
values, as performed by the numeric and atomic update access modes, differ from the primitive==
operator and theFloat.equals(java.lang.Object)
andDouble.equals(java.lang.Object)
methods, specifically with respect to comparing NaN values or comparing-0.0
with+0.0
. Care should be taken when performing a compare and set or a compare and exchange operation with such values since the operation may unexpectedly fail. There are many possible NaN values that are considered to beNaN
in Java, although no IEEE 754 floating-point operation provided by Java can distinguish between them. Operation failure can occur if the expected or witness value is a NaN value and it is transformed (perhaps in a platform specific manner) into another NaN value, and thus has a different bitwise representation (seeFloat.intBitsToFloat(int)
orDouble.longBitsToDouble(long)
for more details). The values-0.0
and+0.0
have different bitwise representations but are considered equal when using the primitive==
operator. Operation failure can occur if, for example, a numeric algorithm computes an expected value to be say-0.0
and previously computed the witness value to be say+0.0
. - Parameters:
recv
- the receiver class, of typeR
, that declares the non-static fieldname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type, of typeT
- Returns:
- a VarHandle giving access to non-static fields.
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field isstatic
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null- Since:
- 9
- if the field is declared
-
findStaticGetter
public MethodHandle findStaticGetter(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle giving read access to a static field. The type of the method handle will have a return type of the field's value type. The method handle will take no arguments. Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.If the returned method handle is invoked, the field's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type- Returns:
- a method handle which can load values from the field
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field is notstatic
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findStaticSetter
public MethodHandle findStaticSetter(Class<?> refc, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle giving write access to a static field. The type of the method handle will have a void return type. The method handle will take a single argument, of the field's value type, the value to be stored. Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.If the returned method handle is invoked, the field's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
- Parameters:
refc
- the class or interface from which the method is accessedname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type- Returns:
- a method handle which can store values into the field
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field is notstatic
or isfinal
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
findStaticVarHandle
public VarHandle findStaticVarHandle(Class<?> decl, String name, Class<?> type) throws NoSuchFieldException, IllegalAccessException Produces a VarHandle giving access to a static fieldname
of typetype
declared in a class of typedecl
. The VarHandle's variable type istype
and it has no coordinate types.Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.
If the returned VarHandle is operated on, the declaring class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
Certain access modes of the returned VarHandle are unsupported under the following conditions:
- if the field is declared
final
, then the write, atomic update, numeric atomic update, and bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
byte
,short
,char
,int
,long
,float
, ordouble
, then numeric atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
boolean
,byte
,short
,char
,int
orlong
then bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported.
If the field is declared
volatile
then the returned VarHandle will override access to the field (effectively ignore thevolatile
declaration) in accordance to its specified access modes.If the field type is
float
ordouble
then numeric and atomic update access modes compare values using their bitwise representation (seeFloat.floatToRawIntBits(float)
andDouble.doubleToRawLongBits(double)
, respectively).- API Note:
- Bitwise comparison of
float
values ordouble
values, as performed by the numeric and atomic update access modes, differ from the primitive==
operator and theFloat.equals(java.lang.Object)
andDouble.equals(java.lang.Object)
methods, specifically with respect to comparing NaN values or comparing-0.0
with+0.0
. Care should be taken when performing a compare and set or a compare and exchange operation with such values since the operation may unexpectedly fail. There are many possible NaN values that are considered to beNaN
in Java, although no IEEE 754 floating-point operation provided by Java can distinguish between them. Operation failure can occur if the expected or witness value is a NaN value and it is transformed (perhaps in a platform specific manner) into another NaN value, and thus has a different bitwise representation (seeFloat.intBitsToFloat(int)
orDouble.longBitsToDouble(long)
for more details). The values-0.0
and+0.0
have different bitwise representations but are considered equal when using the primitive==
operator. Operation failure can occur if, for example, a numeric algorithm computes an expected value to be say-0.0
and previously computed the witness value to be say+0.0
. - Parameters:
decl
- the class that declares the static fieldname
- the field's nametype
- the field's type, of typeT
- Returns:
- a VarHandle giving access to a static field
- Throws:
NoSuchFieldException
- if the field does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field is notstatic
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null- Since:
- 9
- if the field is declared
-
bind
public MethodHandle bind(Object receiver, String name, MethodType type) throws NoSuchMethodException, IllegalAccessException Produces an early-bound method handle for a non-static method. The receiver must have a supertypedefc
in which a method of the given name and type is accessible to the lookup class. The method and all its argument types must be accessible to the lookup object. The type of the method handle will be that of the method, without any insertion of an additional receiver parameter. The given receiver will be bound into the method handle, so that every call to the method handle will invoke the requested method on the given receiver.The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set and the trailing array argument is not the only argument. (If the trailing array argument is the only argument, the given receiver value will be bound to it.)This is almost equivalent to the following code, with some differences noted below:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle mh0 = lookup().findVirtual(defc, name, type); MethodHandle mh1 = mh0.bindTo(receiver); mh1 = mh1.withVarargs(mh0.isVarargsCollector()); return mh1;
defc
is eitherreceiver.getClass()
or a super type of that class, in which the requested method is accessible to the lookup class. (Unlikebind
,bindTo
does not preserve variable arity. Also,bindTo
may throw aClassCastException
in instances wherebind
would throw anIllegalAccessException
, as in the case where the member isprotected
and the receiver is restricted byfindVirtual
to the lookup class.)- Parameters:
receiver
- the object from which the method is accessedname
- the name of the methodtype
- the type of the method, with the receiver argument omitted- Returns:
- the desired method handle
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodException
- if the method does not existIllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsSecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessNullPointerException
- if any argument is null- See Also:
-
unreflect
Makes a direct method handle to m, if the lookup class has permission. If m is non-static, the receiver argument is treated as an initial argument. If m is virtual, overriding is respected on every call. Unlike the Core Reflection API, exceptions are not wrapped. The type of the method handle will be that of the method, with the receiver type prepended (but only if it is non-static). If the method'saccessible
flag is not set, access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class. If m is not public, do not share the resulting handle with untrusted parties.The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.If m is static, and if the returned method handle is invoked, the method's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
- Parameters:
m
- the reflected method- Returns:
- a method handle which can invoke the reflected method
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsNullPointerException
- if the argument is null
-
unreflectSpecial
public MethodHandle unreflectSpecial(Method m, Class<?> specialCaller) throws IllegalAccessException Produces a method handle for a reflected method. It will bypass checks for overriding methods on the receiver, as if called from aninvokespecial
instruction from within the explicitly specifiedspecialCaller
. The type of the method handle will be that of the method, with a suitably restricted receiver type prepended. (The receiver type will bespecialCaller
or a subtype.) If the method'saccessible
flag is not set, access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class, as ifinvokespecial
instruction were being linked.Before method resolution, if the explicitly specified caller class is not identical with the lookup class, or if this lookup object does not have private access privileges, the access fails.
The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the method's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.- Parameters:
m
- the reflected methodspecialCaller
- the class nominally calling the method- Returns:
- a method handle which can invoke the reflected method
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the method isstatic
, or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsNullPointerException
- if any argument is null
-
unreflectConstructor
Produces a method handle for a reflected constructor. The type of the method handle will be that of the constructor, with the return type changed to the declaring class. The method handle will perform anewInstance
operation, creating a new instance of the constructor's class on the arguments passed to the method handle.If the constructor's
accessible
flag is not set, access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.The returned method handle will have variable arity if and only if the constructor's variable arity modifier bit (
0x0080
) is set.If the returned method handle is invoked, the constructor's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
- Parameters:
c
- the reflected constructor- Returns:
- a method handle which can invoke the reflected constructor
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails or if the method's variable arity modifier bit is set andasVarargsCollector
failsNullPointerException
- if the argument is null
-
unreflectGetter
Produces a method handle giving read access to a reflected field. The type of the method handle will have a return type of the field's value type. If the field isstatic
, the method handle will take no arguments. Otherwise, its single argument will be the instance containing the field. If theField
object'saccessible
flag is not set, access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.If the field is static, and if the returned method handle is invoked, the field's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
- Parameters:
f
- the reflected field- Returns:
- a method handle which can load values from the reflected field
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking failsNullPointerException
- if the argument is null
-
unreflectSetter
Produces a method handle giving write access to a reflected field. The type of the method handle will have a void return type. If the field isstatic
, the method handle will take a single argument, of the field's value type, the value to be stored. Otherwise, the two arguments will be the instance containing the field, and the value to be stored. If theField
object'saccessible
flag is not set, access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class.If the field is
final
, write access will not be allowed and access checking will fail, except under certain narrow circumstances documented forField.set
. A method handle is returned only if a corresponding call to theField
object'sset
method could return normally. In particular, fields which are bothstatic
andfinal
may never be set.If the field is
static
, and if the returned method handle is invoked, the field's class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.- Parameters:
f
- the reflected field- Returns:
- a method handle which can store values into the reflected field
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking fails, or if the field isfinal
and write access is not enabled on theField
objectNullPointerException
- if the argument is null
-
unreflectVarHandle
Produces a VarHandle giving access to a reflected fieldf
of typeT
declared in a class of typeR
. The VarHandle's variable type isT
. If the field is non-static the VarHandle has one coordinate type,R
. Otherwise, the field is static, and the VarHandle has no coordinate types.Access checking is performed immediately on behalf of the lookup class, regardless of the value of the field's
accessible
flag.If the field is static, and if the returned VarHandle is operated on, the field's declaring class will be initialized, if it has not already been initialized.
Certain access modes of the returned VarHandle are unsupported under the following conditions:
- if the field is declared
final
, then the write, atomic update, numeric atomic update, and bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
byte
,short
,char
,int
,long
,float
, ordouble
then numeric atomic update access modes are unsupported. - if the field type is anything other than
boolean
,byte
,short
,char
,int
orlong
then bitwise atomic update access modes are unsupported.
If the field is declared
volatile
then the returned VarHandle will override access to the field (effectively ignore thevolatile
declaration) in accordance to its specified access modes.If the field type is
float
ordouble
then numeric and atomic update access modes compare values using their bitwise representation (seeFloat.floatToRawIntBits(float)
andDouble.doubleToRawLongBits(double)
, respectively).- API Note:
- Bitwise comparison of
float
values ordouble
values, as performed by the numeric and atomic update access modes, differ from the primitive==
operator and theFloat.equals(java.lang.Object)
andDouble.equals(java.lang.Object)
methods, specifically with respect to comparing NaN values or comparing-0.0
with+0.0
. Care should be taken when performing a compare and set or a compare and exchange operation with such values since the operation may unexpectedly fail. There are many possible NaN values that are considered to beNaN
in Java, although no IEEE 754 floating-point operation provided by Java can distinguish between them. Operation failure can occur if the expected or witness value is a NaN value and it is transformed (perhaps in a platform specific manner) into another NaN value, and thus has a different bitwise representation (seeFloat.intBitsToFloat(int)
orDouble.longBitsToDouble(long)
for more details). The values-0.0
and+0.0
have different bitwise representations but are considered equal when using the primitive==
operator. Operation failure can occur if, for example, a numeric algorithm computes an expected value to be say-0.0
and previously computed the witness value to be say+0.0
. - Parameters:
f
- the reflected field, with a field of typeT
, and a declaring class of typeR
- Returns:
- a VarHandle giving access to non-static fields or a static field
- Throws:
IllegalAccessException
- if access checking failsNullPointerException
- if the argument is null- Since:
- 9
- if the field is declared
-
revealDirect
Cracks a direct method handle created by this lookup object or a similar one. Security and access checks are performed to ensure that this lookup object is capable of reproducing the target method handle. This means that the cracking may fail if target is a direct method handle but was created by an unrelated lookup object. This can happen if the method handle is caller sensitive and was created by a lookup object for a different class.- Parameters:
target
- a direct method handle to crack into symbolic reference components- Returns:
- a symbolic reference which can be used to reconstruct this method handle from this lookup object
- Throws:
SecurityException
- if a security manager is present and it refuses accessIllegalArgumentException
- if the target is not a direct method handle or if access checking failsNullPointerException
- if the target isnull
- Since:
- 1.8
- See Also:
-
hasPrivateAccess
Deprecated.This method was originally designed to testPRIVATE
access that implies full privilege access butMODULE
access has since become independent ofPRIVATE
access. It is recommended to callhasFullPrivilegeAccess()
instead.Returnstrue
if this lookup hasPRIVATE
andMODULE
access.- Returns:
true
if this lookup hasPRIVATE
andMODULE
access.- Since:
- 9
-
hasFullPrivilegeAccess
public boolean hasFullPrivilegeAccess()Returnstrue
if this lookup has full privilege access, i.e.PRIVATE
andMODULE
access. ALookup
object must have full privilege access in order to access all members that are allowed to the lookup class.- Returns:
true
if this lookup has full privilege access.- Since:
- 14
- See Also:
-
PRIVATE
access that implies full privilege access butMODULE
access has since become independent ofPRIVATE
access.