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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
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*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
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package java.lang.ref;
import sun.misc.Cleaner;
/**
* Abstract base class for reference objects. This class defines the
* operations common to all reference objects. Because reference objects are
* implemented in close cooperation with the garbage collector, this class may
* not be subclassed directly.
*
* @author Mark Reinhold
* @since 1.2
*/
public abstract class Reference<T> {
/* A Reference instance is in one of four possible internal states:
*
* Active: Subject to special treatment by the garbage collector. Some
* time after the collector detects that the reachability of the
* referent has changed to the appropriate state, it changes the
* instance's state to either Pending or Inactive, depending upon
* whether or not the instance was registered with a queue when it was
* created. In the former case it also adds the instance to the
* pending-Reference list. Newly-created instances are Active.
*
* Pending: An element of the pending-Reference list, waiting to be
* enqueued by the Reference-handler thread. Unregistered instances
* are never in this state.
*
* Enqueued: An element of the queue with which the instance was
* registered when it was created. When an instance is removed from
* its ReferenceQueue, it is made Inactive. Unregistered instances are
* never in this state.
*
* Inactive: Nothing more to do. Once an instance becomes Inactive its
* state will never change again.
*
* The state is encoded in the queue and next fields as follows:
*
* Active: queue = ReferenceQueue with which instance is registered, or
* ReferenceQueue.NULL if it was not registered with a queue; next =
* null.
*
* Pending: queue = ReferenceQueue with which instance is registered;
* next = this
*
* Enqueued: queue = ReferenceQueue.ENQUEUED; next = Following instance
* in queue, or this if at end of list.
*
* Inactive: queue = ReferenceQueue.NULL; next = this.
*
* With this scheme the collector need only examine the next field in order
* to determine whether a Reference instance requires special treatment: If
* the next field is null then the instance is active; if it is non-null,
* then the collector should treat the instance normally.
*
* To ensure that a concurrent collector can discover active Reference
* objects without interfering with application threads that may apply
* the enqueue() method to those objects, collectors should link
* discovered objects through the discovered field. The discovered
* field is also used for linking Reference objects in the pending list.
*/
private T referent; /* Treated specially by GC */
volatile ReferenceQueue<? super T> queue;
/* When active: NULL
* pending: this
* Enqueued: next reference in queue (or this if last)
* Inactive: this
*/
@SuppressWarnings("rawtypes")
Reference next;
/* When active: next element in a discovered reference list maintained by GC (or this if last)
* pending: next element in the pending list (or null if last)
* otherwise: NULL
*/
transient private Reference<T> discovered; /* used by VM */
/* Object used to synchronize with the garbage collector. The collector
* must acquire this lock at the beginning of each collection cycle. It is
* therefore critical that any code holding this lock complete as quickly
* as possible, allocate no new objects, and avoid calling user code.
*/
static private class Lock { };
private static Lock lock = new Lock();
/* List of References waiting to be enqueued. The collector adds
* References to this list, while the Reference-handler thread removes
* them. This list is protected by the above lock object. The
* list uses the discovered field to link its elements.
*/
private static Reference<Object> pending = null;
/* High-priority thread to enqueue pending References
*/
private static class ReferenceHandler extends Thread {
ReferenceHandler(ThreadGroup g, String name) {
super(g, name);
}
public void run() {
for (;;) {
Reference<Object> r;
synchronized (lock) {
if (pending != null) {
r = pending;
pending = r.discovered;
r.discovered = null;
} else {
// The waiting on the lock may cause an OOME because it may try to allocate
// exception objects, so also catch OOME here to avoid silent exit of the
// reference handler thread.
//
// Explicitly define the order of the two exceptions we catch here
// when waiting for the lock.
//
// We do not want to try to potentially load the InterruptedException class
// (which would be done if this was its first use, and InterruptedException
// were checked first) in this situation.
//
// This may lead to the VM not ever trying to load the InterruptedException
// class again.
try {
try {
lock.wait();
} catch (OutOfMemoryError x) { }
} catch (InterruptedException x) { }
continue;
}
}
// Fast path for cleaners
if (r instanceof Cleaner) {
((Cleaner)r).clean();
continue;
}
ReferenceQueue<Object> q = r.queue;
if (q != ReferenceQueue.NULL) q.enqueue(r);
}
}
}
static {
ThreadGroup tg = Thread.currentThread().getThreadGroup();
for (ThreadGroup tgn = tg;
tgn != null;
tg = tgn, tgn = tg.getParent());
Thread handler = new ReferenceHandler(tg, "Reference Handler");
/* If there were a special system-only priority greater than
* MAX_PRIORITY, it would be used here
*/
handler.setPriority(Thread.MAX_PRIORITY);
handler.setDaemon(true);
handler.start();
}
/* -- Referent accessor and setters -- */
/**
* Returns this reference object's referent. If this reference object has
* been cleared, either by the program or by the garbage collector, then
* this method returns <code>null</code>.
*
* @return The object to which this reference refers, or
* <code>null</code> if this reference object has been cleared
*/
public T get() {
return this.referent;
}
/**
* Clears this reference object. Invoking this method will not cause this
* object to be enqueued.
*
* <p> This method is invoked only by Java code; when the garbage collector
* clears references it does so directly, without invoking this method.
*/
public void clear() {
this.referent = null;
}
/* -- Queue operations -- */
/**
* Tells whether or not this reference object has been enqueued, either by
* the program or by the garbage collector. If this reference object was
* not registered with a queue when it was created, then this method will
* always return <code>false</code>.
*
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