Thanks for the review Peter. All good points! My latest patch contains
adjustments based on feedback from you and others to date.
* Incorporate use of ClassLoaderValue -
-- I'd appreciate feedback on whether I'm using it correctly.
* Use of ServiceLoader.stream()
* adjusted test for both the ServiceLoader and legacy classpath load
approach
* insert use of sleep which testing GC.
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~coffeys/webrev.8223260.v2/webrev/
regards,
Sean.
On 30/01/2020 07:59, Peter Levart wrote:
Hi Seán,
WeakHashMap is not safe to be called concurrently. Even get() method,
although it may seem read-only, can modify internal state (expunging
stale Weak entries), so holding a READ lock while accessing
WeakHashMap it is wrong.
getInitialContext() static method is called with an env Hashtable
which means it can be called with different keys/values for the same
TCCL. So caching of InitialContextFactory is just performed for the
1st call for a particular TCCL. Subsequent calls for the same TCCL and
different class names are not cached. Is this the behavior you are
pursuing? You could cache the factory using (TCCL, class name) as a
compound key.
Also, by caching in a WeakHashMap<ClassLoader, InitialContextFactory>,
you make a strong reference to InitialContextFactory from class loader
of the NamingManager.class and such InitialContextFactory may
indirectly reference the ClassLoader key of the same entry, so it will
never go away because NamingManager class is never going away. You
should at least use a WeakHashMap<ClassLoader,
WeakReference<InitialContextFactory>> for that.
Shameless plug: there is a JDK internal class
jdk.internal.loader.ClassLoaderValue which you might be able to use
for caching if a part of your key is a ClassLoader. From the javadoc:
* ClassLoaderValue allows associating a
* {@link #computeIfAbsent(ClassLoader, BiFunction) computed} non-null
value with
* a {@code (ClassLoader, keys...)} tuple. The associated value, as
well as the
* keys are strongly reachable from the associated ClassLoader so care
should be
* taken to use such keys and values that only reference types
resolvable from
* the associated ClassLoader. Failing that, ClassLoader leaks are
inevitable.
So if you know that the InitialContextFactory instance is always
resolvable (by class name) from the ClassLoader you are using for the
caching key (the TCCL), then this utility might be just right for your
purpose.
Regards, Peter
On 1/29/20 6:22 PM, Seán Coffey wrote:
Thanks for the reviews. I found an issue with the new test also -
it's loading the custom factory class via the non-serviceloader
approach. I was hoping to exercise ServiceLoader here. I'll address
this and the comments raised and revert with a new patch shortly.
Regards,
Sean.
On 29/01/20 16:27, Alan Bateman wrote:
On 29/01/2020 15:55, Daniel Fuchs wrote:
Hi Seán,
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~coffeys/webrev.8223260.v1/webrev/
A WeakHashKey with the TCCL as the key should be okay here.
If the TCCL is the key then there are good chances that the
concrete factory class is expected to be loaded by the TCCL.
If that happens then the value will reference the key and
nothing will ever get garbage collected.
I don't know how much JNDI is used much beyond LDAP these days but
you are right that a factory with a strong ref to the TCCL would
prevent it from being GC'ed. The internal WeakPairMap might be
useful here.
-Alan