----- Mail original -----
> De: "David M. Lloyd" <david.ll...@redhat.com>
> À: "jigsaw-dev" <jigsaw-dev@openjdk.java.net>
> Envoyé: Lundi 11 Juillet 2016 16:21:46
> Objet: It's not too late for access control
> 
> The crux of this access control discussion is that, up until JDK 9,
> "public" meant "public".  End of story.  If you did not want something
> to be visible, you made it not public.  Very simple and very clear.  The
> word "public" literally means "accessible to all" after all; that's why
> the term was selected in the first place, and it is nearly certain that
> this was the intent of the thing up to this date.
> 
> What is being required in the JPMS spec, and, I dare to suggest, what
> has been generally asked for by the public (and even required by the
> JDK), is a way to provide an additional capability - the ability to
> selectively share otherwise unshared code.
> 
> The existing Java language accessibility model is (of course)
> well-understood by experts.  For new developers, the concepts takes a
> bit of time to explain but can generally be grasped.  In the end the
> accessibility of a member is generally easily determined by examining
> the qualifiers of that member.
> 
> What has been proposed and implemented in Jigsaw is essentially a
> completely new approach to access checking.  Because it is new, and
> because it is essentially untried, I predicted that issues would arise
> not unlike the ones being currently discussed.  I argue that this
> approach is not optimal, for at least reasons discussed on this list and
> in this email, but that even now, it's not too late to change the approach.
> 
> I propose, once again, that rather than changing the meaning of "public"
> to something unintuitive (and indeed counter to the definition of the
> actual word), we instead allow the selective extension of
> package-private.  Users would make public any type or member which is
> *meant* to be public, i.e. accessible by all.  Rather than (at best)
> changing their expectations as to the behavior of "public" only to
> immediately betray that expectation by forcing them through a backdoor
> in order to meet practical needs, we ensure that their expectations
> remain: public members are public, and things that are secret are not
> public.
> 
> Conceptually (and, hopefully, technically) this should not be too far
> away from where we've arrived at now in Jigsaw, at least as far as the
> package inventory is shared between modules for the purpose of access
> control.  Can anyone think of any good reason we should *not* do this,
> or ways that this would be substantially weaker than restricting public?
> --
> - DML
> 

Hi David,
package private means package private :)

One early design idea of jigsaw was to introduce a new modifier "module" with a 
visibility in between public and package private.
It's a bad idea !

First, there is already in the Java ecosystem a notion of non-exported package, 
packages startings with com.sun or packages containing internal, it was just a 
convention and not something enforced by the VM. What the JPMS spec does is 
just to normalize how to declare an exported package and mandate that the VM 
check this new rule.

Sure it means that public classes are not accessible/visible by everybody 
anymore, but a class like sun.misc.Unsafe was never really accessible by 
everybody despite being declared public.

Furthermore, declaring if something is exported or not at class level instead 
of at package level seems wrong to me, usually, several classes works together 
for a purpose and you want these classes to be exported or not, so it's not 
something that should be decided at class level.

So i see the JPMS spec conept of non-exported package as a standardization of 
an existing practice not something new that people will have trouble to 
understand and reason about.

regards,
Rémi

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