Inherits Hashtable.
Implementation of Hashtable
that uses WeakReference
's to hold its keys thus allowing them to be reclaimed by the garbage collector. The associated values are retained using strong references.
This class follows the symantics of Hashtable
as closely as possible. It therefore does not accept null values or keys.
Note: This is not intended to be a general purpose hash table replacement. This implementation is also tuned towards a particular purpose: for use as a replacement for Hashtable
in LogFactory
. This application requires good liveliness for get
and put
. Various tradeoffs have been made with this in mind.
Usage: typical use case is as a drop-in replacement for the Hashtable
used in LogFactory
for J2EE enviroments running 1.3+ JVMs. Use of this class in most cases (see below) will allow classloaders to be collected by the garbage collector without the need to call #release(ClassLoader) LogFactory.release(ClassLoader) .
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
checks whether this class can be supported by the current JVM, and if so then uses it to store references to the LogFactory
implementationd it loads (rather than using a standard Hashtable instance). Having this class used instead of Hashtable
solves certain issues related to dynamic reloading of applications in J2EE-style environments. However this class requires java 1.3 or later (due to its use of java.lang.ref.WeakReference
and associates). And by the way, this extends Hashtable
rather than HashMap
for backwards compatibility reasons. See the documentation for method LogFactory.createFactoryStore
for more details.
The reason all this is necessary is due to a issue which arises during hot deploy in a J2EE-like containers. Each component running in the container owns one or more classloaders; when the component loads a LogFactory instance via the component classloader a reference to it gets stored in the static LogFactory.factories member, keyed by the component's classloader so different components don't stomp on each other. When the component is later unloaded, the container sets the component's classloader to null with the intent that all the component's classes get garbage-collected. However there's still a reference to the component's classloader from a key in the "global" LogFactory
's factories member! If LogFactory.release()
is called whenever component is unloaded, the classloaders will be correctly garbage collected; this should be done by any container that bundles commons-logging by default. However, holding the classloader references weakly ensures that the classloader will be garbage collected without the container performing this step.
Limitations: There is still one (unusual) scenario in which a component will not be correctly unloaded without an explicit release. Though weak references are used for its keys, it is necessary to use strong references for its values.
If the abstract class LogFactory
is loaded by the container classloader but a subclass of LogFactory
[LogFactory1] is loaded by the component's classloader and an instance stored in the static map associated with the base LogFactory class, then there is a strong reference from the LogFactory class to the LogFactory1 instance (as normal) and a strong reference from the LogFactory1 instance to the component classloader via getClass().getClassLoader()
. This chain of references will prevent collection of the child classloader.
Such a situation occurs when the commons-logging.jar is loaded by a parent classloader (e.g. a server level classloader in a servlet container) and a custom LogFactory
implementation is loaded by a child classloader (e.g. a web app classloader).
To avoid this scenario, ensure that any custom LogFactory subclass is loaded by the same classloader as the base LogFactory
. Creating custom LogFactory subclasses is, however, rare. The standard LogFactoryImpl class should be sufficient for most or all users.
- Author
- Brian Stansberry
- Since
- 1.1
Notice
The following notice applies to the original API on which this API is based, and to its documentation. The documentation of this API has been revised from the original.
/*
* Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/