public class MethodHandles extends Object
Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
---|---|
static class |
MethodHandles.Lookup
A lookup object is a factory for creating method handles,
when the creation requires access checking.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static MethodHandle |
arrayElementGetter(Class<?> arrayClass)
Produces a method handle giving read access to elements of an array.
|
static MethodHandle |
arrayElementSetter(Class<?> arrayClass)
Produces a method handle giving write access to elements of an array.
|
static MethodHandle |
catchException(MethodHandle target,
Class<? extends Throwable> exType,
MethodHandle handler)
Makes a method handle which adapts a target method handle,
by running it inside an exception handler.
|
static MethodHandle |
constant(Class<?> type,
Object value)
Produces a method handle of the requested return type which returns the given
constant value every time it is invoked.
|
static MethodHandle |
dropArguments(MethodHandle target,
int pos,
Class<?>... valueTypes)
Produces a method handle which will discard some dummy arguments
before calling some other specified target method handle.
|
static MethodHandle |
dropArguments(MethodHandle target,
int pos,
List<Class<?>> valueTypes)
Produces a method handle which will discard some dummy arguments
before calling some other specified target method handle.
|
static MethodHandle |
exactInvoker(MethodType type)
Produces a special invoker method handle which can be used to
invoke any method handle of the given type, as if by
invokeExact . |
static MethodHandle |
explicitCastArguments(MethodHandle target,
MethodType newType)
Produces a method handle which adapts the type of the
given method handle to a new type by pairwise argument and return type conversion.
|
static MethodHandle |
filterArguments(MethodHandle target,
int pos,
MethodHandle... filters)
Adapts a target method handle by pre-processing
one or more of its arguments, each with its own unary filter function,
and then calling the target with each pre-processed argument
replaced by the result of its corresponding filter function.
|
static MethodHandle |
filterReturnValue(MethodHandle target,
MethodHandle filter)
Adapts a target method handle by post-processing
its return value (if any) with a filter (another method handle).
|
static MethodHandle |
foldArguments(MethodHandle target,
MethodHandle combiner)
Adapts a target method handle by pre-processing
some of its arguments, and then calling the target with
the result of the pre-processing, inserted into the original
sequence of arguments.
|
static MethodHandle |
guardWithTest(MethodHandle test,
MethodHandle target,
MethodHandle fallback)
Makes a method handle which adapts a target method handle,
by guarding it with a test, a boolean-valued method handle.
|
static MethodHandle |
identity(Class<?> type)
Produces a method handle which returns its sole argument when invoked.
|
static MethodHandle |
insertArguments(MethodHandle target,
int pos,
Object... values)
Provides a target method handle with one or more bound arguments
in advance of the method handle's invocation.
|
static MethodHandle |
invoker(MethodType type)
Produces a special invoker method handle which can be used to
invoke any method handle compatible with the given type, as if by
invoke . |
static MethodHandles.Lookup |
lookup()
Returns a
lookup object on the caller,
which has the capability to access any method handle that the caller has access to,
including direct method handles to private fields and methods. |
static MethodHandle |
permuteArguments(MethodHandle target,
MethodType newType,
int... reorder)
Produces a method handle which adapts the calling sequence of the
given method handle to a new type, by reordering the arguments.
|
static MethodHandles.Lookup |
publicLookup()
Returns a
lookup object which is trusted minimally. |
static MethodHandle |
spreadInvoker(MethodType type,
int leadingArgCount)
Produces a method handle which will invoke any method handle of the
given
type , with a given number of trailing arguments replaced by
a single trailing Object[] array. |
static MethodHandle |
throwException(Class<?> returnType,
Class<? extends Throwable> exType)
Produces a method handle which will throw exceptions of the given
exType . |
public static MethodHandles.Lookup lookup()
lookup object
on the caller,
which has the capability to access any method handle that the caller has access to,
including direct method handles to private fields and methods.
This lookup object is a capability which may be delegated to trusted agents.
Do not store it in place where untrusted code can access it.public static MethodHandles.Lookup publicLookup()
lookup object
which is trusted minimally.
It can only be used to create method handles to
publicly accessible fields and methods.
As a matter of pure convention, the lookup class
of this lookup object will be Object
.
The lookup class can be changed to any other class C
using an expression of the form
publicLookup().in(C.class)
.
Since all classes have equal access to public names,
such a change would confer no new access rights.
public static MethodHandle arrayElementGetter(Class<?> arrayClass) throws IllegalArgumentException
int
.arrayClass
- an array typeNullPointerException
- if the argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if arrayClass is not an array typepublic static MethodHandle arrayElementSetter(Class<?> arrayClass) throws IllegalArgumentException
NullPointerException
- if the argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if arrayClass is not an array typepublic static MethodHandle spreadInvoker(MethodType type, int leadingArgCount)
type
, with a given number of trailing arguments replaced by
a single trailing Object[]
array.
The resulting invoker will be a method handle with the following
arguments:
MethodHandle
target
leadingArgCount
)
Object[]
array containing trailing arguments
The invoker will invoke its target like a call to invoke
with
the indicated type
.
That is, if the target is exactly of the given type
, it will behave
like invokeExact
; otherwise it behave as if asType
is used to convert the target to the required type
.
The type of the returned invoker will not be the given type
, but rather
will have all parameters except the first leadingArgCount
replaced by a single array of type Object[]
, which will be
the final parameter.
Before invoking its target, the invoker will spread the final array, apply reference casts as necessary, and unbox and widen primitive arguments.
This method is equivalent to the following code (though it may be more efficient):
MethodHandle invoker = MethodHandles.invoker(type); int spreadArgCount = type.parameterCount() - leadingArgCount; invoker = invoker.asSpreader(Object[].class, spreadArgCount); return invoker;
This method throws no reflective or security exceptions.
type
- the desired target typeleadingArgCount
- number of fixed arguments, to be passed unchanged to the targetNullPointerException
- if type
is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if leadingArgCount
is not in
the range from 0 to type.parameterCount()
inclusivepublic static MethodHandle exactInvoker(MethodType type)
invokeExact
.
The resulting invoker will have a type which is
exactly equal to the desired type, except that it will accept
an additional leading argument of type MethodHandle
.
This method is equivalent to the following code (though it may be more efficient):
publicLookup().findVirtual(MethodHandle.class, "invokeExact", type)
Discussion:
Invoker method handles can be useful when working with variable method handles
of unknown types.
For example, to emulate an invokeExact
call to a variable method
handle M
, extract its type T
,
look up the invoker method X
for T
,
and call the invoker method, as X.invoke(T, A...)
.
(It would not work to call X.invokeExact
, since the type T
is unknown.)
If spreading, collecting, or other argument transformations are required,
they can be applied once to the invoker X
and reused on many M
method handle values, as long as they are compatible with the type of X
.
(Note: The invoker method is not available via the Core Reflection API.
An attempt to call java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke
on the declared invokeExact
or invoke
method will raise an
UnsupportedOperationException
.)
This method throws no reflective or security exceptions.
type
- the desired target typepublic static MethodHandle invoker(MethodType type)
invoke
.
The resulting invoker will have a type which is
exactly equal to the desired type, except that it will accept
an additional leading argument of type MethodHandle
.
Before invoking its target, if the target differs from the expected type,
the invoker will apply reference casts as
necessary and box, unbox, or widen primitive values, as if by asType
.
Similarly, the return value will be converted as necessary.
If the target is a variable arity method handle,
the required arity conversion will be made, again as if by asType
.
A general method type,
mentions only Object
arguments and return values.
An invoker for such a type is capable of calling any method handle
of the same arity as the general type.
This method is equivalent to the following code (though it may be more efficient):
publicLookup().findVirtual(MethodHandle.class, "invoke", type)
This method throws no reflective or security exceptions.
type
- the desired target typepublic static MethodHandle explicitCastArguments(MethodHandle target, MethodType newType)
If the original type and new type are equal, returns target.
The same conversions are allowed as for MethodHandle.asType
,
and some additional conversions are also applied if those conversions fail.
Given types T0, T1, one of the following conversions is applied
if possible, before or instead of any conversions done by asType
:
(x & 1) != 0
.
target
- the method handle to invoke after arguments are retypednewType
- the expected type of the new method handleNullPointerException
- if either argument is nullWrongMethodTypeException
- if the conversion cannot be madeMethodHandle.asType(java.lang.invoke.MethodType)
public static MethodHandle permuteArguments(MethodHandle target, MethodType newType, int... reorder)
The given array controls the reordering.
Call #I
the number of incoming parameters (the value
newType.parameterCount()
, and call #O
the number
of outgoing parameters (the value target.type().parameterCount()
).
Then the length of the reordering array must be #O
,
and each element must be a non-negative number less than #I
.
For every N
less than #O
, the N
-th
outgoing argument will be taken from the I
-th incoming
argument, where I
is reorder[N]
.
No argument or return value conversions are applied.
The type of each incoming argument, as determined by newType
,
must be identical to the type of the corresponding outgoing parameter
or parameters in the target method handle.
The return type of newType
must be identical to the return
type of the original target.
The reordering array need not specify an actual permutation.
An incoming argument will be duplicated if its index appears
more than once in the array, and an incoming argument will be dropped
if its index does not appear in the array.
As in the case of dropArguments
,
incoming arguments which are not mentioned in the reordering array
are may be any type, as determined only by newType
.
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodType intfn1 = methodType(int.class, int.class); MethodType intfn2 = methodType(int.class, int.class, int.class); MethodHandle sub = ... {int x, int y => x-y} ...; assert(sub.type().equals(intfn2)); MethodHandle sub1 = permuteArguments(sub, intfn2, 0, 1); MethodHandle rsub = permuteArguments(sub, intfn2, 1, 0); assert((int)rsub.invokeExact(1, 100) == 99); MethodHandle add = ... {int x, int y => x+y} ...; assert(add.type().equals(intfn2)); MethodHandle twice = permuteArguments(add, intfn1, 0, 0); assert(twice.type().equals(intfn1)); assert((int)twice.invokeExact(21) == 42);
target
- the method handle to invoke after arguments are reorderednewType
- the expected type of the new method handlereorder
- an index array which controls the reorderingNullPointerException
- if any argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if the index array length is not equal to
the arity of the target, or if any index array element
not a valid index for a parameter of newType
,
or if two corresponding parameter types in
target.type()
and newType
are not identical,public static MethodHandle constant(Class<?> type, Object value)
Before the method handle is returned, the passed-in value is converted to the requested type. If the requested type is primitive, widening primitive conversions are attempted, else reference conversions are attempted.
The returned method handle is equivalent to identity(type).bindTo(value)
.
type
- the return type of the desired method handlevalue
- the value to returnNullPointerException
- if the type
argument is nullClassCastException
- if the value cannot be converted to the required return typeIllegalArgumentException
- if the given type is void.class
public static MethodHandle identity(Class<?> type)
type
- the type of the sole parameter and return value of the desired method handleNullPointerException
- if the argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if the given type is void.class
public static MethodHandle insertArguments(MethodHandle target, int pos, Object... values)
The type of the new method handle will drop the types for the bound parameters from the original target type, since the new method handle will no longer require those arguments to be supplied by its callers.
Each given argument object must match the corresponding bound parameter type. If a bound parameter type is a primitive, the argument object must be a wrapper, and will be unboxed to produce the primitive value.
The pos
argument selects which parameters are to be bound.
It may range between zero and N-L (inclusively),
where N is the arity of the target method handle
and L is the length of the values array.
target
- the method handle to invoke after the argument is insertedpos
- where to insert the argument (zero for the first)values
- the series of arguments to insertNullPointerException
- if the target or the values
array is nullMethodHandle.bindTo(java.lang.Object)
public static MethodHandle dropArguments(MethodHandle target, int pos, List<Class<?>> valueTypes)
The pos
argument may range between zero and N,
where N is the arity of the target.
If pos
is zero, the dummy arguments will precede
the target's real arguments; if pos
is N
they will come after.
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle cat = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); assertEquals("xy", (String) cat.invokeExact("x", "y")); MethodType bigType = cat.type().insertParameterTypes(0, int.class, String.class); MethodHandle d0 = dropArguments(cat, 0, bigType.parameterList().subList(0,2)); assertEquals(bigType, d0.type()); assertEquals("yz", (String) d0.invokeExact(123, "x", "y", "z"));
This method is also equivalent to the following code:
dropArguments
(target, pos, valueTypes.toArray(new Class[0]))
target
- the method handle to invoke after the arguments are droppedvalueTypes
- the type(s) of the argument(s) to droppos
- position of first argument to drop (zero for the leftmost)NullPointerException
- if the target is null,
or if the valueTypes
list or any of its elements is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if any element of valueTypes
is void.class
,
or if pos
is negative or greater than the arity of the target,
or if the new method handle's type would have too many parameterspublic static MethodHandle dropArguments(MethodHandle target, int pos, Class<?>... valueTypes)
The pos
argument may range between zero and N,
where N is the arity of the target.
If pos
is zero, the dummy arguments will precede
the target's real arguments; if pos
is N
they will come after.
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle cat = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); assertEquals("xy", (String) cat.invokeExact("x", "y")); MethodHandle d0 = dropArguments(cat, 0, String.class); assertEquals("yz", (String) d0.invokeExact("x", "y", "z")); MethodHandle d1 = dropArguments(cat, 1, String.class); assertEquals("xz", (String) d1.invokeExact("x", "y", "z")); MethodHandle d2 = dropArguments(cat, 2, String.class); assertEquals("xy", (String) d2.invokeExact("x", "y", "z")); MethodHandle d12 = dropArguments(cat, 1, int.class, boolean.class); assertEquals("xz", (String) d12.invokeExact("x", 12, true, "z"));
This method is also equivalent to the following code:
dropArguments
(target, pos, Arrays.asList(valueTypes))
target
- the method handle to invoke after the arguments are droppedvalueTypes
- the type(s) of the argument(s) to droppos
- position of first argument to drop (zero for the leftmost)NullPointerException
- if the target is null,
or if the valueTypes
array or any of its elements is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if any element of valueTypes
is void.class
,
or if pos
is negative or greater than the arity of the target,
or if the new method handle's type would have too many parameterspublic static MethodHandle filterArguments(MethodHandle target, int pos, MethodHandle... filters)
The pre-processing is performed by one or more method handles,
specified in the elements of the filters
array.
The first element of the filter array corresponds to the pos
argument of the target, and so on in sequence.
Null arguments in the array are treated as identity functions, and the corresponding arguments left unchanged. (If there are no non-null elements in the array, the original target is returned.) Each filter is applied to the corresponding argument of the adapter.
If a filter F
applies to the N
th argument of
the target, then F
must be a method handle which
takes exactly one argument. The type of F
's sole argument
replaces the corresponding argument type of the target
in the resulting adapted method handle.
The return type of F
must be identical to the corresponding
parameter type of the target.
It is an error if there are elements of filters
(null or not)
which do not correspond to argument positions in the target.
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle cat = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); MethodHandle upcase = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "toUpperCase", methodType(String.class)); assertEquals("xy", (String) cat.invokeExact("x", "y")); MethodHandle f0 = filterArguments(cat, 0, upcase); assertEquals("Xy", (String) f0.invokeExact("x", "y")); // Xy MethodHandle f1 = filterArguments(cat, 1, upcase); assertEquals("xY", (String) f1.invokeExact("x", "y")); // xY MethodHandle f2 = filterArguments(cat, 0, upcase, upcase); assertEquals("XY", (String) f2.invokeExact("x", "y")); // XY
Here is pseudocode for the resulting adapter:
V target(P... p, A[i]... a[i], B... b); A[i] filter[i](V[i]); T adapter(P... p, V[i]... v[i], B... b) { return target(p..., f[i](v[i])..., b...); }
target
- the method handle to invoke after arguments are filteredpos
- the position of the first argument to filterfilters
- method handles to call initially on filtered argumentsNullPointerException
- if the target is null
or if the filters
array is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if a non-null element of filters
does not match a corresponding argument type of target as described above,
or if the pos+filters.length
is greater than target.type().parameterCount()
public static MethodHandle filterReturnValue(MethodHandle target, MethodHandle filter)
If the target returns a value, the filter must accept that value as its only argument. If the target returns void, the filter must accept no arguments.
The return type of the filter replaces the return type of the target in the resulting adapted method handle. The argument type of the filter (if any) must be identical to the return type of the target. Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle cat = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); MethodHandle length = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "length", methodType(int.class)); System.out.println((String) cat.invokeExact("x", "y")); // xy MethodHandle f0 = filterReturnValue(cat, length); System.out.println((int) f0.invokeExact("x", "y")); // 2
Here is pseudocode for the resulting adapter:
V target(A...); T filter(V); T adapter(A... a) { V v = target(a...); return filter(v); } // and if the target has a void return: void target2(A...); T filter2(); T adapter2(A... a) { target2(a...); return filter2(); } // and if the filter has a void return: V target3(A...); void filter3(V); void adapter3(A... a) { V v = target3(a...); filter3(v); }
target
- the method handle to invoke before filtering the return valuefilter
- method handle to call on the return valueNullPointerException
- if either argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if the argument list of filter
does not match the return type of target as described abovepublic static MethodHandle foldArguments(MethodHandle target, MethodHandle combiner)
The pre-processing is performed by combiner
, a second method handle.
Of the arguments passed to the adapter, the first N
arguments
are copied to the combiner, which is then called.
(Here, N
is defined as the parameter count of the combiner.)
After this, control passes to the target, with any result
from the combiner inserted before the original N
incoming
arguments.
If the combiner returns a value, the first parameter type of the target
must be identical with the return type of the combiner, and the next
N
parameter types of the target must exactly match the parameters
of the combiner.
If the combiner has a void return, no result will be inserted,
and the first N
parameter types of the target
must exactly match the parameters of the combiner.
The resulting adapter is the same type as the target, except that the first parameter type is dropped, if it corresponds to the result of the combiner.
(Note that dropArguments
can be used to remove any arguments
that either the combiner or the target does not wish to receive.
If some of the incoming arguments are destined only for the combiner,
consider using asCollector
instead, since those
arguments will not need to be live on the stack on entry to the
target.)
Example:
import static java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.*; import static java.lang.invoke.MethodType.*; ... MethodHandle trace = publicLookup().findVirtual(java.io.PrintStream.class, "println", methodType(void.class, String.class)) .bindTo(System.out); MethodHandle cat = lookup().findVirtual(String.class, "concat", methodType(String.class, String.class)); assertEquals("boojum", (String) cat.invokeExact("boo", "jum")); MethodHandle catTrace = foldArguments(cat, trace); // also prints "boo": assertEquals("boojum", (String) catTrace.invokeExact("boo", "jum"));
Here is pseudocode for the resulting adapter:
// there are N arguments in A... T target(V, A[N]..., B...); V combiner(A...); T adapter(A... a, B... b) { V v = combiner(a...); return target(v, a..., b...); } // and if the combiner has a void return: T target2(A[N]..., B...); void combiner2(A...); T adapter2(A... a, B... b) { combiner2(a...); return target2(a..., b...); }
target
- the method handle to invoke after arguments are combinedcombiner
- method handle to call initially on the incoming argumentsNullPointerException
- if either argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if combiner
's return type
is non-void and not the same as the first argument type of
the target, or if the initial N
argument types
of the target
(skipping one matching the combiner
's return type)
are not identical with the argument types of combiner
public static MethodHandle guardWithTest(MethodHandle test, MethodHandle target, MethodHandle fallback)
Here is pseudocode for the resulting adapter:
Note that the test arguments (boolean test(A...); T target(A...,B...); T fallback(A...,B...); T adapter(A... a,B... b) { if (test(a...)) return target(a..., b...); else return fallback(a..., b...); }
a...
in the pseudocode) cannot
be modified by execution of the test, and so are passed unchanged
from the caller to the target or fallback as appropriate.test
- method handle used for test, must return booleantarget
- method handle to call if test passesfallback
- method handle to call if test failsNullPointerException
- if any argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if test
does not return boolean,
or if all three method types do not match (with the return
type of test
changed to match that of the target).public static MethodHandle catchException(MethodHandle target, Class<? extends Throwable> exType, MethodHandle handler)
The target and handler must have the same corresponding
argument and return types, except that handler may omit trailing arguments
(similarly to the predicate in guardWithTest
).
Also, the handler must have an extra leading parameter of exType
or a supertype.
Here is pseudocode for the resulting adapter:
Note that the saved arguments (T target(A..., B...); T handler(ExType, A...); T adapter(A... a, B... b) { try { return target(a..., b...); } catch (ExType ex) { return handler(ex, a...); } }
a...
in the pseudocode) cannot
be modified by execution of the target, and so are passed unchanged
from the caller to the handler, if the handler is invoked.
The target and handler must return the same type, even if the handler
always throws. (This might happen, for instance, because the handler
is simulating a finally
clause).
To create such a throwing handler, compose the handler creation logic
with throwException
,
in order to create a method handle of the correct return type.
target
- method handle to callexType
- the type of exception which the handler will catchhandler
- method handle to call if a matching exception is thrownNullPointerException
- if any argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if handler
does not accept
the given exception type, or if the method handle types do
not match in their return types and their
corresponding parameterspublic static MethodHandle throwException(Class<?> returnType, Class<? extends Throwable> exType)
exType
.
The method handle will accept a single argument of exType
,
and immediately throw it as an exception.
The method type will nominally specify a return of returnType
.
The return type may be anything convenient: It doesn't matter to the
method handle's behavior, since it will never return normally.NullPointerException
- if either argument is null Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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