public class SwitchPoint extends Object
A SwitchPoint
is an object which can publish state transitions to other threads.
A switch point is initially in the valid state, but may at any time be
changed to the invalid state. Invalidation cannot be reversed.
A switch point can combine a guarded pair of method handles into a
guarded delegator.
The guarded delegator is a method handle which delegates to one of the old method handles.
The state of the switch point determines which of the two gets the delegation.
A single switch point may be used to control any number of method handles. (Indirectly, therefore, it can control any number of call sites.) This is done by using the single switch point as a factory for combining any number of guarded method handle pairs into guarded delegators.
When a guarded delegator is created from a guarded pair, the pair
is wrapped in a new method handle M
,
which is permanently associated with the switch point that created it.
Each pair consists of a target T
and a fallback F
.
While the switch point is valid, invocations to M
are delegated to T
.
After it is invalidated, invocations are delegated to F
.
Invalidation is global and immediate, as if the switch point contained a
volatile boolean variable consulted on every call to M
.
The invalidation is also permanent, which means the switch point
can change state only once.
The switch point will always delegate to F
after being invalidated.
At that point guardWithTest
may ignore T
and return F
.
Here is an example of a switch point in action:
MethodHandle MH_strcat = MethodHandles.lookup() .findVirtual(String.class, "concat", MethodType.methodType(String.class, String.class)); SwitchPoint spt = new SwitchPoint(); assert(!spt.hasBeenInvalidated()); // the following steps may be repeated to re-use the same switch point: MethodHandle worker1 = MH_strcat; MethodHandle worker2 = MethodHandles.permuteArguments(MH_strcat, MH_strcat.type(), 1, 0); MethodHandle worker = spt.guardWithTest(worker1, worker2); assertEquals("method", (String) worker.invokeExact("met", "hod")); SwitchPoint.invalidateAll(new SwitchPoint[]{ spt }); assert(spt.hasBeenInvalidated()); assertEquals("hodmet", (String) worker.invokeExact("met", "hod"));
Discussion: Switch points are useful without subclassing. They may also be subclassed. This may be useful in order to associate application-specific invalidation logic with the switch point. Notice that there is no permanent association between a switch point and the method handles it produces and consumes. The garbage collector may collect method handles produced or consumed by a switch point independently of the lifetime of the switch point itself.
Implementation Note:
A switch point behaves as if implemented on top of MutableCallSite
,
approximately as follows:
public class SwitchPoint { private static final MethodHandle K_true = MethodHandles.constant(boolean.class, true), K_false = MethodHandles.constant(boolean.class, false); private final MutableCallSite mcs; private final MethodHandle mcsInvoker; public SwitchPoint() { this.mcs = new MutableCallSite(K_true); this.mcsInvoker = mcs.dynamicInvoker(); } public MethodHandle guardWithTest( MethodHandle target, MethodHandle fallback) { // Note: mcsInvoker is of type ()boolean. // Target and fallback may take any arguments, but must have the same type. return MethodHandles.guardWithTest(this.mcsInvoker, target, fallback); } public static void invalidateAll(SwitchPoint[] spts) { List<MutableCallSite> mcss = new ArrayList<>(); for (SwitchPoint spt : spts) mcss.add(spt.mcs); for (MutableCallSite mcs : mcss) mcs.setTarget(K_false); MutableCallSite.syncAll(mcss.toArray(new MutableCallSite[0])); } }
Constructor and Description |
---|
SwitchPoint()
Creates a new switch point.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
MethodHandle |
guardWithTest(MethodHandle target,
MethodHandle fallback)
Returns a method handle which always delegates either to the target or the fallback.
|
boolean |
hasBeenInvalidated()
Determines if this switch point has been invalidated yet.
|
static void |
invalidateAll(SwitchPoint[] switchPoints)
Sets all of the given switch points into the invalid state.
|
public boolean hasBeenInvalidated()
Discussion:
Because of the one-way nature of invalidation, once a switch point begins
to return true for hasBeenInvalidated
,
it will always do so in the future.
On the other hand, a valid switch point visible to other threads may
be invalidated at any moment, due to a request by another thread.
Since invalidation is a global and immediate operation,
the execution of this query, on a valid switchpoint,
must be internally sequenced with any
other threads that could cause invalidation.
This query may therefore be expensive.
The recommended way to build a boolean-valued method handle
which queries the invalidation state of a switch point s
is
to call s.guardWithTest
on
constant
true and false method handles.
public MethodHandle guardWithTest(MethodHandle target, MethodHandle fallback)
The target and fallback must be of exactly the same method type, and the resulting combined method handle will also be of this type.
target
- the method handle selected by the switch point as long as it is validfallback
- the method handle selected by the switch point after it is invalidatedNullPointerException
- if either argument is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if the two method types do not matchMethodHandles.guardWithTest(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandle, java.lang.invoke.MethodHandle, java.lang.invoke.MethodHandle)
public static void invalidateAll(SwitchPoint[] switchPoints)
This operation is likely to be expensive and should be used sparingly. If possible, it should be buffered for batch processing on sets of switch points.
If switchPoints
contains a null element,
a NullPointerException
will be raised.
In this case, some non-null elements in the array may be
processed before the method returns abnormally.
Which elements these are (if any) is implementation-dependent.
Discussion:
For performance reasons, invalidateAll
is not a virtual method
on a single switch point, but rather applies to a set of switch points.
Some implementations may incur a large fixed overhead cost
for processing one or more invalidation operations,
but a small incremental cost for each additional invalidation.
In any case, this operation is likely to be costly, since
other threads may have to be somehow interrupted
in order to make them notice the updated switch point state.
However, it may be observed that a single call to invalidate
several switch points has the same formal effect as many calls,
each on just one of the switch points.
Implementation Note:
Simple implementations of SwitchPoint
may use
a private MutableCallSite
to publish the state of a switch point.
In such an implementation, the invalidateAll
method can
simply change the call site's target, and issue one call to
synchronize all the
private call sites.
switchPoints
- an array of call sites to be synchronizedNullPointerException
- if the switchPoints
array reference is null
or the array contains a 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.
Copyright © 1993, 2016, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.