001/* 002 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more 003 * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with 004 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. 005 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 006 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with 007 * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at 008 * 009 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 010 * 011 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 012 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 013 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 014 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 015 * limitations under the License. 016 */ 017package org.apache.commons.lang3.concurrent; 018 019/** 020 * <p> 021 * This class provides a generic implementation of the lazy initialization 022 * pattern. 023 * </p> 024 * <p> 025 * Sometimes an application has to deal with an object only under certain 026 * circumstances, e.g. when the user selects a specific menu item or if a 027 * special event is received. If the creation of the object is costly or the 028 * consumption of memory or other system resources is significant, it may make 029 * sense to defer the creation of this object until it is really needed. This is 030 * a use case for the lazy initialization pattern. 031 * </p> 032 * <p> 033 * This abstract base class provides an implementation of the double-check idiom 034 * for an instance field as discussed in Joshua Bloch's "Effective Java", 2nd 035 * edition, item 71. The class already implements all necessary synchronization. 036 * A concrete subclass has to implement the {@code initialize()} method, which 037 * actually creates the wrapped data object. 038 * </p> 039 * <p> 040 * As an usage example consider that we have a class {@code ComplexObject} whose 041 * instantiation is a complex operation. In order to apply lazy initialization 042 * to this class, a subclass of {@code LazyInitializer} has to be created: 043 * </p> 044 * 045 * <pre> 046 * public class ComplexObjectInitializer extends LazyInitializer<ComplexObject> { 047 * @Override 048 * protected ComplexObject initialize() { 049 * return new ComplexObject(); 050 * } 051 * } 052 * </pre> 053 * 054 * <p> 055 * Access to the data object is provided through the {@code get()} method. So, 056 * code that wants to obtain the {@code ComplexObject} instance would simply 057 * look like this: 058 * </p> 059 * 060 * <pre> 061 * // Create an instance of the lazy initializer 062 * ComplexObjectInitializer initializer = new ComplexObjectInitializer(); 063 * ... 064 * // When the object is actually needed: 065 * ComplexObject cobj = initializer.get(); 066 * </pre> 067 * 068 * <p> 069 * If multiple threads call the {@code get()} method when the object has not yet 070 * been created, they are blocked until initialization completes. The algorithm 071 * guarantees that only a single instance of the wrapped object class is 072 * created, which is passed to all callers. Once initialized, calls to the 073 * {@code get()} method are pretty fast because no synchronization is needed 074 * (only an access to a <b>volatile</b> member field). 075 * </p> 076 * 077 * @since 3.0 078 * @param <T> the type of the object managed by this initializer class 079 */ 080public abstract class LazyInitializer<T> implements ConcurrentInitializer<T> { 081 082 private static final Object NO_INIT = new Object(); 083 084 @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") 085 /** Stores the managed object. */ 086 private volatile T object = (T) NO_INIT; 087 088 /** 089 * Returns the object wrapped by this instance. On first access the object 090 * is created. After that it is cached and can be accessed pretty fast. 091 * 092 * @return the object initialized by this {@code LazyInitializer} 093 * @throws ConcurrentException if an error occurred during initialization of 094 * the object 095 */ 096 @Override 097 public T get() throws ConcurrentException { 098 // use a temporary variable to reduce the number of reads of the 099 // volatile field 100 T result = object; 101 102 if (result == NO_INIT) { 103 synchronized (this) { 104 result = object; 105 if (result == NO_INIT) { 106 object = result = initialize(); 107 } 108 } 109 } 110 111 return result; 112 } 113 114 /** 115 * Creates and initializes the object managed by this {@code 116 * LazyInitializer}. This method is called by {@link #get()} when the object 117 * is accessed for the first time. An implementation can focus on the 118 * creation of the object. No synchronization is needed, as this is already 119 * handled by {@code get()}. 120 * 121 * @return the managed data object 122 * @throws ConcurrentException if an error occurs during object creation 123 */ 124 protected abstract T initialize() throws ConcurrentException; 125}