Module java.base
Package java.lang

Class ScopedValue<T>

java.lang.Object
java.lang.ScopedValue<T>
Type Parameters:
T - the type of the value

public final class ScopedValue<T> extends Object
ScopedValue is a preview API of the Java platform.
Programs can only use ScopedValue when preview features are enabled.
Preview features may be removed in a future release, or upgraded to permanent features of the Java platform.
A value that may be safely and efficiently shared to methods without using method parameters.

In the Java programming language, data is usually passed to a method by means of a method parameter. The data may need to be passed through a sequence of many methods to get to the method that makes use of the data. Every method in the sequence of calls needs to declare the parameter and every method has access to the data. ScopedValue provides a means to pass data to a faraway method (typically a callback) without using method parameters. In effect, a ScopedValue is an implicit method parameter. It is "as if" every method in a sequence of calls has an additional parameter. None of the methods declare the parameter and only the methods that have access to the ScopedValue object can access its value (the data). ScopedValue makes it possible to securely pass data from a caller to a faraway callee through a sequence of intermediate methods that do not declare a parameter for the data and have no access to the data.

The ScopedValue API works by executing a method with a ScopedValue object bound to some value for the bounded period of execution of a method. The method may invoke another method, which in turn may invoke another. The unfolding execution of the methods define a dynamic scope. Code in these methods with access to the ScopedValue object may read its value. The ScopedValue object reverts to being unbound when the original method completes normally or with an exception. The ScopedValue API supports executing a Runnable.run, Callable.call, or Supplier.get method with a ScopedValue bound to a value.

Consider the following example with a scoped value "NAME" bound to the value "duke" for the execution of a run method. The run method, in turn, invokes doSomething.

    private static final ScopedValue<String> NAME = ScopedValue.newInstance();

    ScopedValue.runWhere(NAME, "duke", () -> doSomething());
Code executed directly or indirectly by doSomething, with access to the field NAME, can invoke NAME.get() to read the value "duke". NAME is bound while executing the run method. It reverts to being unbound when the run method completes.

The example using runWhere invokes a method that does not return a result. The callWhere and getWhere can be used to invoke a method that returns a result. In addition, ScopedValue defines the where(ScopedValue, Object) method for cases where multiple mappings (of ScopedValue to value) are accumulated in advance of calling a method with all ScopedValues bound to their value.

Bindings are per-thread

A ScopedValue binding to a value is per-thread. Invoking xxxWhere executes a method with a ScopedValue bound to a value for the current thread. The get method returns the value bound for the current thread.

In the example, if code executed by one thread invokes this:

    ScopedValue.runWhere(NAME, "duke1", () -> doSomething());
and code executed by another thread invokes:
    ScopedValue.runWhere(NAME, "duke2", () -> doSomething());
then code in doSomething (or any method that it calls) invoking NAME.get() will read the value "duke1" or "duke2", depending on which thread is executing.

Scoped values as capabilities

A ScopedValue object should be treated as a capability or a key to access its value when the ScopedValue is bound. Secure usage depends on access control (see The Java Virtual Machine Specification, Section 5.4.4) and taking care to not share the ScopedValue object. In many cases, a ScopedValue will be declared in a final and static field so that it is only accessible to code in a single class (or nest).

Rebinding

The ScopedValue API allows a new binding to be established for nested dynamic scopes. This is known as rebinding. A ScopedValue that is bound to a value may be bound to a new value for the bounded execution of a new method. The unfolding execution of code executed by that method defines the nested dynamic scope. When the method completes, the value of the ScopedValue reverts to its previous value.

In the above example, suppose that code executed by doSomething binds NAME to a new value with:

    ScopedValue.runWhere(NAME, "duchess", () -> doMore());
Code executed directly or indirectly by doMore() that invokes NAME.get() will read the value "duchess". When doMore() completes then the value of NAME reverts to "duke".

Inheritance

ScopedValue supports sharing across threads. This sharing is limited to structured cases where child threads are started and terminate within the bounded period of execution by a parent thread. When using a StructuredTaskScopePREVIEW, scoped value bindings are captured when creating a StructuredTaskScope and inherited by all threads started in that task scope with the forkPREVIEW method.

A ScopedValue that is shared across threads requires that the value be an immutable object or for all access to the value to be appropriately synchronized.

In the following example, the ScopedValue NAME is bound to the value "duke" for the execution of a runnable operation. The code in the run method creates a StructuredTaskScope that forks three tasks. Code executed directly or indirectly by these threads running childTask1(), childTask2(), and childTask3() that invokes NAME.get() will read the value "duke".

    private static final ScopedValue<String> NAME = ScopedValue.newInstance();

    ScopedValue.runWhere(NAME, "duke", () -> {
        try (var scope = new StructuredTaskScope<String>()) {

            scope.fork(() -> childTask1());
            scope.fork(() -> childTask2());
            scope.fork(() -> childTask3());

            ...
         }
    });

Unless otherwise specified, passing a null argument to a method in this class will cause a NullPointerException to be thrown.

API Note:
A ScopedValue should be preferred over a ThreadLocal for cases where the goal is "one-way transmission" of data without using method parameters. While a ThreadLocal can be used to pass data to a method without using method parameters, it does suffer from a number of issues:
  1. ThreadLocal does not prevent code in a faraway callee from setting a new value.
  2. A ThreadLocal has an unbounded lifetime and thus continues to have a value after a method completes, unless explicitly removed.
  3. Inheritance is expensive - the map of thread-locals to values must be copied when creating each child thread.
Implementation Note:
Scoped values are designed to be used in fairly small numbers. get() initially performs a search through enclosing scopes to find a scoped value's innermost binding. It then caches the result of the search in a small thread-local cache. Subsequent invocations of get() for that scoped value will almost always be very fast. However, if a program has many scoped values that it uses cyclically, the cache hit rate will be low and performance will be poor. This design allows scoped-value inheritance by StructuredTaskScopePREVIEW threads to be very fast: in essence, no more than copying a pointer, and leaving a scoped-value binding also requires little more than updating a pointer.

Because the scoped-value per-thread cache is small, clients should minimize the number of bound scoped values in use. For example, if it is necessary to pass a number of values in this way, it makes sense to create a record class to hold those values, and then bind a single ScopedValue to an instance of that record.

For this release, the reference implementation provides some system properties to tune the performance of scoped values.

The system property java.lang.ScopedValue.cacheSize controls the size of the (per-thread) scoped-value cache. This cache is crucial for the performance of scoped values. If it is too small, the runtime library will repeatedly need to scan for each get(). If it is too large, memory will be unnecessarily consumed. The default scoped-value cache size is 16 entries. It may be varied from 2 to 16 entries in size. ScopedValue.cacheSize must be an integer power of 2.

For example, you could use -Djava.lang.ScopedValue.cacheSize=8.

The other system property is jdk.preserveScopedValueCache. This property determines whether the per-thread scoped-value cache is preserved when a virtual thread is blocked. By default this property is set to true, meaning that every virtual thread preserves its scoped-value cache when blocked. Like ScopedValue.cacheSize, this is a space versus speed trade-off: in situations where many virtual threads are blocked most of the time, setting this property to false might result in a useful memory saving, but each virtual thread's scoped-value cache would have to be regenerated after a blocking operation.

Since:
21