Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Application Development Guide

Chapter 2 Class Loaders

Understanding Oracle GlassFishTM Server class loaders can help you determine where to place supporting JAR and resource files for your modules and applications. For general information about J2SE class loaders, see Understanding Network Class Loaders.

In a JVM implementation, the class loaders dynamically load a specific Java class file needed for resolving a dependency. For example, when an instance of java.util.Enumeration needs to be created, one of the class loaders loads the relevant class into the environment. This section includes the following topics:


Note –

The Web Profile of the GlassFish Server supports the EJB 3.1 Lite specification, which allows enterprise beans within web applications, among other features. The full GlassFish Server supports the entire EJB 3.1 specification. For details, see JSR 318.


The Class Loader Hierarchy

Class loaders in the GlassFish Server runtime follow a delegation hierarchy that is fully described in Table 2–1.

Table 2–1 Oracle GlassFish Server Class Loaders

Class Loader 

Description 

Bootstrap

The Bootstrap class loader loads the basic runtime classes provided by the JVM software. 

Extension

The Extension class loader loads classes from JAR files present in the system extensions directory, domain-dir/lib/ext. It is parent to the Public API class loader. See Using the Java Optional Package Mechanism.

Public API

The Public API class loader makes available all classes specifically exported by the GlassFish Server runtime for use by deployed applications. This includes, but is not limited to, Java EE APIs and other Oracle APIs. It is parent to the Common class loader. 

Common

The Common class loader loads JAR files in the as-install/lib directory, then classes in the domain-dir/lib/classes directory, followed by JAR files in the domain-dir/lib directory. Using domain-dir/lib/classes or domain-dir/lib is recommended whenever possible, and required for custom login modules and realms. It is parent to the Connector class loader. See Using the Common Class Loader.

Connector

The Connector class loader is a single class loader instance that loads individually deployed connector modules, which are shared across all applications. It is parent to the Applib class loader and the LifeCycleModule class loader. 

LifeCycleModule

The LifeCycleModule class loader is created once per lifecycle module. Each lifecycle module’s classpath is used to construct its own class loader. For more information on lifecycle modules, see Chapter 13, Developing Lifecycle Listeners.

Applib

The Applib class loader loads the library classes, specified during deployment, for a specific enabled module or Java EE application; see Application-Specific Class Loading. One instance of this class loader is present in each class loader universe; see Class Loader Universes. It is parent to the Archive class loader.

When multiple deployed applications use the same library, they share the same instance of the library. One library cannot reference classes from another library. 

Archive

The Archive class loader loads classes from the WAR, EAR, and JAR files or directories (for directory deployment) of applications or modules deployed to the GlassFish Server. This class loader also loads any application-specific classes generated by the GlassFish Server runtime, such as stub classes or servlets generated by JSP pages. 

Delegation

Note that the class loader hierarchy is not a Java inheritance hierarchy, but a delegation hierarchy. In the delegation design, a class loader delegates class loading to its parent before attempting to load a class itself. If the parent class loader cannot load a class, the class loader attempts to load the class itself. In effect, a class loader is responsible for loading only the classes not available to the parent. Classes loaded by a class loader higher in the hierarchy cannot refer to classes available lower in the hierarchy.

The Java Servlet specification recommends that a web module's class loader look in the local class loader before delegating to its parent. You can make this class loader follow the delegation inversion model in the Servlet specification by setting delegate="false" in the class-loader element of the sun-web.xml file. It is safe to do this only for a web module that does not interact with any other modules. For details, see class-loader in Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Application Deployment Guide.

The default value is delegate="true", which causes a web module's class loader to delegate in the same manner as the other class loaders. You must use delegate="true" for a web application that accesses EJB components or that acts as a web service client or endpoint. For details about sun-web.xml, see Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Application Deployment Guide.

For a number of packages, including java.* and javax.*, symbol resolution is always delegated to the parent class loader regardless of the delegate setting. This prevents applications from overriding core Java runtime classes or changing the API versions of specifications that are part of the Java EE platform.

Using the Java Optional Package Mechanism

Optional packages are packages of Java classes and associated native code that application developers can use to extend the functionality of the core platform.

To use the Java optional package mechanism, copy the JAR files into the domain-dir/lib/ext directory, then restart the server.

For more information, see Optional Packages - An Overview and Understanding Extension Class Loading.

Using the Endorsed Standards Override Mechanism

Endorsed standards handle changes to classes and APIs that are bundled in the JDK but are subject to change by external bodies.

To use the endorsed standards override mechanism, copy the JAR files into the domain-dir/lib/endorsed directory, then restart the server.

For more information and the list of packages that can be overridden, see Endorsed Standards Override Mechanism.

Class Loader Universes

Access to components within applications and modules installed on the server occurs within the context of isolated class loader universes, each of which has its own Applib and Archive class loaders.

A resource such as a file that is accessed by a servlet, JSP, or EJB component must be in one of the following locations:

Application-Specific Class Loading

You can specify module- or application-specific library classes during deployment in one of the following ways:


Note –

The Libraries field in the Administration Console's deployment page and the ----libraries option of the asadmin deploy command do not apply to application clients. For more information, see Using Libraries with Application Clients.


You can only specify module- or application-specific library classes during deployment. You can update a library JAR file using dynamic reloading or by restarting (disabling and re-enabling) a module or application. To add or remove library JAR files, you must redeploy the module or application.

Application libraries are included in the Applib class loader. Paths to libraries can be relative or absolute. A relative path is relative to domain-dir/lib/applibs. If the path is absolute, the path must be accessible to the domain administration server (DAS).


Tip –

You can use application-specific class loading to specify a different XML parser than the default GlassFish Server XML parser. For details, see http://blogs.sun.com/sivakumart/entry/classloaders_in_glassfish_an_attempt.

You can also use application-specific class loading to access different versions of a library from different applications.


If multiple applications or modules refer to the same libraries, classes in those libraries are automatically shared. This can reduce the memory footprint and allow sharing of static information. However, applications or modules using application-specific libraries are not portable. Other ways to make libraries available are described in Circumventing Class Loader Isolation.

One library cannot reference classes from another library.

For general information about deployment, including dynamic reloading, see the Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Application Deployment Guide.


Note –

If you see an access control error message when you try to use a library, you may need to grant permission to the library in the server.policy file. For more information, see Changing Permissions for an Application.


Circumventing Class Loader Isolation

Since each application or individually deployed module class loader universe is isolated, an application or module cannot load classes from another application or module. This prevents two similarly named classes in different applications or modules from interfering with each other.

To circumvent this limitation for libraries, utility classes, or individually deployed modules accessed by more than one application, you can include the relevant path to the required classes in one of these ways:

Using the Common Class Loader

To use the Common class loader, copy the JAR files into the domain-dir/lib or as-install/lib directory or copy the .class files (and other needed files, such as .properties files) into the domain-dir/lib/classes directory, then restart the server.

Using the Common class loader makes an application or module accessible to all applications or modules deployed on servers that share the same configuration. However, this accessibility does not extend to application clients. For more information, see Using Libraries with Application Clients.

For example, using the Common class loader is the recommended way of adding JDBC drivers to the GlassFish Server. For a list of the JDBC drivers currently supported by the GlassFish Server, see the Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Release Notes. For configurations of supported and other drivers, see Configuration Specifics for JDBC Drivers in Oracle GlassFish Server 3.0.1 Administration Guide.

To activate custom login modules and realms, place the JAR files in the domain-dir/lib directory or the class files in the domain-dir/lib/classes directory, then restart the server.

Packaging the Client JAR for One Application in Another Application

By packaging the client JAR for one application in a second application, you allow an EJB or web component in the second application to call an EJB component in the first (dependent) application, without making either of them accessible to any other application or module.

As an alternative for a production environment, you can have the Common class loader load the client JAR of the dependent application as described in Using the Common Class Loader. Restart the server to make the dependent application accessible to all applications or modules deployed on servers that share the same configuration.

ProcedureTo Package the Client JAR for One Application in Another Application

  1. Deploy the dependent application.

  2. Add the dependent application’s client JAR file to the calling application.

    • For a calling EJB component, add the client JAR file at the same level as the EJB component. Then add a Class-Path entry to the MANIFEST.MF file of the calling EJB component. The Class-Path entry has this syntax:

      Class-Path: filepath1.jar filepath2.jar ...

      Each filepath is relative to the directory or JAR file containing the MANIFEST.MF file. For details, see the Java EE specification.

    • For a calling web component, add the client JAR file under the WEB-INF/lib directory.

  3. If you need to package the client JAR with both the EJB and web components, set delegate="true" in the class-loader element of the sun-web.xml file.

    This changes the Web class loader so that it follows the standard class loader delegation model and delegates to its parent before attempting to load a class itself.

    For most applications, packaging the client JAR file with the calling EJB component is sufficient. You do not need to package the client JAR file with both the EJB and web components unless the web component is directly calling the EJB component in the dependent application.

  4. Deploy the calling application.

    The calling EJB or web component must specify in its sun-ejb-jar.xml or sun-web.xml file the JNDI name of the EJB component in the dependent application. Using an ejb-link mapping does not work when the EJB component being called resides in another application.

    You do not need to restart the server.