Module java.base

Class MethodHandle

java.lang.Object
java.lang.invoke.MethodHandle
All Implemented Interfaces:
Constable

public abstract sealed class MethodHandle extends Object implements Constable
A method handle is a typed, directly executable reference to an underlying method, constructor, field, or similar low-level operation, with optional transformations of arguments or return values. These transformations are quite general, and include such patterns as conversion, insertion, deletion, and substitution.

Method handle contents

Method handles are dynamically and strongly typed according to their parameter and return types. They are not distinguished by the name or the defining class of their underlying methods. A method handle must be invoked using a symbolic type descriptor which matches the method handle's own type descriptor.

Every method handle reports its type descriptor via the type accessor. This type descriptor is a MethodType object, whose structure is a series of classes, one of which is the return type of the method (or void.class if none).

A method handle's type controls the types of invocations it accepts, and the kinds of transformations that apply to it.

A method handle contains a pair of special invoker methods called invokeExact and invoke. Both invoker methods provide direct access to the method handle's underlying method, constructor, field, or other operation, as modified by transformations of arguments and return values. Both invokers accept calls which exactly match the method handle's own type. The plain, inexact invoker also accepts a range of other call types.

Method handles are immutable and have no visible state. Of course, they can be bound to underlying methods or data which exhibit state. With respect to the Java Memory Model, any method handle will behave as if all of its (internal) fields are final variables. This means that any method handle made visible to the application will always be fully formed. This is true even if the method handle is published through a shared variable in a data race.

Method handles cannot be subclassed by the user. Implementations may (or may not) create internal subclasses of MethodHandle which may be visible via the Object.getClass operation. The programmer should not draw conclusions about a method handle from its specific class, as the method handle class hierarchy (if any) may change from time to time or across implementations from different vendors.

Method handle compilation

A Java method call expression naming invokeExact or invoke can invoke a method handle from Java source code. From the viewpoint of source code, these methods can take any arguments and their result can be cast to any return type. Formally this is accomplished by giving the invoker methods Object return types and variable arity Object arguments, but they have an additional quality called signature polymorphism which connects this freedom of invocation directly to the JVM execution stack.

As is usual with virtual methods, source-level calls to invokeExact and invoke compile to an invokevirtual instruction. More unusually, the compiler must record the actual argument types, and may not perform method invocation conversions on the arguments. Instead, it must generate instructions that push them on the stack according to their own unconverted types. The method handle object itself is pushed on the stack before the arguments. The compiler then generates an invokevirtual instruction that invokes the method handle with a symbolic type descriptor which describes the argument and return types.

To issue a complete symbolic type descriptor, the compiler must also determine the return type. This is based on a cast on the method invocation expression, if there is one, or else Object if the invocation is an expression, or else void if the invocation is a statement. The cast may be to a primitive type (but not void).

As a corner case, an uncasted null argument is given a symbolic type descriptor of java.lang.Void. The ambiguity with the type Void is harmless, since there are no references of type Void except the null reference.

Method handle invocation

The first time an invokevirtual instruction is executed it is linked by symbolically resolving the names in the instruction and verifying that the method call is statically legal. This also holds for calls to invokeExact and invoke. In this case, the symbolic type descriptor emitted by the compiler is checked for correct syntax, and names it contains are resolved. Thus, an invokevirtual instruction which invokes a method handle will always link, as long as the symbolic type descriptor is syntactically well-formed and the types exist.

When the invokevirtual is executed after linking, the receiving method handle's type is first checked by the JVM to ensure that it matches the symbolic type descriptor. If the type match fails, it means that the method which the caller is invoking is not present on the individual method handle being invoked.

In the case of invokeExact, the type descriptor of the invocation (after resolving symbolic type names) must exactly match the method type of the receiving method handle. In the case of plain, inexact invoke, the resolved type descriptor must be a valid argument to the receiver's asType method. Thus, plain invoke is more permissive than invokeExact.

After type matching, a call to invokeExact directly and immediately invoke the method handle's underlying method (or other behavior, as the case may be).

A call to plain invoke works the same as a call to invokeExact, if the symbolic type descriptor specified by the caller exactly matches the method handle's own type. If there is a type mismatch, invoke attempts to adjust the type of the receiving method handle, as if by a call to asType, to obtain an exactly invokable method handle M2. This allows a more powerful negotiation of method type between caller and callee.

(Note: The adjusted method handle M2 is not directly observable, and implementations are therefore not required to materialize it.)

Invocation checking

In typical programs, method handle type matching will usually succeed. But if a match fails, the JVM will throw a WrongMethodTypeException, either directly (in the case of invokeExact) or indirectly as if by a failed call to asType (in the case of invoke).

Thus, a method type mismatch which might show up as a linkage error in a statically typed program can show up as a dynamic WrongMethodTypeException in a program which uses method handles.

Because method types contain "live" Class objects, method type matching takes into account both type names and class loaders. Thus, even if a method handle M is created in one class loader L1 and used in another L2, method handle calls are type-safe, because the caller's symbolic type descriptor, as resolved in L2, is matched against the original callee method's symbolic type descriptor, as resolved in L1. The resolution in L1 happens when M is created and its type is assigned, while the resolution in L2 happens when the invokevirtual instruction is linked.

Apart from type descriptor checks, a method handle's capability to call its underlying method is unrestricted. If a method handle is formed on a non-public method by a class that has access to that method, the resulting handle can be used in any place by any caller who receives a reference to it.

Unlike with the Core Reflection API, where access is checked every time a reflective method is invoked, method handle access checking is performed when the method handle is created. In the case of ldc (see below), access checking is performed as part of linking the constant pool entry underlying the constant method handle.

Thus, handles to non-public methods, or to methods in non-public classes, should generally be kept secret. They should not be passed to untrusted code unless their use from the untrusted code would be harmless.

Method handle creation

Java code can create a method handle that directly accesses any method, constructor, or field that is accessible to that code. This is done via a reflective, capability-based API called MethodHandles.Lookup. For example, a static method handle can be obtained from Lookup.findStatic. There are also conversion methods from Core Reflection API objects, such as Lookup.unreflect.

Like classes and strings, method handles that correspond to accessible fields, methods, and constructors can also be represented directly in a class file's constant pool as constants to be loaded by ldc bytecodes. A new type of constant pool entry, CONSTANT_MethodHandle, refers directly to an associated CONSTANT_Methodref, CONSTANT_InterfaceMethodref, or CONSTANT_Fieldref constant pool entry. (For full details on method handle constants, see sections 4.4.8 and 5.4.3.5 of the Java Virtual Machine Specification.)

Method handles produced by lookups or constant loads from methods or constructors with the variable arity modifier bit (0x0080) have a corresponding variable arity, as if they were defined with the help of asVarargsCollector or withVarargs.

A method reference may refer either to a static or non-static method. In the non-static case, the method handle type includes an explicit receiver argument, prepended before any other arguments. In the method handle's type, the initial receiver argument is typed according to the class under which the method was initially requested. (E.g., if a non-static method handle is obtained via ldc, the type of the receiver is the class named in the constant pool entry.)

Method handle constants are subject to the same link-time access checks their corresponding bytecode instructions, and the ldc instruction will throw corresponding linkage errors if the bytecode behaviors would throw such errors.

As a corollary of this, access to protected members is restricted to receivers only of the accessing class, or one of its subclasses, and the accessing class must in turn be a subclass (or package sibling) of the protected member's defining class. If a method reference refers to a protected non-static method or field of a class outside the current package, the receiver argument will be narrowed to the type of the accessing class.

When a method handle to a virtual method is invoked, the method is always looked up in the receiver (that is, the first argument).

A non-virtual method handle to a specific virtual method implementation can also be created. These do not perform virtual lookup based on receiver type. Such a method handle simulates the effect of an invokespecial instruction to the same method. A non-virtual method handle can also be created to simulate the effect of an invokevirtual or invokeinterface instruction on a private method (as applicable).

Usage examples

Here are some examples of usage:
Object x, y; String s; int i;
MethodType mt; MethodHandle mh;
MethodHandles.Lookup lookup = MethodHandles.lookup();
// mt is (char,char)String
mt = MethodType.methodType(String.class, char.class, char.class);
mh = lookup.findVirtual(String.class, "replace", mt);
s = (String) mh.invokeExact("daddy",'d','n');
// invokeExact(Ljava/lang/String;CC)Ljava/lang/String;
assertEquals(s, "nanny");
// weakly typed invocation (using MHs.invoke)
s = (String) mh.invokeWithArguments("sappy", 'p', 'v');
assertEquals(s, "savvy");
// mt is (Object[])List
mt = MethodType.methodType(java.util.List.class, Object[].class);
mh = lookup.findStatic(java.util.Arrays.class, "asList", mt);
assert(mh.isVarargsCollector());
x = mh.invoke("one", "two");
// invoke(Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/lang/String;)Ljava/lang/Object;
assertEquals(x, java.util.Arrays.asList("one","two"));
// mt is (Object,Object,Object)Object
mt = MethodType.genericMethodType(3);
mh = mh.asType(mt);
x = mh.invokeExact((Object)1, (Object)2, (Object)3);
// invokeExact(Ljava/lang/Object;Ljava/lang/Object;Ljava/lang/Object;)Ljava/lang/Object;
assertEquals(x, java.util.Arrays.asList(1,2,3));
// mt is ()int
mt = MethodType.methodType(int.class);
mh = lookup.findVirtual(java.util.List.class, "size", mt);
i = (int) mh.invokeExact(java.util.Arrays.asList(1,2,3));
// invokeExact(Ljava/util/List;)I
assert(i == 3);
mt = MethodType.methodType(void.class, String.class);
mh = lookup.findVirtual(java.io.PrintStream.class, "println", mt);
mh.invokeExact(System.out, "Hello, world.");
// invokeExact(Ljava/io/PrintStream;Ljava/lang/String;)V
Each of the above calls to invokeExact or plain invoke generates a single invokevirtual instruction with the symbolic type descriptor indicated in the following comment. In these examples, the helper method assertEquals is assumed to be a method which calls Objects.equals on its arguments, and asserts that the result is true.

Exceptions

The methods invokeExact and invoke are declared to throw Throwable, which is to say that there is no static restriction on what a method handle can throw. Since the JVM does not distinguish between checked and unchecked exceptions (other than by their class, of course), there is no particular effect on bytecode shape from ascribing checked exceptions to method handle invocations. But in Java source code, methods which perform method handle calls must either explicitly throw Throwable, or else must catch all throwables locally, rethrowing only those which are legal in the context, and wrapping ones which are illegal.

Signature polymorphism

The unusual compilation and linkage behavior of invokeExact and plain invoke is referenced by the term signature polymorphism. As defined in the Java Language Specification, a signature polymorphic method is one which can operate with any of a wide range of call signatures and return types.

In source code, a call to a signature polymorphic method will compile, regardless of the requested symbolic type descriptor. As usual, the Java compiler emits an invokevirtual instruction with the given symbolic type descriptor against the named method. The unusual part is that the symbolic type descriptor is derived from the actual argument and return types, not from the method declaration.

When the JVM processes bytecode containing signature polymorphic calls, it will successfully link any such call, regardless of its symbolic type descriptor. (In order to retain type safety, the JVM will guard such calls with suitable dynamic type checks, as described elsewhere.)

Bytecode generators, including the compiler back end, are required to emit untransformed symbolic type descriptors for these methods. Tools which determine symbolic linkage are required to accept such untransformed descriptors, without reporting linkage errors.

Interoperation between method handles and the Core Reflection API

Using factory methods in the Lookup API, any class member represented by a Core Reflection API object can be converted to a behaviorally equivalent method handle. For example, a reflective Method can be converted to a method handle using Lookup.unreflect. The resulting method handles generally provide more direct and efficient access to the underlying class members.

As a special case, when the Core Reflection API is used to view the signature polymorphic methods invokeExact or plain invoke in this class, they appear as ordinary non-polymorphic methods. Their reflective appearance, as viewed by Class.getDeclaredMethod, is unaffected by their special status in this API. For example, Method.getModifiers will report exactly those modifier bits required for any similarly declared method, including in this case native and varargs bits.

As with any reflected method, these methods (when reflected) may be invoked via java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke. However, such reflective calls do not result in method handle invocations. Such a call, if passed the required argument (a single one, of type Object[]), will ignore the argument and will throw an UnsupportedOperationException.

Since invokevirtual instructions can natively invoke method handles under any symbolic type descriptor, this reflective view conflicts with the normal presentation of these methods via bytecodes. Thus, these two native methods, when reflectively viewed by Class.getDeclaredMethod, may be regarded as placeholders only.

In order to obtain an invoker method for a particular type descriptor, use MethodHandles.exactInvoker, or MethodHandles.invoker. The Lookup.findVirtual API is also able to return a method handle to call invokeExact or plain invoke, for any specified type descriptor .

Interoperation between method handles and Java generics

A method handle can be obtained on a method, constructor, or field which is declared with Java generic types. As with the Core Reflection API, the type of the method handle will be constructed from the erasure of the source-level type. When a method handle is invoked, the types of its arguments or the return value cast type may be generic types or type instances. If this occurs, the compiler will replace those types by their erasures when it constructs the symbolic type descriptor for the invokevirtual instruction.

Method handles do not represent their function-like types in terms of Java parameterized (generic) types, because there are three mismatches between function-like types and parameterized Java types.

  • Method types range over all possible arities, from no arguments to up to the maximum number of allowed arguments. Generics are not variadic, and so cannot represent this.
  • Method types can specify arguments of primitive types, which Java generic types cannot range over.
  • Higher order functions over method handles (combinators) are often generic across a wide range of function types, including those of multiple arities. It is impossible to represent such genericity with a Java type parameter.

Arity limits

The JVM imposes on all methods and constructors of any kind an absolute limit of 255 stacked arguments. This limit can appear more restrictive in certain cases:
  • A long or double argument counts (for purposes of arity limits) as two argument slots.
  • A non-static method consumes an extra argument for the object on which the method is called.
  • A constructor consumes an extra argument for the object which is being constructed.
  • Since a method handle’s invoke method (or other signature-polymorphic method) is non-virtual, it consumes an extra argument for the method handle itself, in addition to any non-virtual receiver object.
These limits imply that certain method handles cannot be created, solely because of the JVM limit on stacked arguments. For example, if a static JVM method accepts exactly 255 arguments, a method handle cannot be created for it. Attempts to create method handles with impossible method types lead to an IllegalArgumentException. In particular, a method handle’s type must not have an arity of the exact maximum 255.
Since:
1.7
See Also: