ThreadContextClassLoader

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Revision as of 08:51, 8 November 2010 by JaroslavTulach (Talk | contribs)
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Java provides way to associate a special ClassLoader with each executing thread. This is handy, as often the executing class needs more classes than those visible by its own ClassLoader. However it is also accompanied with problems. Especially in general purpose modular systems, when it is not easy to control thread management. If any part of application can create and destroy threads on the fly, it is hard to make sure the ThreadContextClassLoader behavior is specified properly.

Things get even more complicated as each modular runtime container may have different idea what ThreadContextClassLoader shall do. I know what I am talking about, I have spend last month trying to reimplement Netbinox OSGi container to provide ThreadContextClassLoader which is friendly to NetBeans modules as well as bundles comming from Equinox world.

The need for enhanced ThreadContextClassLoader in modular systems is clear as documented by Equinox class loader enhancements document. It summarizes the need as well as the solution taken by Equinox guys. Everything is built around buddies - e.g. each module can define its own buddy loading policy and let others to register is buddies.

The NetBeans way is slightly different. It knows packages of all enabled modules and the ThreadContextClassLoader can load any such classes (even non-public, e.g. not exported). It is build around observation that it does not make much sense in a running application to have the same implementation module loaded twice (if such duplication happens, the ThreadContextClassLoader yields an error).

Best of Both Worlds?

It is easy to create a union behavior that will support both ways. And I did it quite easily. If the class is not found the NetBeans way, then Netbinox tries the classical Equinox way. This guarantees that if the class is present in the system and either belongs to enabled module or it is accessible via buddy policy, it will be loaded.

Everything looked fine, until I started to execute existing tests in this new system. The testing framework (built around JUnit just like NetBeans NbJUnit), has the classes visible twice. Once on application classpath and once in the available bundles. I claimed that I can successfully find a class, if it can be found just a paragraph ago. Yes, I can, but I cannot guarantee it will be the right one. The problem is NetBeans ThreadContextClassLoader by default delegate to parent ClassLoader first (e.g. the class is usually loaded from the application classpath), while the Equinox ThreadContextClassLoader prefers the bundle version.

When there are two version of a class visible (like in case of unit testing), having best of both worlds is a way to hell. It leads to randomness and bunch of ClassCastExceptions.

The NbJUnit ClassLoader

I don't see much reasons why classes in real system shall be duplicated in a bundle and on classpath except in rare situations (like providing newer javac or JAX-WS than available in JDK). Thus the JUnit class duplication is an unusual situation. But hard to overcome if one relies on standard Ant JUnit task.

Thus I decided to write new isolating ClassLoader. One that does not load anything from classpath (except own JUnit classes). By using this ClassLoader as a parent for NetBeans or for Equinox, one can make sure the system basically sees only one class and thus the best of both worlds again becomes beneficial.

Still my problems were not over. From time to time the system managed to load a class from classpath, in spite it was available in a bundle (and the classpath shall not be visible). It took me next few days to find out I have to use:

System.setProperty("osgi.parentClassloader", "fwk");

Only then the Equinox stops loading classes from the classpath and really uses the isolating [ClassLoader]]. Tests started to almost work.

Happy End

Later I found out that small amount of tests was still failing when using the "fwk" value. I tried to switch it back to "app" and often that helped. Morale of this story? ThreadContextClassLoader is an important type of API. If you are writing a framework make sure you define its behavior.

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