public abstract class ClassValue<T> extends Object
ClassValue to cache information needed to
 perform the message send quickly, for each class encountered.| Modifier | Constructor and Description | 
|---|---|
| protected  | ClassValue()Sole constructor. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| protected abstract T | computeValue(Class<?> type)Computes the given class's derived value for this  ClassValue. | 
| T | get(Class<?> type)Returns the value for the given class. | 
| void | remove(Class<?> type)Removes the associated value for the given class. | 
protected ClassValue()
protected abstract T computeValue(Class<?> type)
ClassValue.
 
 This method will be invoked within the first thread that accesses
 the value with the get method.
 
 Normally, this method is invoked at most once per class,
 but it may be invoked again if there has been a call to
 remove.
 
 If this method throws an exception, the corresponding call to get
 will terminate abnormally with that exception, and no class value will be recorded.
type - the type whose class value must be computedClassValue, for the given class or interfaceget(java.lang.Class<?>), 
remove(java.lang.Class<?>)public T get(Class<?> type)
computeValue method.
 The actual installation of the value on the class is performed atomically. At that point, if several racing threads have computed values, one is chosen, and returned to all the racing threads.
 The type parameter is typically a class, but it may be any type,
 such as an interface, a primitive type (like int.class), or void.class.
 
 In the absence of remove calls, a class value has a simple
 state diagram:  uninitialized and initialized.
 When remove calls are made,
 the rules for value observation are more complex.
 See the documentation for remove for more information.
type - the type whose class value must be computed or retrievedClassValue, for the given class or interfaceNullPointerException - if the argument is nullremove(java.lang.Class<?>), 
computeValue(java.lang.Class<?>)public void remove(Class<?> type)
computeValue method.
 This may result in an additional invocation of the
 computeValue method for the given class.
 
 In order to explain the interaction between get and remove calls,
 we must model the state transitions of a class value to take into account
 the alternation between uninitialized and initialized states.
 To do this, number these states sequentially from zero, and note that
 uninitialized (or removed) states are numbered with even numbers,
 while initialized (or re-initialized) states have odd numbers.
 
 When a thread T removes a class value in state 2N,
 nothing happens, since the class value is already uninitialized.
 Otherwise, the state is advanced atomically to 2N+1.
 
 When a thread T queries a class value in state 2N,
 the thread first attempts to initialize the class value to state 2N+1
 by invoking computeValue and installing the resulting value.
 
 When T attempts to install the newly computed value,
 if the state is still at 2N, the class value will be initialized
 with the computed value, advancing it to state 2N+1.
 
 Otherwise, whether the new state is even or odd,
 T will discard the newly computed value
 and retry the get operation.
 
 Discarding and retrying is an important proviso,
 since otherwise T could potentially install
 a disastrously stale value.  For example:
 
T calls CV.get(C) and sees state 2N
 T quickly computes a time-dependent value V0 and gets ready to install it
 T is hit by an unlucky paging or scheduling event, and goes to sleep for a long time
 T2 also calls CV.get(C) and sees state 2N
 T2 quickly computes a similar time-dependent value V1 and installs it on CV.get(C)
 T2 (or a third thread) then calls CV.remove(C), undoing T2's work
 T2 are repeated several times
 V1, V2, ...
 T wakes up and attempts to install V0; this must fail
 CV.computeValue uses locks to properly
 observe the time-dependent states as it computes V1, etc.
 This does not remove the threat of a stale value, since there is a window of time
 between the return of computeValue in T and the installation
 of the the new value.  No user synchronization is possible during this time.type - the type whose class value must be removedNullPointerException - if the argument is null Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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