rev 55686 : 8227587: Add internal privileged System.loadLibrary Reviewed-by: rriggs, mchung
1 /* 2 * Copyright (c) 1994, 2019, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 3 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. 4 * 5 * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it 6 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as 7 * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this 8 * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided 9 * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. 10 * 11 * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT 12 * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or 13 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License 14 * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that 15 * accompanied this code). 16 * 17 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version 18 * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 19 * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. 20 * 21 * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA 22 * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any 23 * questions. 24 */ 25 package java.lang; 26 27 import java.io.BufferedInputStream; 28 import java.io.BufferedOutputStream; 29 import java.io.Console; 30 import java.io.FileDescriptor; 31 import java.io.FileInputStream; 32 import java.io.FileOutputStream; 33 import java.io.IOException; 34 import java.io.InputStream; 35 import java.io.PrintStream; 36 import java.io.UnsupportedEncodingException; 37 import java.lang.annotation.Annotation; 38 import java.lang.module.ModuleDescriptor; 39 import java.lang.reflect.Constructor; 40 import java.lang.reflect.Executable; 41 import java.lang.reflect.Method; 42 import java.lang.reflect.Modifier; 43 import java.net.URI; 44 import java.nio.charset.CharacterCodingException; 45 import java.security.AccessControlContext; 46 import java.security.ProtectionDomain; 47 import java.security.AccessController; 48 import java.security.PrivilegedAction; 49 import java.nio.channels.Channel; 50 import java.nio.channels.spi.SelectorProvider; 51 import java.nio.charset.Charset; 52 import java.util.Iterator; 53 import java.util.List; 54 import java.util.Map; 55 import java.util.Objects; 56 import java.util.Properties; 57 import java.util.PropertyPermission; 58 import java.util.ResourceBundle; 59 import java.util.function.Supplier; 60 import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap; 61 import java.util.stream.Stream; 62 63 import jdk.internal.util.StaticProperty; 64 import jdk.internal.module.ModuleBootstrap; 65 import jdk.internal.module.ServicesCatalog; 66 import jdk.internal.reflect.CallerSensitive; 67 import jdk.internal.reflect.Reflection; 68 import jdk.internal.HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate; 69 import jdk.internal.access.JavaLangAccess; 70 import jdk.internal.access.SharedSecrets; 71 import jdk.internal.misc.VM; 72 import jdk.internal.logger.LoggerFinderLoader; 73 import jdk.internal.logger.LazyLoggers; 74 import jdk.internal.logger.LocalizedLoggerWrapper; 75 import jdk.internal.util.SystemProps; 76 import jdk.internal.vm.annotation.Stable; 77 import sun.reflect.annotation.AnnotationType; 78 import sun.nio.ch.Interruptible; 79 import sun.security.util.SecurityConstants; 80 81 /** 82 * The {@code System} class contains several useful class fields 83 * and methods. It cannot be instantiated. 84 * 85 * Among the facilities provided by the {@code System} class 86 * are standard input, standard output, and error output streams; 87 * access to externally defined properties and environment 88 * variables; a means of loading files and libraries; and a utility 89 * method for quickly copying a portion of an array. 90 * 91 * @since 1.0 92 */ 93 public final class System { 94 /* Register the natives via the static initializer. 95 * 96 * VM will invoke the initializeSystemClass method to complete 97 * the initialization for this class separated from clinit. 98 * Note that to use properties set by the VM, see the constraints 99 * described in the initializeSystemClass method. 100 */ 101 private static native void registerNatives(); 102 static { 103 registerNatives(); 104 } 105 106 /** Don't let anyone instantiate this class */ 107 private System() { 108 } 109 110 /** 111 * The "standard" input stream. This stream is already 112 * open and ready to supply input data. Typically this stream 113 * corresponds to keyboard input or another input source specified by 114 * the host environment or user. 115 */ 116 public static final InputStream in = null; 117 118 /** 119 * The "standard" output stream. This stream is already 120 * open and ready to accept output data. Typically this stream 121 * corresponds to display output or another output destination 122 * specified by the host environment or user. 123 * <p> 124 * For simple stand-alone Java applications, a typical way to write 125 * a line of output data is: 126 * <blockquote><pre> 127 * System.out.println(data) 128 * </pre></blockquote> 129 * <p> 130 * See the {@code println} methods in class {@code PrintStream}. 131 * 132 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println() 133 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(boolean) 134 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(char) 135 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(char[]) 136 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(double) 137 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(float) 138 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(int) 139 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(long) 140 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(java.lang.Object) 141 * @see java.io.PrintStream#println(java.lang.String) 142 */ 143 public static final PrintStream out = null; 144 145 /** 146 * The "standard" error output stream. This stream is already 147 * open and ready to accept output data. 148 * <p> 149 * Typically this stream corresponds to display output or another 150 * output destination specified by the host environment or user. By 151 * convention, this output stream is used to display error messages 152 * or other information that should come to the immediate attention 153 * of a user even if the principal output stream, the value of the 154 * variable {@code out}, has been redirected to a file or other 155 * destination that is typically not continuously monitored. 156 */ 157 public static final PrintStream err = null; 158 159 // indicates if a security manager is possible 160 private static final int NEVER = 1; 161 private static final int MAYBE = 2; 162 private static @Stable int allowSecurityManager; 163 164 // current security manager 165 private static volatile SecurityManager security; // read by VM 166 167 // return true if a security manager is allowed 168 private static boolean allowSecurityManager() { 169 return (allowSecurityManager != NEVER); 170 } 171 172 /** 173 * Reassigns the "standard" input stream. 174 * 175 * First, if there is a security manager, its {@code checkPermission} 176 * method is called with a {@code RuntimePermission("setIO")} permission 177 * to see if it's ok to reassign the "standard" input stream. 178 * 179 * @param in the new standard input stream. 180 * 181 * @throws SecurityException 182 * if a security manager exists and its 183 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow 184 * reassigning of the standard input stream. 185 * 186 * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission 187 * @see java.lang.RuntimePermission 188 * 189 * @since 1.1 190 */ 191 public static void setIn(InputStream in) { 192 checkIO(); 193 setIn0(in); 194 } 195 196 /** 197 * Reassigns the "standard" output stream. 198 * 199 * First, if there is a security manager, its {@code checkPermission} 200 * method is called with a {@code RuntimePermission("setIO")} permission 201 * to see if it's ok to reassign the "standard" output stream. 202 * 203 * @param out the new standard output stream 204 * 205 * @throws SecurityException 206 * if a security manager exists and its 207 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow 208 * reassigning of the standard output stream. 209 * 210 * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission 211 * @see java.lang.RuntimePermission 212 * 213 * @since 1.1 214 */ 215 public static void setOut(PrintStream out) { 216 checkIO(); 217 setOut0(out); 218 } 219 220 /** 221 * Reassigns the "standard" error output stream. 222 * 223 * First, if there is a security manager, its {@code checkPermission} 224 * method is called with a {@code RuntimePermission("setIO")} permission 225 * to see if it's ok to reassign the "standard" error output stream. 226 * 227 * @param err the new standard error output stream. 228 * 229 * @throws SecurityException 230 * if a security manager exists and its 231 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow 232 * reassigning of the standard error output stream. 233 * 234 * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission 235 * @see java.lang.RuntimePermission 236 * 237 * @since 1.1 238 */ 239 public static void setErr(PrintStream err) { 240 checkIO(); 241 setErr0(err); 242 } 243 244 private static volatile Console cons; 245 246 /** 247 * Returns the unique {@link java.io.Console Console} object associated 248 * with the current Java virtual machine, if any. 249 * 250 * @return The system console, if any, otherwise {@code null}. 251 * 252 * @since 1.6 253 */ 254 public static Console console() { 255 Console c; 256 if ((c = cons) == null) { 257 synchronized (System.class) { 258 if ((c = cons) == null) { 259 cons = c = SharedSecrets.getJavaIOAccess().console(); 260 } 261 } 262 } 263 return c; 264 } 265 266 /** 267 * Returns the channel inherited from the entity that created this 268 * Java virtual machine. 269 * 270 * This method returns the channel obtained by invoking the 271 * {@link java.nio.channels.spi.SelectorProvider#inheritedChannel 272 * inheritedChannel} method of the system-wide default 273 * {@link java.nio.channels.spi.SelectorProvider} object. 274 * 275 * <p> In addition to the network-oriented channels described in 276 * {@link java.nio.channels.spi.SelectorProvider#inheritedChannel 277 * inheritedChannel}, this method may return other kinds of 278 * channels in the future. 279 * 280 * @return The inherited channel, if any, otherwise {@code null}. 281 * 282 * @throws IOException 283 * If an I/O error occurs 284 * 285 * @throws SecurityException 286 * If a security manager is present and it does not 287 * permit access to the channel. 288 * 289 * @since 1.5 290 */ 291 public static Channel inheritedChannel() throws IOException { 292 return SelectorProvider.provider().inheritedChannel(); 293 } 294 295 private static void checkIO() { 296 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 297 if (sm != null) { 298 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("setIO")); 299 } 300 } 301 302 private static native void setIn0(InputStream in); 303 private static native void setOut0(PrintStream out); 304 private static native void setErr0(PrintStream err); 305 306 /** 307 * Sets the system-wide security manager. 308 * 309 * If there is a security manager already installed, this method first 310 * calls the security manager's {@code checkPermission} method 311 * with a {@code RuntimePermission("setSecurityManager")} 312 * permission to ensure it's ok to replace the existing 313 * security manager. 314 * This may result in throwing a {@code SecurityException}. 315 * 316 * <p> Otherwise, the argument is established as the current 317 * security manager. If the argument is {@code null} and no 318 * security manager has been established, then no action is taken and 319 * the method simply returns. 320 * 321 * @implNote In the JDK implementation, if the Java virtual machine is 322 * started with the system property {@code java.security.manager} set to 323 * the special token "{@code disallow}" then the {@code setSecurityManager} 324 * method cannot be used to set a security manager. 325 * 326 * @param sm the security manager or {@code null} 327 * @throws SecurityException 328 * if the security manager has already been set and its {@code 329 * checkPermission} method doesn't allow it to be replaced 330 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException 331 * if {@code sm} is non-null and a security manager is not allowed 332 * to be set dynamically 333 * @see #getSecurityManager 334 * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission 335 * @see java.lang.RuntimePermission 336 */ 337 public static void setSecurityManager(SecurityManager sm) { 338 if (allowSecurityManager()) { 339 if (security == null) { 340 // ensure image reader is initialized 341 Object.class.getResource("java/lang/ANY"); 342 } 343 if (sm != null) { 344 try { 345 // pre-populates the SecurityManager.packageAccess cache 346 // to avoid recursive permission checking issues with custom 347 // SecurityManager implementations 348 sm.checkPackageAccess("java.lang"); 349 } catch (Exception e) { 350 // no-op 351 } 352 } 353 setSecurityManager0(sm); 354 } else { 355 // security manager not allowed 356 if (sm != null) { 357 throw new UnsupportedOperationException( 358 "Runtime configured to disallow security manager"); 359 } 360 } 361 } 362 363 private static synchronized 364 void setSecurityManager0(final SecurityManager s) { 365 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 366 if (sm != null) { 367 // ask the currently installed security manager if we 368 // can replace it. 369 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("setSecurityManager")); 370 } 371 372 if ((s != null) && (s.getClass().getClassLoader() != null)) { 373 // New security manager class is not on bootstrap classpath. 374 // Force policy to get initialized before we install the new 375 // security manager, in order to prevent infinite loops when 376 // trying to initialize the policy (which usually involves 377 // accessing some security and/or system properties, which in turn 378 // calls the installed security manager's checkPermission method 379 // which will loop infinitely if there is a non-system class 380 // (in this case: the new security manager class) on the stack). 381 AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction<>() { 382 public Object run() { 383 s.getClass().getProtectionDomain().implies 384 (SecurityConstants.ALL_PERMISSION); 385 return null; 386 } 387 }); 388 } 389 390 security = s; 391 } 392 393 /** 394 * Gets the system-wide security manager. 395 * 396 * @return if a security manager has already been established for the 397 * current application, then that security manager is returned; 398 * otherwise, {@code null} is returned. 399 * @see #setSecurityManager 400 */ 401 public static SecurityManager getSecurityManager() { 402 if (allowSecurityManager()) { 403 return security; 404 } else { 405 return null; 406 } 407 } 408 409 /** 410 * Returns the current time in milliseconds. Note that 411 * while the unit of time of the return value is a millisecond, 412 * the granularity of the value depends on the underlying 413 * operating system and may be larger. For example, many 414 * operating systems measure time in units of tens of 415 * milliseconds. 416 * 417 * <p> See the description of the class {@code Date} for 418 * a discussion of slight discrepancies that may arise between 419 * "computer time" and coordinated universal time (UTC). 420 * 421 * @return the difference, measured in milliseconds, between 422 * the current time and midnight, January 1, 1970 UTC. 423 * @see java.util.Date 424 */ 425 @HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate 426 public static native long currentTimeMillis(); 427 428 /** 429 * Returns the current value of the running Java Virtual Machine's 430 * high-resolution time source, in nanoseconds. 431 * 432 * This method can only be used to measure elapsed time and is 433 * not related to any other notion of system or wall-clock time. 434 * The value returned represents nanoseconds since some fixed but 435 * arbitrary <i>origin</i> time (perhaps in the future, so values 436 * may be negative). The same origin is used by all invocations of 437 * this method in an instance of a Java virtual machine; other 438 * virtual machine instances are likely to use a different origin. 439 * 440 * <p>This method provides nanosecond precision, but not necessarily 441 * nanosecond resolution (that is, how frequently the value changes) 442 * - no guarantees are made except that the resolution is at least as 443 * good as that of {@link #currentTimeMillis()}. 444 * 445 * <p>Differences in successive calls that span greater than 446 * approximately 292 years (2<sup>63</sup> nanoseconds) will not 447 * correctly compute elapsed time due to numerical overflow. 448 * 449 * <p>The values returned by this method become meaningful only when 450 * the difference between two such values, obtained within the same 451 * instance of a Java virtual machine, is computed. 452 * 453 * <p>For example, to measure how long some code takes to execute: 454 * <pre> {@code 455 * long startTime = System.nanoTime(); 456 * // ... the code being measured ... 457 * long elapsedNanos = System.nanoTime() - startTime;}</pre> 458 * 459 * <p>To compare elapsed time against a timeout, use <pre> {@code 460 * if (System.nanoTime() - startTime >= timeoutNanos) ...}</pre> 461 * instead of <pre> {@code 462 * if (System.nanoTime() >= startTime + timeoutNanos) ...}</pre> 463 * because of the possibility of numerical overflow. 464 * 465 * @return the current value of the running Java Virtual Machine's 466 * high-resolution time source, in nanoseconds 467 * @since 1.5 468 */ 469 @HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate 470 public static native long nanoTime(); 471 472 /** 473 * Copies an array from the specified source array, beginning at the 474 * specified position, to the specified position of the destination array. 475 * A subsequence of array components are copied from the source 476 * array referenced by {@code src} to the destination array 477 * referenced by {@code dest}. The number of components copied is 478 * equal to the {@code length} argument. The components at 479 * positions {@code srcPos} through 480 * {@code srcPos+length-1} in the source array are copied into 481 * positions {@code destPos} through 482 * {@code destPos+length-1}, respectively, of the destination 483 * array. 484 * <p> 485 * If the {@code src} and {@code dest} arguments refer to the 486 * same array object, then the copying is performed as if the 487 * components at positions {@code srcPos} through 488 * {@code srcPos+length-1} were first copied to a temporary 489 * array with {@code length} components and then the contents of 490 * the temporary array were copied into positions 491 * {@code destPos} through {@code destPos+length-1} of the 492 * destination array. 493 * <p> 494 * If {@code dest} is {@code null}, then a 495 * {@code NullPointerException} is thrown. 496 * <p> 497 * If {@code src} is {@code null}, then a 498 * {@code NullPointerException} is thrown and the destination 499 * array is not modified. 500 * <p> 501 * Otherwise, if any of the following is true, an 502 * {@code ArrayStoreException} is thrown and the destination is 503 * not modified: 504 * <ul> 505 * <li>The {@code src} argument refers to an object that is not an 506 * array. 507 * <li>The {@code dest} argument refers to an object that is not an 508 * array. 509 * <li>The {@code src} argument and {@code dest} argument refer 510 * to arrays whose component types are different primitive types. 511 * <li>The {@code src} argument refers to an array with a primitive 512 * component type and the {@code dest} argument refers to an array 513 * with a reference component type. 514 * <li>The {@code src} argument refers to an array with a reference 515 * component type and the {@code dest} argument refers to an array 516 * with a primitive component type. 517 * </ul> 518 * <p> 519 * Otherwise, if any of the following is true, an 520 * {@code IndexOutOfBoundsException} is 521 * thrown and the destination is not modified: 522 * <ul> 523 * <li>The {@code srcPos} argument is negative. 524 * <li>The {@code destPos} argument is negative. 525 * <li>The {@code length} argument is negative. 526 * <li>{@code srcPos+length} is greater than 527 * {@code src.length}, the length of the source array. 528 * <li>{@code destPos+length} is greater than 529 * {@code dest.length}, the length of the destination array. 530 * </ul> 531 * <p> 532 * Otherwise, if any actual component of the source array from 533 * position {@code srcPos} through 534 * {@code srcPos+length-1} cannot be converted to the component 535 * type of the destination array by assignment conversion, an 536 * {@code ArrayStoreException} is thrown. In this case, let 537 * <b><i>k</i></b> be the smallest nonnegative integer less than 538 * length such that {@code src[srcPos+}<i>k</i>{@code ]} 539 * cannot be converted to the component type of the destination 540 * array; when the exception is thrown, source array components from 541 * positions {@code srcPos} through 542 * {@code srcPos+}<i>k</i>{@code -1} 543 * will already have been copied to destination array positions 544 * {@code destPos} through 545 * {@code destPos+}<i>k</I>{@code -1} and no other 546 * positions of the destination array will have been modified. 547 * (Because of the restrictions already itemized, this 548 * paragraph effectively applies only to the situation where both 549 * arrays have component types that are reference types.) 550 * 551 * @param src the source array. 552 * @param srcPos starting position in the source array. 553 * @param dest the destination array. 554 * @param destPos starting position in the destination data. 555 * @param length the number of array elements to be copied. 556 * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException if copying would cause 557 * access of data outside array bounds. 558 * @throws ArrayStoreException if an element in the {@code src} 559 * array could not be stored into the {@code dest} array 560 * because of a type mismatch. 561 * @throws NullPointerException if either {@code src} or 562 * {@code dest} is {@code null}. 563 */ 564 @HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate 565 public static native void arraycopy(Object src, int srcPos, 566 Object dest, int destPos, 567 int length); 568 569 /** 570 * Returns the same hash code for the given object as 571 * would be returned by the default method hashCode(), 572 * whether or not the given object's class overrides 573 * hashCode(). 574 * The hash code for the null reference is zero. 575 * 576 * @param x object for which the hashCode is to be calculated 577 * @return the hashCode 578 * @since 1.1 579 * @see Object#hashCode 580 * @see java.util.Objects#hashCode(Object) 581 */ 582 @HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate 583 public static native int identityHashCode(Object x); 584 585 /** 586 * System properties. The following properties are guaranteed to be defined: 587 * <dl> 588 * <dt>java.version <dd>Java version number 589 * <dt>java.version.date <dd>Java version date 590 * <dt>java.vendor <dd>Java vendor specific string 591 * <dt>java.vendor.url <dd>Java vendor URL 592 * <dt>java.vendor.version <dd>Java vendor version 593 * <dt>java.home <dd>Java installation directory 594 * <dt>java.class.version <dd>Java class version number 595 * <dt>java.class.path <dd>Java classpath 596 * <dt>os.name <dd>Operating System Name 597 * <dt>os.arch <dd>Operating System Architecture 598 * <dt>os.version <dd>Operating System Version 599 * <dt>file.separator <dd>File separator ("/" on Unix) 600 * <dt>path.separator <dd>Path separator (":" on Unix) 601 * <dt>line.separator <dd>Line separator ("\n" on Unix) 602 * <dt>user.name <dd>User account name 603 * <dt>user.home <dd>User home directory 604 * <dt>user.dir <dd>User's current working directory 605 * </dl> 606 */ 607 608 private static Properties props; 609 610 /** 611 * Determines the current system properties. 612 * 613 * First, if there is a security manager, its 614 * {@code checkPropertiesAccess} method is called with no 615 * arguments. This may result in a security exception. 616 * <p> 617 * The current set of system properties for use by the 618 * {@link #getProperty(String)} method is returned as a 619 * {@code Properties} object. If there is no current set of 620 * system properties, a set of system properties is first created and 621 * initialized. This set of system properties includes a value 622 * for each of the following keys unless the description of the associated 623 * value indicates that the value is optional. 624 * <table class="striped" style="text-align:left"> 625 * <caption style="display:none">Shows property keys and associated values</caption> 626 * <thead> 627 * <tr><th scope="col">Key</th> 628 * <th scope="col">Description of Associated Value</th></tr> 629 * </thead> 630 * <tbody> 631 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.version}</th> 632 * <td>Java Runtime Environment version, which may be interpreted 633 * as a {@link Runtime.Version}</td></tr> 634 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.version.date}</th> 635 * <td>Java Runtime Environment version date, in ISO-8601 YYYY-MM-DD 636 * format, which may be interpreted as a {@link 637 * java.time.LocalDate}</td></tr> 638 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vendor}</th> 639 * <td>Java Runtime Environment vendor</td></tr> 640 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vendor.url}</th> 641 * <td>Java vendor URL</td></tr> 642 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vendor.version}</th> 643 * <td>Java vendor version <em>(optional)</em> </td></tr> 644 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.home}</th> 645 * <td>Java installation directory</td></tr> 646 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.specification.version}</th> 647 * <td>Java Virtual Machine specification version, whose value is the 648 * {@linkplain Runtime.Version#feature feature} element of the 649 * {@linkplain Runtime#version() runtime version}</td></tr> 650 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.specification.vendor}</th> 651 * <td>Java Virtual Machine specification vendor</td></tr> 652 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.specification.name}</th> 653 * <td>Java Virtual Machine specification name</td></tr> 654 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.version}</th> 655 * <td>Java Virtual Machine implementation version which may be 656 * interpreted as a {@link Runtime.Version}</td></tr> 657 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.vendor}</th> 658 * <td>Java Virtual Machine implementation vendor</td></tr> 659 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.vm.name}</th> 660 * <td>Java Virtual Machine implementation name</td></tr> 661 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.specification.version}</th> 662 * <td>Java Runtime Environment specification version, whose value is 663 * the {@linkplain Runtime.Version#feature feature} element of the 664 * {@linkplain Runtime#version() runtime version}</td></tr> 665 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.specification.vendor}</th> 666 * <td>Java Runtime Environment specification vendor</td></tr> 667 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.specification.name}</th> 668 * <td>Java Runtime Environment specification name</td></tr> 669 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.class.version}</th> 670 * <td>Java class format version number</td></tr> 671 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.class.path}</th> 672 * <td>Java class path (refer to 673 * {@link ClassLoader#getSystemClassLoader()} for details)</td></tr> 674 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.library.path}</th> 675 * <td>List of paths to search when loading libraries</td></tr> 676 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.io.tmpdir}</th> 677 * <td>Default temp file path</td></tr> 678 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty java.compiler}</th> 679 * <td>Name of JIT compiler to use</td></tr> 680 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty os.name}</th> 681 * <td>Operating system name</td></tr> 682 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty os.arch}</th> 683 * <td>Operating system architecture</td></tr> 684 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty os.version}</th> 685 * <td>Operating system version</td></tr> 686 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty file.separator}</th> 687 * <td>File separator ("/" on UNIX)</td></tr> 688 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty path.separator}</th> 689 * <td>Path separator (":" on UNIX)</td></tr> 690 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty line.separator}</th> 691 * <td>Line separator ("\n" on UNIX)</td></tr> 692 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty user.name}</th> 693 * <td>User's account name</td></tr> 694 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty user.home}</th> 695 * <td>User's home directory</td></tr> 696 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty user.dir}</th> 697 * <td>User's current working directory</td></tr> 698 * </tbody> 699 * </table> 700 * <p> 701 * Multiple paths in a system property value are separated by the path 702 * separator character of the platform. 703 * <p> 704 * Note that even if the security manager does not permit the 705 * {@code getProperties} operation, it may choose to permit the 706 * {@link #getProperty(String)} operation. 707 * 708 * @apiNote 709 * <strong>Changing a standard system property may have unpredictable results 710 * unless otherwise specified.</strong> 711 * Property values may be cached during initialization or on first use. 712 * Setting a standard property after initialization using {@link #getProperties()}, 713 * {@link #setProperties(Properties)}, {@link #setProperty(String, String)}, or 714 * {@link #clearProperty(String)} may not have the desired effect. 715 * 716 * @implNote 717 * In addition to the standard system properties, the system 718 * properties may include the following keys: 719 * <table class="striped"> 720 * <caption style="display:none">Shows property keys and associated values</caption> 721 * <thead> 722 * <tr><th scope="col">Key</th> 723 * <th scope="col">Description of Associated Value</th></tr> 724 * </thead> 725 * <tbody> 726 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty jdk.module.path}</th> 727 * <td>The application module path</td></tr> 728 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty jdk.module.upgrade.path}</th> 729 * <td>The upgrade module path</td></tr> 730 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty jdk.module.main}</th> 731 * <td>The module name of the initial/main module</td></tr> 732 * <tr><th scope="row">{@systemProperty jdk.module.main.class}</th> 733 * <td>The main class name of the initial module</td></tr> 734 * </tbody> 735 * </table> 736 * 737 * @return the system properties 738 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 739 * {@code checkPropertiesAccess} method doesn't allow access 740 * to the system properties. 741 * @see #setProperties 742 * @see java.lang.SecurityException 743 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkPropertiesAccess() 744 * @see java.util.Properties 745 */ 746 public static Properties getProperties() { 747 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 748 if (sm != null) { 749 sm.checkPropertiesAccess(); 750 } 751 752 return props; 753 } 754 755 /** 756 * Returns the system-dependent line separator string. It always 757 * returns the same value - the initial value of the {@linkplain 758 * #getProperty(String) system property} {@code line.separator}. 759 * 760 * <p>On UNIX systems, it returns {@code "\n"}; on Microsoft 761 * Windows systems it returns {@code "\r\n"}. 762 * 763 * @return the system-dependent line separator string 764 * @since 1.7 765 */ 766 public static String lineSeparator() { 767 return lineSeparator; 768 } 769 770 private static String lineSeparator; 771 772 /** 773 * Sets the system properties to the {@code Properties} argument. 774 * 775 * First, if there is a security manager, its 776 * {@code checkPropertiesAccess} method is called with no 777 * arguments. This may result in a security exception. 778 * <p> 779 * The argument becomes the current set of system properties for use 780 * by the {@link #getProperty(String)} method. If the argument is 781 * {@code null}, then the current set of system properties is 782 * forgotten. 783 * 784 * @apiNote 785 * <strong>Changing a standard system property may have unpredictable results 786 * unless otherwise specified</strong>. 787 * See {@linkplain #getProperties getProperties} for details. 788 * 789 * @param props the new system properties. 790 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 791 * {@code checkPropertiesAccess} method doesn't allow access 792 * to the system properties. 793 * @see #getProperties 794 * @see java.util.Properties 795 * @see java.lang.SecurityException 796 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkPropertiesAccess() 797 */ 798 public static void setProperties(Properties props) { 799 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 800 if (sm != null) { 801 sm.checkPropertiesAccess(); 802 } 803 804 if (props == null) { 805 Map<String, String> tempProps = SystemProps.initProperties(); 806 VersionProps.init(tempProps); 807 props = createProperties(tempProps); 808 } 809 System.props = props; 810 } 811 812 /** 813 * Gets the system property indicated by the specified key. 814 * 815 * First, if there is a security manager, its 816 * {@code checkPropertyAccess} method is called with the key as 817 * its argument. This may result in a SecurityException. 818 * <p> 819 * If there is no current set of system properties, a set of system 820 * properties is first created and initialized in the same manner as 821 * for the {@code getProperties} method. 822 * 823 * @apiNote 824 * <strong>Changing a standard system property may have unpredictable results 825 * unless otherwise specified</strong>. 826 * See {@linkplain #getProperties getProperties} for details. 827 * 828 * @param key the name of the system property. 829 * @return the string value of the system property, 830 * or {@code null} if there is no property with that key. 831 * 832 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 833 * {@code checkPropertyAccess} method doesn't allow 834 * access to the specified system property. 835 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code key} is {@code null}. 836 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code key} is empty. 837 * @see #setProperty 838 * @see java.lang.SecurityException 839 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkPropertyAccess(java.lang.String) 840 * @see java.lang.System#getProperties() 841 */ 842 public static String getProperty(String key) { 843 checkKey(key); 844 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 845 if (sm != null) { 846 sm.checkPropertyAccess(key); 847 } 848 849 return props.getProperty(key); 850 } 851 852 /** 853 * Gets the system property indicated by the specified key. 854 * 855 * First, if there is a security manager, its 856 * {@code checkPropertyAccess} method is called with the 857 * {@code key} as its argument. 858 * <p> 859 * If there is no current set of system properties, a set of system 860 * properties is first created and initialized in the same manner as 861 * for the {@code getProperties} method. 862 * 863 * @param key the name of the system property. 864 * @param def a default value. 865 * @return the string value of the system property, 866 * or the default value if there is no property with that key. 867 * 868 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 869 * {@code checkPropertyAccess} method doesn't allow 870 * access to the specified system property. 871 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code key} is {@code null}. 872 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code key} is empty. 873 * @see #setProperty 874 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkPropertyAccess(java.lang.String) 875 * @see java.lang.System#getProperties() 876 */ 877 public static String getProperty(String key, String def) { 878 checkKey(key); 879 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 880 if (sm != null) { 881 sm.checkPropertyAccess(key); 882 } 883 884 return props.getProperty(key, def); 885 } 886 887 /** 888 * Sets the system property indicated by the specified key. 889 * 890 * First, if a security manager exists, its 891 * {@code SecurityManager.checkPermission} method 892 * is called with a {@code PropertyPermission(key, "write")} 893 * permission. This may result in a SecurityException being thrown. 894 * If no exception is thrown, the specified property is set to the given 895 * value. 896 * 897 * @apiNote 898 * <strong>Changing a standard system property may have unpredictable results 899 * unless otherwise specified</strong>. 900 * See {@linkplain #getProperties getProperties} for details. 901 * 902 * @param key the name of the system property. 903 * @param value the value of the system property. 904 * @return the previous value of the system property, 905 * or {@code null} if it did not have one. 906 * 907 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 908 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow 909 * setting of the specified property. 910 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code key} or 911 * {@code value} is {@code null}. 912 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code key} is empty. 913 * @see #getProperty 914 * @see java.lang.System#getProperty(java.lang.String) 915 * @see java.lang.System#getProperty(java.lang.String, java.lang.String) 916 * @see java.util.PropertyPermission 917 * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission 918 * @since 1.2 919 */ 920 public static String setProperty(String key, String value) { 921 checkKey(key); 922 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 923 if (sm != null) { 924 sm.checkPermission(new PropertyPermission(key, 925 SecurityConstants.PROPERTY_WRITE_ACTION)); 926 } 927 928 return (String) props.setProperty(key, value); 929 } 930 931 /** 932 * Removes the system property indicated by the specified key. 933 * 934 * First, if a security manager exists, its 935 * {@code SecurityManager.checkPermission} method 936 * is called with a {@code PropertyPermission(key, "write")} 937 * permission. This may result in a SecurityException being thrown. 938 * If no exception is thrown, the specified property is removed. 939 * 940 * @apiNote 941 * <strong>Changing a standard system property may have unpredictable results 942 * unless otherwise specified</strong>. 943 * See {@linkplain #getProperties getProperties} method for details. 944 * 945 * @param key the name of the system property to be removed. 946 * @return the previous string value of the system property, 947 * or {@code null} if there was no property with that key. 948 * 949 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 950 * {@code checkPropertyAccess} method doesn't allow 951 * access to the specified system property. 952 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code key} is {@code null}. 953 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code key} is empty. 954 * @see #getProperty 955 * @see #setProperty 956 * @see java.util.Properties 957 * @see java.lang.SecurityException 958 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkPropertiesAccess() 959 * @since 1.5 960 */ 961 public static String clearProperty(String key) { 962 checkKey(key); 963 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 964 if (sm != null) { 965 sm.checkPermission(new PropertyPermission(key, "write")); 966 } 967 968 return (String) props.remove(key); 969 } 970 971 private static void checkKey(String key) { 972 if (key == null) { 973 throw new NullPointerException("key can't be null"); 974 } 975 if (key.isEmpty()) { 976 throw new IllegalArgumentException("key can't be empty"); 977 } 978 } 979 980 /** 981 * Gets the value of the specified environment variable. An 982 * environment variable is a system-dependent external named 983 * value. 984 * 985 * <p>If a security manager exists, its 986 * {@link SecurityManager#checkPermission checkPermission} 987 * method is called with a 988 * {@link RuntimePermission RuntimePermission("getenv."+name)} 989 * permission. This may result in a {@link SecurityException} 990 * being thrown. If no exception is thrown the value of the 991 * variable {@code name} is returned. 992 * 993 * <p><a id="EnvironmentVSSystemProperties"><i>System 994 * properties</i> and <i>environment variables</i></a> are both 995 * conceptually mappings between names and values. Both 996 * mechanisms can be used to pass user-defined information to a 997 * Java process. Environment variables have a more global effect, 998 * because they are visible to all descendants of the process 999 * which defines them, not just the immediate Java subprocess. 1000 * They can have subtly different semantics, such as case 1001 * insensitivity, on different operating systems. For these 1002 * reasons, environment variables are more likely to have 1003 * unintended side effects. It is best to use system properties 1004 * where possible. Environment variables should be used when a 1005 * global effect is desired, or when an external system interface 1006 * requires an environment variable (such as {@code PATH}). 1007 * 1008 * <p>On UNIX systems the alphabetic case of {@code name} is 1009 * typically significant, while on Microsoft Windows systems it is 1010 * typically not. For example, the expression 1011 * {@code System.getenv("FOO").equals(System.getenv("foo"))} 1012 * is likely to be true on Microsoft Windows. 1013 * 1014 * @param name the name of the environment variable 1015 * @return the string value of the variable, or {@code null} 1016 * if the variable is not defined in the system environment 1017 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code name} is {@code null} 1018 * @throws SecurityException 1019 * if a security manager exists and its 1020 * {@link SecurityManager#checkPermission checkPermission} 1021 * method doesn't allow access to the environment variable 1022 * {@code name} 1023 * @see #getenv() 1024 * @see ProcessBuilder#environment() 1025 */ 1026 public static String getenv(String name) { 1027 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 1028 if (sm != null) { 1029 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("getenv."+name)); 1030 } 1031 1032 return ProcessEnvironment.getenv(name); 1033 } 1034 1035 1036 /** 1037 * Returns an unmodifiable string map view of the current system environment. 1038 * The environment is a system-dependent mapping from names to 1039 * values which is passed from parent to child processes. 1040 * 1041 * <p>If the system does not support environment variables, an 1042 * empty map is returned. 1043 * 1044 * <p>The returned map will never contain null keys or values. 1045 * Attempting to query the presence of a null key or value will 1046 * throw a {@link NullPointerException}. Attempting to query 1047 * the presence of a key or value which is not of type 1048 * {@link String} will throw a {@link ClassCastException}. 1049 * 1050 * <p>The returned map and its collection views may not obey the 1051 * general contract of the {@link Object#equals} and 1052 * {@link Object#hashCode} methods. 1053 * 1054 * <p>The returned map is typically case-sensitive on all platforms. 1055 * 1056 * <p>If a security manager exists, its 1057 * {@link SecurityManager#checkPermission checkPermission} 1058 * method is called with a 1059 * {@link RuntimePermission RuntimePermission("getenv.*")} permission. 1060 * This may result in a {@link SecurityException} being thrown. 1061 * 1062 * <p>When passing information to a Java subprocess, 1063 * <a href=#EnvironmentVSSystemProperties>system properties</a> 1064 * are generally preferred over environment variables. 1065 * 1066 * @return the environment as a map of variable names to values 1067 * @throws SecurityException 1068 * if a security manager exists and its 1069 * {@link SecurityManager#checkPermission checkPermission} 1070 * method doesn't allow access to the process environment 1071 * @see #getenv(String) 1072 * @see ProcessBuilder#environment() 1073 * @since 1.5 1074 */ 1075 public static java.util.Map<String,String> getenv() { 1076 SecurityManager sm = getSecurityManager(); 1077 if (sm != null) { 1078 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("getenv.*")); 1079 } 1080 1081 return ProcessEnvironment.getenv(); 1082 } 1083 1084 /** 1085 * {@code System.Logger} instances log messages that will be 1086 * routed to the underlying logging framework the {@link System.LoggerFinder 1087 * LoggerFinder} uses. 1088 * 1089 * {@code System.Logger} instances are typically obtained from 1090 * the {@link java.lang.System System} class, by calling 1091 * {@link java.lang.System#getLogger(java.lang.String) System.getLogger(loggerName)} 1092 * or {@link java.lang.System#getLogger(java.lang.String, java.util.ResourceBundle) 1093 * System.getLogger(loggerName, bundle)}. 1094 * 1095 * @see java.lang.System#getLogger(java.lang.String) 1096 * @see java.lang.System#getLogger(java.lang.String, java.util.ResourceBundle) 1097 * @see java.lang.System.LoggerFinder 1098 * 1099 * @since 9 1100 */ 1101 public interface Logger { 1102 1103 /** 1104 * System {@linkplain Logger loggers} levels. 1105 * 1106 * A level has a {@linkplain #getName() name} and {@linkplain 1107 * #getSeverity() severity}. 1108 * Level values are {@link #ALL}, {@link #TRACE}, {@link #DEBUG}, 1109 * {@link #INFO}, {@link #WARNING}, {@link #ERROR}, {@link #OFF}, 1110 * by order of increasing severity. 1111 * <br> 1112 * {@link #ALL} and {@link #OFF} 1113 * are simple markers with severities mapped respectively to 1114 * {@link java.lang.Integer#MIN_VALUE Integer.MIN_VALUE} and 1115 * {@link java.lang.Integer#MAX_VALUE Integer.MAX_VALUE}. 1116 * <p> 1117 * <b>Severity values and Mapping to {@code java.util.logging.Level}.</b> 1118 * <p> 1119 * {@linkplain System.Logger.Level System logger levels} are mapped to 1120 * {@linkplain java.util.logging.Level java.util.logging levels} 1121 * of corresponding severity. 1122 * <br>The mapping is as follows: 1123 * <br><br> 1124 * <table class="striped"> 1125 * <caption>System.Logger Severity Level Mapping</caption> 1126 * <thead> 1127 * <tr><th scope="col">System.Logger Levels</th> 1128 * <th scope="col">java.util.logging Levels</th> 1129 * </thead> 1130 * <tbody> 1131 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#ALL ALL}</th> 1132 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#ALL ALL}</td> 1133 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#TRACE TRACE}</th> 1134 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#FINER FINER}</td> 1135 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#DEBUG DEBUG}</th> 1136 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#FINE FINE}</td> 1137 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#INFO INFO}</th> 1138 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#INFO INFO}</td> 1139 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#WARNING WARNING}</th> 1140 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#WARNING WARNING}</td> 1141 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#ERROR ERROR}</th> 1142 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#SEVERE SEVERE}</td> 1143 * <tr><th scope="row">{@link Logger.Level#OFF OFF}</th> 1144 * <td>{@link java.util.logging.Level#OFF OFF}</td> 1145 * </tbody> 1146 * </table> 1147 * 1148 * @since 9 1149 * 1150 * @see java.lang.System.LoggerFinder 1151 * @see java.lang.System.Logger 1152 */ 1153 public enum Level { 1154 1155 // for convenience, we're reusing java.util.logging.Level int values 1156 // the mapping logic in sun.util.logging.PlatformLogger depends 1157 // on this. 1158 /** 1159 * A marker to indicate that all levels are enabled. 1160 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1161 * {@link Integer#MIN_VALUE}. 1162 */ 1163 ALL(Integer.MIN_VALUE), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.ALL 1164 /** 1165 * {@code TRACE} level: usually used to log diagnostic information. 1166 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1167 * {@code 400}. 1168 */ 1169 TRACE(400), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.FINER 1170 /** 1171 * {@code DEBUG} level: usually used to log debug information traces. 1172 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1173 * {@code 500}. 1174 */ 1175 DEBUG(500), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.FINEST/FINE/CONFIG 1176 /** 1177 * {@code INFO} level: usually used to log information messages. 1178 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1179 * {@code 800}. 1180 */ 1181 INFO(800), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.INFO 1182 /** 1183 * {@code WARNING} level: usually used to log warning messages. 1184 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1185 * {@code 900}. 1186 */ 1187 WARNING(900), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.WARNING 1188 /** 1189 * {@code ERROR} level: usually used to log error messages. 1190 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1191 * {@code 1000}. 1192 */ 1193 ERROR(1000), // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.SEVERE 1194 /** 1195 * A marker to indicate that all levels are disabled. 1196 * This level {@linkplain #getSeverity() severity} is 1197 * {@link Integer#MAX_VALUE}. 1198 */ 1199 OFF(Integer.MAX_VALUE); // typically mapped to/from j.u.l.Level.OFF 1200 1201 private final int severity; 1202 1203 private Level(int severity) { 1204 this.severity = severity; 1205 } 1206 1207 /** 1208 * Returns the name of this level. 1209 * @return this level {@linkplain #name()}. 1210 */ 1211 public final String getName() { 1212 return name(); 1213 } 1214 1215 /** 1216 * Returns the severity of this level. 1217 * A higher severity means a more severe condition. 1218 * @return this level severity. 1219 */ 1220 public final int getSeverity() { 1221 return severity; 1222 } 1223 } 1224 1225 /** 1226 * Returns the name of this logger. 1227 * 1228 * @return the logger name. 1229 */ 1230 public String getName(); 1231 1232 /** 1233 * Checks if a message of the given level would be logged by 1234 * this logger. 1235 * 1236 * @param level the log message level. 1237 * @return {@code true} if the given log message level is currently 1238 * being logged. 1239 * 1240 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1241 */ 1242 public boolean isLoggable(Level level); 1243 1244 /** 1245 * Logs a message. 1246 * 1247 * @implSpec The default implementation for this method calls 1248 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, msg, (Object[])null);} 1249 * 1250 * @param level the log message level. 1251 * @param msg the string message (or a key in the message catalog, if 1252 * this logger is a {@link 1253 * LoggerFinder#getLocalizedLogger(java.lang.String, 1254 * java.util.ResourceBundle, java.lang.Module) localized logger}); 1255 * can be {@code null}. 1256 * 1257 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1258 */ 1259 public default void log(Level level, String msg) { 1260 log(level, (ResourceBundle) null, msg, (Object[]) null); 1261 } 1262 1263 /** 1264 * Logs a lazily supplied message. 1265 * 1266 * If the logger is currently enabled for the given log message level 1267 * then a message is logged that is the result produced by the 1268 * given supplier function. Otherwise, the supplier is not operated on. 1269 * 1270 * @implSpec When logging is enabled for the given level, the default 1271 * implementation for this method calls 1272 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, msgSupplier.get(), (Object[])null);} 1273 * 1274 * @param level the log message level. 1275 * @param msgSupplier a supplier function that produces a message. 1276 * 1277 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}, 1278 * or {@code msgSupplier} is {@code null}. 1279 */ 1280 public default void log(Level level, Supplier<String> msgSupplier) { 1281 Objects.requireNonNull(msgSupplier); 1282 if (isLoggable(Objects.requireNonNull(level))) { 1283 log(level, (ResourceBundle) null, msgSupplier.get(), (Object[]) null); 1284 } 1285 } 1286 1287 /** 1288 * Logs a message produced from the given object. 1289 * 1290 * If the logger is currently enabled for the given log message level then 1291 * a message is logged that, by default, is the result produced from 1292 * calling toString on the given object. 1293 * Otherwise, the object is not operated on. 1294 * 1295 * @implSpec When logging is enabled for the given level, the default 1296 * implementation for this method calls 1297 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, obj.toString(), (Object[])null);} 1298 * 1299 * @param level the log message level. 1300 * @param obj the object to log. 1301 * 1302 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}, or 1303 * {@code obj} is {@code null}. 1304 */ 1305 public default void log(Level level, Object obj) { 1306 Objects.requireNonNull(obj); 1307 if (isLoggable(Objects.requireNonNull(level))) { 1308 this.log(level, (ResourceBundle) null, obj.toString(), (Object[]) null); 1309 } 1310 } 1311 1312 /** 1313 * Logs a message associated with a given throwable. 1314 * 1315 * @implSpec The default implementation for this method calls 1316 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, msg, thrown);} 1317 * 1318 * @param level the log message level. 1319 * @param msg the string message (or a key in the message catalog, if 1320 * this logger is a {@link 1321 * LoggerFinder#getLocalizedLogger(java.lang.String, 1322 * java.util.ResourceBundle, java.lang.Module) localized logger}); 1323 * can be {@code null}. 1324 * @param thrown a {@code Throwable} associated with the log message; 1325 * can be {@code null}. 1326 * 1327 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1328 */ 1329 public default void log(Level level, String msg, Throwable thrown) { 1330 this.log(level, null, msg, thrown); 1331 } 1332 1333 /** 1334 * Logs a lazily supplied message associated with a given throwable. 1335 * 1336 * If the logger is currently enabled for the given log message level 1337 * then a message is logged that is the result produced by the 1338 * given supplier function. Otherwise, the supplier is not operated on. 1339 * 1340 * @implSpec When logging is enabled for the given level, the default 1341 * implementation for this method calls 1342 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, msgSupplier.get(), thrown);} 1343 * 1344 * @param level one of the log message level identifiers. 1345 * @param msgSupplier a supplier function that produces a message. 1346 * @param thrown a {@code Throwable} associated with log message; 1347 * can be {@code null}. 1348 * 1349 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}, or 1350 * {@code msgSupplier} is {@code null}. 1351 */ 1352 public default void log(Level level, Supplier<String> msgSupplier, 1353 Throwable thrown) { 1354 Objects.requireNonNull(msgSupplier); 1355 if (isLoggable(Objects.requireNonNull(level))) { 1356 this.log(level, null, msgSupplier.get(), thrown); 1357 } 1358 } 1359 1360 /** 1361 * Logs a message with an optional list of parameters. 1362 * 1363 * @implSpec The default implementation for this method calls 1364 * {@code this.log(level, (ResourceBundle)null, format, params);} 1365 * 1366 * @param level one of the log message level identifiers. 1367 * @param format the string message format in {@link 1368 * java.text.MessageFormat} format, (or a key in the message 1369 * catalog, if this logger is a {@link 1370 * LoggerFinder#getLocalizedLogger(java.lang.String, 1371 * java.util.ResourceBundle, java.lang.Module) localized logger}); 1372 * can be {@code null}. 1373 * @param params an optional list of parameters to the message (may be 1374 * none). 1375 * 1376 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1377 */ 1378 public default void log(Level level, String format, Object... params) { 1379 this.log(level, null, format, params); 1380 } 1381 1382 /** 1383 * Logs a localized message associated with a given throwable. 1384 * 1385 * If the given resource bundle is non-{@code null}, the {@code msg} 1386 * string is localized using the given resource bundle. 1387 * Otherwise the {@code msg} string is not localized. 1388 * 1389 * @param level the log message level. 1390 * @param bundle a resource bundle to localize {@code msg}; can be 1391 * {@code null}. 1392 * @param msg the string message (or a key in the message catalog, 1393 * if {@code bundle} is not {@code null}); can be {@code null}. 1394 * @param thrown a {@code Throwable} associated with the log message; 1395 * can be {@code null}. 1396 * 1397 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1398 */ 1399 public void log(Level level, ResourceBundle bundle, String msg, 1400 Throwable thrown); 1401 1402 /** 1403 * Logs a message with resource bundle and an optional list of 1404 * parameters. 1405 * 1406 * If the given resource bundle is non-{@code null}, the {@code format} 1407 * string is localized using the given resource bundle. 1408 * Otherwise the {@code format} string is not localized. 1409 * 1410 * @param level the log message level. 1411 * @param bundle a resource bundle to localize {@code format}; can be 1412 * {@code null}. 1413 * @param format the string message format in {@link 1414 * java.text.MessageFormat} format, (or a key in the message 1415 * catalog if {@code bundle} is not {@code null}); can be {@code null}. 1416 * @param params an optional list of parameters to the message (may be 1417 * none). 1418 * 1419 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code level} is {@code null}. 1420 */ 1421 public void log(Level level, ResourceBundle bundle, String format, 1422 Object... params); 1423 } 1424 1425 /** 1426 * The {@code LoggerFinder} service is responsible for creating, managing, 1427 * and configuring loggers to the underlying framework it uses. 1428 * 1429 * A logger finder is a concrete implementation of this class that has a 1430 * zero-argument constructor and implements the abstract methods defined 1431 * by this class. 1432 * The loggers returned from a logger finder are capable of routing log 1433 * messages to the logging backend this provider supports. 1434 * A given invocation of the Java Runtime maintains a single 1435 * system-wide LoggerFinder instance that is loaded as follows: 1436 * <ul> 1437 * <li>First it finds any custom {@code LoggerFinder} provider 1438 * using the {@link java.util.ServiceLoader} facility with the 1439 * {@linkplain ClassLoader#getSystemClassLoader() system class 1440 * loader}.</li> 1441 * <li>If no {@code LoggerFinder} provider is found, the system default 1442 * {@code LoggerFinder} implementation will be used.</li> 1443 * </ul> 1444 * <p> 1445 * An application can replace the logging backend 1446 * <i>even when the java.logging module is present</i>, by simply providing 1447 * and declaring an implementation of the {@link LoggerFinder} service. 1448 * <p> 1449 * <b>Default Implementation</b> 1450 * <p> 1451 * The system default {@code LoggerFinder} implementation uses 1452 * {@code java.util.logging} as the backend framework when the 1453 * {@code java.logging} module is present. 1454 * It returns a {@linkplain System.Logger logger} instance 1455 * that will route log messages to a {@link java.util.logging.Logger 1456 * java.util.logging.Logger}. Otherwise, if {@code java.logging} is not 1457 * present, the default implementation will return a simple logger 1458 * instance that will route log messages of {@code INFO} level and above to 1459 * the console ({@code System.err}). 1460 * <p> 1461 * <b>Logging Configuration</b> 1462 * <p> 1463 * {@linkplain Logger Logger} instances obtained from the 1464 * {@code LoggerFinder} factory methods are not directly configurable by 1465 * the application. Configuration is the responsibility of the underlying 1466 * logging backend, and usually requires using APIs specific to that backend. 1467 * <p>For the default {@code LoggerFinder} implementation 1468 * using {@code java.util.logging} as its backend, refer to 1469 * {@link java.util.logging java.util.logging} for logging configuration. 1470 * For the default {@code LoggerFinder} implementation returning simple loggers 1471 * when the {@code java.logging} module is absent, the configuration 1472 * is implementation dependent. 1473 * <p> 1474 * Usually an application that uses a logging framework will log messages 1475 * through a logger facade defined (or supported) by that framework. 1476 * Applications that wish to use an external framework should log 1477 * through the facade associated with that framework. 1478 * <p> 1479 * A system class that needs to log messages will typically obtain 1480 * a {@link System.Logger} instance to route messages to the logging 1481 * framework selected by the application. 1482 * <p> 1483 * Libraries and classes that only need loggers to produce log messages 1484 * should not attempt to configure loggers by themselves, as that 1485 * would make them dependent from a specific implementation of the 1486 * {@code LoggerFinder} service. 1487 * <p> 1488 * In addition, when a security manager is present, loggers provided to 1489 * system classes should not be directly configurable through the logging 1490 * backend without requiring permissions. 1491 * <br> 1492 * It is the responsibility of the provider of 1493 * the concrete {@code LoggerFinder} implementation to ensure that 1494 * these loggers are not configured by untrusted code without proper 1495 * permission checks, as configuration performed on such loggers usually 1496 * affects all applications in the same Java Runtime. 1497 * <p> 1498 * <b>Message Levels and Mapping to backend levels</b> 1499 * <p> 1500 * A logger finder is responsible for mapping from a {@code 1501 * System.Logger.Level} to a level supported by the logging backend it uses. 1502 * <br>The default LoggerFinder using {@code java.util.logging} as the backend 1503 * maps {@code System.Logger} levels to 1504 * {@linkplain java.util.logging.Level java.util.logging} levels 1505 * of corresponding severity - as described in {@link Logger.Level 1506 * Logger.Level}. 1507 * 1508 * @see java.lang.System 1509 * @see java.lang.System.Logger 1510 * 1511 * @since 9 1512 */ 1513 public static abstract class LoggerFinder { 1514 /** 1515 * The {@code RuntimePermission("loggerFinder")} is 1516 * necessary to subclass and instantiate the {@code LoggerFinder} class, 1517 * as well as to obtain loggers from an instance of that class. 1518 */ 1519 static final RuntimePermission LOGGERFINDER_PERMISSION = 1520 new RuntimePermission("loggerFinder"); 1521 1522 /** 1523 * Creates a new instance of {@code LoggerFinder}. 1524 * 1525 * @implNote It is recommended that a {@code LoggerFinder} service 1526 * implementation does not perform any heavy initialization in its 1527 * constructor, in order to avoid possible risks of deadlock or class 1528 * loading cycles during the instantiation of the service provider. 1529 * 1530 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager is present and its 1531 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow the 1532 * {@code RuntimePermission("loggerFinder")}. 1533 */ 1534 protected LoggerFinder() { 1535 this(checkPermission()); 1536 } 1537 1538 private LoggerFinder(Void unused) { 1539 // nothing to do. 1540 } 1541 1542 private static Void checkPermission() { 1543 final SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager(); 1544 if (sm != null) { 1545 sm.checkPermission(LOGGERFINDER_PERMISSION); 1546 } 1547 return null; 1548 } 1549 1550 /** 1551 * Returns an instance of {@link Logger Logger} 1552 * for the given {@code module}. 1553 * 1554 * @param name the name of the logger. 1555 * @param module the module for which the logger is being requested. 1556 * 1557 * @return a {@link Logger logger} suitable for use within the given 1558 * module. 1559 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code name} is {@code null} or 1560 * {@code module} is {@code null}. 1561 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager is present and its 1562 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow the 1563 * {@code RuntimePermission("loggerFinder")}. 1564 */ 1565 public abstract Logger getLogger(String name, Module module); 1566 1567 /** 1568 * Returns a localizable instance of {@link Logger Logger} 1569 * for the given {@code module}. 1570 * The returned logger will use the provided resource bundle for 1571 * message localization. 1572 * 1573 * @implSpec By default, this method calls {@link 1574 * #getLogger(java.lang.String, java.lang.Module) 1575 * this.getLogger(name, module)} to obtain a logger, then wraps that 1576 * logger in a {@link Logger} instance where all methods that do not 1577 * take a {@link ResourceBundle} as parameter are redirected to one 1578 * which does - passing the given {@code bundle} for 1579 * localization. So for instance, a call to {@link 1580 * Logger#log(Logger.Level, String) Logger.log(Level.INFO, msg)} 1581 * will end up as a call to {@link 1582 * Logger#log(Logger.Level, ResourceBundle, String, Object...) 1583 * Logger.log(Level.INFO, bundle, msg, (Object[])null)} on the wrapped 1584 * logger instance. 1585 * Note however that by default, string messages returned by {@link 1586 * java.util.function.Supplier Supplier<String>} will not be 1587 * localized, as it is assumed that such strings are messages which are 1588 * already constructed, rather than keys in a resource bundle. 1589 * <p> 1590 * An implementation of {@code LoggerFinder} may override this method, 1591 * for example, when the underlying logging backend provides its own 1592 * mechanism for localizing log messages, then such a 1593 * {@code LoggerFinder} would be free to return a logger 1594 * that makes direct use of the mechanism provided by the backend. 1595 * 1596 * @param name the name of the logger. 1597 * @param bundle a resource bundle; can be {@code null}. 1598 * @param module the module for which the logger is being requested. 1599 * @return an instance of {@link Logger Logger} which will use the 1600 * provided resource bundle for message localization. 1601 * 1602 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code name} is {@code null} or 1603 * {@code module} is {@code null}. 1604 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager is present and its 1605 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow the 1606 * {@code RuntimePermission("loggerFinder")}. 1607 */ 1608 public Logger getLocalizedLogger(String name, ResourceBundle bundle, 1609 Module module) { 1610 return new LocalizedLoggerWrapper<>(getLogger(name, module), bundle); 1611 } 1612 1613 /** 1614 * Returns the {@code LoggerFinder} instance. There is one 1615 * single system-wide {@code LoggerFinder} instance in 1616 * the Java Runtime. See the class specification of how the 1617 * {@link LoggerFinder LoggerFinder} implementation is located and 1618 * loaded. 1619 1620 * @return the {@link LoggerFinder LoggerFinder} instance. 1621 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager is present and its 1622 * {@code checkPermission} method doesn't allow the 1623 * {@code RuntimePermission("loggerFinder")}. 1624 */ 1625 public static LoggerFinder getLoggerFinder() { 1626 final SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager(); 1627 if (sm != null) { 1628 sm.checkPermission(LOGGERFINDER_PERMISSION); 1629 } 1630 return accessProvider(); 1631 } 1632 1633 1634 private static volatile LoggerFinder service; 1635 static LoggerFinder accessProvider() { 1636 // We do not need to synchronize: LoggerFinderLoader will 1637 // always return the same instance, so if we don't have it, 1638 // just fetch it again. 1639 if (service == null) { 1640 PrivilegedAction<LoggerFinder> pa = 1641 () -> LoggerFinderLoader.getLoggerFinder(); 1642 service = AccessController.doPrivileged(pa, null, 1643 LOGGERFINDER_PERMISSION); 1644 } 1645 return service; 1646 } 1647 1648 } 1649 1650 1651 /** 1652 * Returns an instance of {@link Logger Logger} for the caller's 1653 * use. 1654 * 1655 * @implSpec 1656 * Instances returned by this method route messages to loggers 1657 * obtained by calling {@link LoggerFinder#getLogger(java.lang.String, 1658 * java.lang.Module) LoggerFinder.getLogger(name, module)}, where 1659 * {@code module} is the caller's module. 1660 * In cases where {@code System.getLogger} is called from a context where 1661 * there is no caller frame on the stack (e.g when called directly 1662 * from a JNI attached thread), {@code IllegalCallerException} is thrown. 1663 * To obtain a logger in such a context, use an auxiliary class that will 1664 * implicitly be identified as the caller, or use the system {@link 1665 * LoggerFinder#getLoggerFinder() LoggerFinder} to obtain a logger instead. 1666 * Note that doing the latter may eagerly initialize the underlying 1667 * logging system. 1668 * 1669 * @apiNote 1670 * This method may defer calling the {@link 1671 * LoggerFinder#getLogger(java.lang.String, java.lang.Module) 1672 * LoggerFinder.getLogger} method to create an actual logger supplied by 1673 * the logging backend, for instance, to allow loggers to be obtained during 1674 * the system initialization time. 1675 * 1676 * @param name the name of the logger. 1677 * @return an instance of {@link Logger} that can be used by the calling 1678 * class. 1679 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code name} is {@code null}. 1680 * @throws IllegalCallerException if there is no Java caller frame on the 1681 * stack. 1682 * 1683 * @since 9 1684 */ 1685 @CallerSensitive 1686 public static Logger getLogger(String name) { 1687 Objects.requireNonNull(name); 1688 final Class<?> caller = Reflection.getCallerClass(); 1689 if (caller == null) { 1690 throw new IllegalCallerException("no caller frame"); 1691 } 1692 return LazyLoggers.getLogger(name, caller.getModule()); 1693 } 1694 1695 /** 1696 * Returns a localizable instance of {@link Logger 1697 * Logger} for the caller's use. 1698 * The returned logger will use the provided resource bundle for message 1699 * localization. 1700 * 1701 * @implSpec 1702 * The returned logger will perform message localization as specified 1703 * by {@link LoggerFinder#getLocalizedLogger(java.lang.String, 1704 * java.util.ResourceBundle, java.lang.Module) 1705 * LoggerFinder.getLocalizedLogger(name, bundle, module)}, where 1706 * {@code module} is the caller's module. 1707 * In cases where {@code System.getLogger} is called from a context where 1708 * there is no caller frame on the stack (e.g when called directly 1709 * from a JNI attached thread), {@code IllegalCallerException} is thrown. 1710 * To obtain a logger in such a context, use an auxiliary class that 1711 * will implicitly be identified as the caller, or use the system {@link 1712 * LoggerFinder#getLoggerFinder() LoggerFinder} to obtain a logger instead. 1713 * Note that doing the latter may eagerly initialize the underlying 1714 * logging system. 1715 * 1716 * @apiNote 1717 * This method is intended to be used after the system is fully initialized. 1718 * This method may trigger the immediate loading and initialization 1719 * of the {@link LoggerFinder} service, which may cause issues if the 1720 * Java Runtime is not ready to initialize the concrete service 1721 * implementation yet. 1722 * System classes which may be loaded early in the boot sequence and 1723 * need to log localized messages should create a logger using 1724 * {@link #getLogger(java.lang.String)} and then use the log methods that 1725 * take a resource bundle as parameter. 1726 * 1727 * @param name the name of the logger. 1728 * @param bundle a resource bundle. 1729 * @return an instance of {@link Logger} which will use the provided 1730 * resource bundle for message localization. 1731 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code name} is {@code null} or 1732 * {@code bundle} is {@code null}. 1733 * @throws IllegalCallerException if there is no Java caller frame on the 1734 * stack. 1735 * 1736 * @since 9 1737 */ 1738 @CallerSensitive 1739 public static Logger getLogger(String name, ResourceBundle bundle) { 1740 final ResourceBundle rb = Objects.requireNonNull(bundle); 1741 Objects.requireNonNull(name); 1742 final Class<?> caller = Reflection.getCallerClass(); 1743 if (caller == null) { 1744 throw new IllegalCallerException("no caller frame"); 1745 } 1746 final SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager(); 1747 // We don't use LazyLoggers if a resource bundle is specified. 1748 // Bootstrap sensitive classes in the JDK do not use resource bundles 1749 // when logging. This could be revisited later, if it needs to. 1750 if (sm != null) { 1751 final PrivilegedAction<Logger> pa = 1752 () -> LoggerFinder.accessProvider() 1753 .getLocalizedLogger(name, rb, caller.getModule()); 1754 return AccessController.doPrivileged(pa, null, 1755 LoggerFinder.LOGGERFINDER_PERMISSION); 1756 } 1757 return LoggerFinder.accessProvider() 1758 .getLocalizedLogger(name, rb, caller.getModule()); 1759 } 1760 1761 /** 1762 * Terminates the currently running Java Virtual Machine. The 1763 * argument serves as a status code; by convention, a nonzero status 1764 * code indicates abnormal termination. 1765 * <p> 1766 * This method calls the {@code exit} method in class 1767 * {@code Runtime}. This method never returns normally. 1768 * <p> 1769 * The call {@code System.exit(n)} is effectively equivalent to 1770 * the call: 1771 * <blockquote><pre> 1772 * Runtime.getRuntime().exit(n) 1773 * </pre></blockquote> 1774 * 1775 * @param status exit status. 1776 * @throws SecurityException 1777 * if a security manager exists and its {@code checkExit} 1778 * method doesn't allow exit with the specified status. 1779 * @see java.lang.Runtime#exit(int) 1780 */ 1781 public static void exit(int status) { 1782 Runtime.getRuntime().exit(status); 1783 } 1784 1785 /** 1786 * Runs the garbage collector in the Java Virtual Machine. 1787 * <p> 1788 * Calling the {@code gc} method suggests that the Java Virtual Machine 1789 * expend effort toward recycling unused objects in order to 1790 * make the memory they currently occupy available for reuse 1791 * by the Java Virtual Machine. 1792 * When control returns from the method call, the Java Virtual Machine 1793 * has made a best effort to reclaim space from all unused objects. 1794 * There is no guarantee that this effort will recycle any particular 1795 * number of unused objects, reclaim any particular amount of space, or 1796 * complete at any particular time, if at all, before the method returns or ever. 1797 * <p> 1798 * The call {@code System.gc()} is effectively equivalent to the 1799 * call: 1800 * <blockquote><pre> 1801 * Runtime.getRuntime().gc() 1802 * </pre></blockquote> 1803 * 1804 * @see java.lang.Runtime#gc() 1805 */ 1806 public static void gc() { 1807 Runtime.getRuntime().gc(); 1808 } 1809 1810 /** 1811 * Runs the finalization methods of any objects pending finalization. 1812 * 1813 * Calling this method suggests that the Java Virtual Machine expend 1814 * effort toward running the {@code finalize} methods of objects 1815 * that have been found to be discarded but whose {@code finalize} 1816 * methods have not yet been run. When control returns from the 1817 * method call, the Java Virtual Machine has made a best effort to 1818 * complete all outstanding finalizations. 1819 * <p> 1820 * The call {@code System.runFinalization()} is effectively 1821 * equivalent to the call: 1822 * <blockquote><pre> 1823 * Runtime.getRuntime().runFinalization() 1824 * </pre></blockquote> 1825 * 1826 * @see java.lang.Runtime#runFinalization() 1827 */ 1828 public static void runFinalization() { 1829 Runtime.getRuntime().runFinalization(); 1830 } 1831 1832 /** 1833 * Loads the native library specified by the filename argument. The filename 1834 * argument must be an absolute path name. 1835 * 1836 * If the filename argument, when stripped of any platform-specific library 1837 * prefix, path, and file extension, indicates a library whose name is, 1838 * for example, L, and a native library called L is statically linked 1839 * with the VM, then the JNI_OnLoad_L function exported by the library 1840 * is invoked rather than attempting to load a dynamic library. 1841 * A filename matching the argument does not have to exist in the 1842 * file system. 1843 * See the <a href="{@docRoot}/../specs/jni/index.html"> JNI Specification</a> 1844 * for more details. 1845 * 1846 * Otherwise, the filename argument is mapped to a native library image in 1847 * an implementation-dependent manner. 1848 * 1849 * <p> 1850 * The call {@code System.load(name)} is effectively equivalent 1851 * to the call: 1852 * <blockquote><pre> 1853 * Runtime.getRuntime().load(name) 1854 * </pre></blockquote> 1855 * 1856 * @param filename the file to load. 1857 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 1858 * {@code checkLink} method doesn't allow 1859 * loading of the specified dynamic library 1860 * @throws UnsatisfiedLinkError if either the filename is not an 1861 * absolute path name, the native library is not statically 1862 * linked with the VM, or the library cannot be mapped to 1863 * a native library image by the host system. 1864 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code filename} is {@code null} 1865 * @see java.lang.Runtime#load(java.lang.String) 1866 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkLink(java.lang.String) 1867 */ 1868 @CallerSensitive 1869 public static void load(String filename) { 1870 Runtime.getRuntime().load0(Reflection.getCallerClass(), filename); 1871 } 1872 1873 /** 1874 * Loads the native library specified by the {@code libname} 1875 * argument. The {@code libname} argument must not contain any platform 1876 * specific prefix, file extension or path. If a native library 1877 * called {@code libname} is statically linked with the VM, then the 1878 * JNI_OnLoad_{@code libname} function exported by the library is invoked. 1879 * See the <a href="{@docRoot}/../specs/jni/index.html"> JNI Specification</a> 1880 * for more details. 1881 * 1882 * Otherwise, the libname argument is loaded from a system library 1883 * location and mapped to a native library image in an implementation- 1884 * dependent manner. 1885 * <p> 1886 * The call {@code System.loadLibrary(name)} is effectively 1887 * equivalent to the call 1888 * <blockquote><pre> 1889 * Runtime.getRuntime().loadLibrary(name) 1890 * </pre></blockquote> 1891 * 1892 * @param libname the name of the library. 1893 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and its 1894 * {@code checkLink} method doesn't allow 1895 * loading of the specified dynamic library 1896 * @throws UnsatisfiedLinkError if either the libname argument 1897 * contains a file path, the native library is not statically 1898 * linked with the VM, or the library cannot be mapped to a 1899 * native library image by the host system. 1900 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code libname} is {@code null} 1901 * @see java.lang.Runtime#loadLibrary(java.lang.String) 1902 * @see java.lang.SecurityManager#checkLink(java.lang.String) 1903 */ 1904 @CallerSensitive 1905 public static void loadLibrary(String libname) { 1906 Runtime.getRuntime().loadLibrary0(Reflection.getCallerClass(), libname); 1907 } 1908 1909 /** 1910 * Maps a library name into a platform-specific string representing 1911 * a native library. 1912 * 1913 * @param libname the name of the library. 1914 * @return a platform-dependent native library name. 1915 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code libname} is {@code null} 1916 * @see java.lang.System#loadLibrary(java.lang.String) 1917 * @see java.lang.ClassLoader#findLibrary(java.lang.String) 1918 * @since 1.2 1919 */ 1920 public static native String mapLibraryName(String libname); 1921 1922 /** 1923 * Create PrintStream for stdout/err based on encoding. 1924 */ 1925 private static PrintStream newPrintStream(FileOutputStream fos, String enc) { 1926 if (enc != null) { 1927 try { 1928 return new PrintStream(new BufferedOutputStream(fos, 128), true, enc); 1929 } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException uee) {} 1930 } 1931 return new PrintStream(new BufferedOutputStream(fos, 128), true); 1932 } 1933 1934 /** 1935 * Logs an exception/error at initialization time to stdout or stderr. 1936 * 1937 * @param printToStderr to print to stderr rather than stdout 1938 * @param printStackTrace to print the stack trace 1939 * @param msg the message to print before the exception, can be {@code null} 1940 * @param e the exception or error 1941 */ 1942 private static void logInitException(boolean printToStderr, 1943 boolean printStackTrace, 1944 String msg, 1945 Throwable e) { 1946 if (VM.initLevel() < 1) { 1947 throw new InternalError("system classes not initialized"); 1948 } 1949 PrintStream log = (printToStderr) ? err : out; 1950 if (msg != null) { 1951 log.println(msg); 1952 } 1953 if (printStackTrace) { 1954 e.printStackTrace(log); 1955 } else { 1956 log.println(e); 1957 for (Throwable suppressed : e.getSuppressed()) { 1958 log.println("Suppressed: " + suppressed); 1959 } 1960 Throwable cause = e.getCause(); 1961 if (cause != null) { 1962 log.println("Caused by: " + cause); 1963 } 1964 } 1965 } 1966 1967 /** 1968 * Create the Properties object from a map - masking out system properties 1969 * that are not intended for public access. 1970 */ 1971 private static Properties createProperties(Map<String, String> initialProps) { 1972 Properties properties = new Properties(initialProps.size()); 1973 for (var entry : initialProps.entrySet()) { 1974 String prop = entry.getKey(); 1975 switch (prop) { 1976 // Do not add private system properties to the Properties 1977 case "sun.nio.MaxDirectMemorySize": 1978 case "sun.nio.PageAlignDirectMemory": 1979 // used by java.lang.Integer.IntegerCache 1980 case "java.lang.Integer.IntegerCache.high": 1981 // used by sun.launcher.LauncherHelper 1982 case "sun.java.launcher.diag": 1983 // used by jdk.internal.loader.ClassLoaders 1984 case "jdk.boot.class.path.append": 1985 break; 1986 default: 1987 properties.put(prop, entry.getValue()); 1988 } 1989 } 1990 return properties; 1991 } 1992 1993 /** 1994 * Initialize the system class. Called after thread initialization. 1995 */ 1996 private static void initPhase1() { 1997 // VM might invoke JNU_NewStringPlatform() to set those encoding 1998 // sensitive properties (user.home, user.name, boot.class.path, etc.) 1999 // during "props" initialization. 2000 // The charset is initialized in System.c and does not depend on the Properties. 2001 Map<String, String> tempProps = SystemProps.initProperties(); 2002 VersionProps.init(tempProps); 2003 2004 // There are certain system configurations that may be controlled by 2005 // VM options such as the maximum amount of direct memory and 2006 // Integer cache size used to support the object identity semantics 2007 // of autoboxing. Typically, the library will obtain these values 2008 // from the properties set by the VM. If the properties are for 2009 // internal implementation use only, these properties should be 2010 // masked from the system properties. 2011 // 2012 // Save a private copy of the system properties object that 2013 // can only be accessed by the internal implementation. 2014 VM.saveProperties(tempProps); 2015 props = createProperties(tempProps); 2016 2017 StaticProperty.javaHome(); // Load StaticProperty to cache the property values 2018 2019 lineSeparator = props.getProperty("line.separator"); 2020 2021 FileInputStream fdIn = new FileInputStream(FileDescriptor.in); 2022 FileOutputStream fdOut = new FileOutputStream(FileDescriptor.out); 2023 FileOutputStream fdErr = new FileOutputStream(FileDescriptor.err); 2024 setIn0(new BufferedInputStream(fdIn)); 2025 setOut0(newPrintStream(fdOut, props.getProperty("sun.stdout.encoding"))); 2026 setErr0(newPrintStream(fdErr, props.getProperty("sun.stderr.encoding"))); 2027 2028 // Setup Java signal handlers for HUP, TERM, and INT (where available). 2029 Terminator.setup(); 2030 2031 // Initialize any miscellaneous operating system settings that need to be 2032 // set for the class libraries. Currently this is no-op everywhere except 2033 // for Windows where the process-wide error mode is set before the java.io 2034 // classes are used. 2035 VM.initializeOSEnvironment(); 2036 2037 // The main thread is not added to its thread group in the same 2038 // way as other threads; we must do it ourselves here. 2039 Thread current = Thread.currentThread(); 2040 current.getThreadGroup().add(current); 2041 2042 // register shared secrets 2043 setJavaLangAccess(); 2044 2045 // Subsystems that are invoked during initialization can invoke 2046 // VM.isBooted() in order to avoid doing things that should 2047 // wait until the VM is fully initialized. The initialization level 2048 // is incremented from 0 to 1 here to indicate the first phase of 2049 // initialization has completed. 2050 // IMPORTANT: Ensure that this remains the last initialization action! 2051 VM.initLevel(1); 2052 } 2053 2054 // @see #initPhase2() 2055 static ModuleLayer bootLayer; 2056 2057 /* 2058 * Invoked by VM. Phase 2 module system initialization. 2059 * Only classes in java.base can be loaded in this phase. 2060 * 2061 * @param printToStderr print exceptions to stderr rather than stdout 2062 * @param printStackTrace print stack trace when exception occurs 2063 * 2064 * @return JNI_OK for success, JNI_ERR for failure 2065 */ 2066 private static int initPhase2(boolean printToStderr, boolean printStackTrace) { 2067 try { 2068 bootLayer = ModuleBootstrap.boot(); 2069 } catch (Exception | Error e) { 2070 logInitException(printToStderr, printStackTrace, 2071 "Error occurred during initialization of boot layer", e); 2072 return -1; // JNI_ERR 2073 } 2074 2075 // module system initialized 2076 VM.initLevel(2); 2077 2078 return 0; // JNI_OK 2079 } 2080 2081 /* 2082 * Invoked by VM. Phase 3 is the final system initialization: 2083 * 1. set security manager 2084 * 2. set system class loader 2085 * 3. set TCCL 2086 * 2087 * This method must be called after the module system initialization. 2088 * The security manager and system class loader may be a custom class from 2089 * the application classpath or modulepath. 2090 */ 2091 private static void initPhase3() { 2092 String smProp = System.getProperty("java.security.manager"); 2093 if (smProp != null) { 2094 switch (smProp) { 2095 case "disallow": 2096 allowSecurityManager = NEVER; 2097 break; 2098 case "allow": 2099 allowSecurityManager = MAYBE; 2100 break; 2101 case "": 2102 case "default": 2103 setSecurityManager(new SecurityManager()); 2104 allowSecurityManager = MAYBE; 2105 break; 2106 default: 2107 try { 2108 ClassLoader cl = ClassLoader.getBuiltinAppClassLoader(); 2109 Class<?> c = Class.forName(smProp, false, cl); 2110 Constructor<?> ctor = c.getConstructor(); 2111 // Must be a public subclass of SecurityManager with 2112 // a public no-arg constructor 2113 if (!SecurityManager.class.isAssignableFrom(c) || 2114 !Modifier.isPublic(c.getModifiers()) || 2115 !Modifier.isPublic(ctor.getModifiers())) { 2116 throw new Error("Could not create SecurityManager: " 2117 + ctor.toString()); 2118 } 2119 // custom security manager may be in non-exported package 2120 ctor.setAccessible(true); 2121 SecurityManager sm = (SecurityManager) ctor.newInstance(); 2122 setSecurityManager(sm); 2123 } catch (Exception e) { 2124 throw new InternalError("Could not create SecurityManager", e); 2125 } 2126 allowSecurityManager = MAYBE; 2127 } 2128 } else { 2129 allowSecurityManager = MAYBE; 2130 } 2131 2132 // initializing the system class loader 2133 VM.initLevel(3); 2134 2135 // system class loader initialized 2136 ClassLoader scl = ClassLoader.initSystemClassLoader(); 2137 2138 // set TCCL 2139 Thread.currentThread().setContextClassLoader(scl); 2140 2141 // system is fully initialized 2142 VM.initLevel(4); 2143 } 2144 2145 private static void setJavaLangAccess() { 2146 // Allow privileged classes outside of java.lang 2147 SharedSecrets.setJavaLangAccess(new JavaLangAccess() { 2148 public List<Method> getDeclaredPublicMethods(Class<?> klass, String name, Class<?>... parameterTypes) { 2149 return klass.getDeclaredPublicMethods(name, parameterTypes); 2150 } 2151 public jdk.internal.reflect.ConstantPool getConstantPool(Class<?> klass) { 2152 return klass.getConstantPool(); 2153 } 2154 public boolean casAnnotationType(Class<?> klass, AnnotationType oldType, AnnotationType newType) { 2155 return klass.casAnnotationType(oldType, newType); 2156 } 2157 public AnnotationType getAnnotationType(Class<?> klass) { 2158 return klass.getAnnotationType(); 2159 } 2160 public Map<Class<? extends Annotation>, Annotation> getDeclaredAnnotationMap(Class<?> klass) { 2161 return klass.getDeclaredAnnotationMap(); 2162 } 2163 public byte[] getRawClassAnnotations(Class<?> klass) { 2164 return klass.getRawAnnotations(); 2165 } 2166 public byte[] getRawClassTypeAnnotations(Class<?> klass) { 2167 return klass.getRawTypeAnnotations(); 2168 } 2169 public byte[] getRawExecutableTypeAnnotations(Executable executable) { 2170 return Class.getExecutableTypeAnnotationBytes(executable); 2171 } 2172 public <E extends Enum<E>> 2173 E[] getEnumConstantsShared(Class<E> klass) { 2174 return klass.getEnumConstantsShared(); 2175 } 2176 public void blockedOn(Interruptible b) { 2177 Thread.blockedOn(b); 2178 } 2179 public void registerShutdownHook(int slot, boolean registerShutdownInProgress, Runnable hook) { 2180 Shutdown.add(slot, registerShutdownInProgress, hook); 2181 } 2182 public Thread newThreadWithAcc(Runnable target, AccessControlContext acc) { 2183 return new Thread(target, acc); 2184 } 2185 @SuppressWarnings("deprecation") 2186 public void invokeFinalize(Object o) throws Throwable { 2187 o.finalize(); 2188 } 2189 public ConcurrentHashMap<?, ?> createOrGetClassLoaderValueMap(ClassLoader cl) { 2190 return cl.createOrGetClassLoaderValueMap(); 2191 } 2192 public Class<?> defineClass(ClassLoader loader, String name, byte[] b, ProtectionDomain pd, String source) { 2193 return ClassLoader.defineClass1(loader, name, b, 0, b.length, pd, source); 2194 } 2195 public Class<?> findBootstrapClassOrNull(ClassLoader cl, String name) { 2196 return cl.findBootstrapClassOrNull(name); 2197 } 2198 public Package definePackage(ClassLoader cl, String name, Module module) { 2199 return cl.definePackage(name, module); 2200 } 2201 public String fastUUID(long lsb, long msb) { 2202 return Long.fastUUID(lsb, msb); 2203 } 2204 public void addNonExportedPackages(ModuleLayer layer) { 2205 SecurityManager.addNonExportedPackages(layer); 2206 } 2207 public void invalidatePackageAccessCache() { 2208 SecurityManager.invalidatePackageAccessCache(); 2209 } 2210 public Module defineModule(ClassLoader loader, 2211 ModuleDescriptor descriptor, 2212 URI uri) { 2213 return new Module(null, loader, descriptor, uri); 2214 } 2215 public Module defineUnnamedModule(ClassLoader loader) { 2216 return new Module(loader); 2217 } 2218 public void addReads(Module m1, Module m2) { 2219 m1.implAddReads(m2); 2220 } 2221 public void addReadsAllUnnamed(Module m) { 2222 m.implAddReadsAllUnnamed(); 2223 } 2224 public void addExports(Module m, String pn, Module other) { 2225 m.implAddExports(pn, other); 2226 } 2227 public void addExportsToAllUnnamed(Module m, String pn) { 2228 m.implAddExportsToAllUnnamed(pn); 2229 } 2230 public void addOpens(Module m, String pn, Module other) { 2231 m.implAddOpens(pn, other); 2232 } 2233 public void addOpensToAllUnnamed(Module m, String pn) { 2234 m.implAddOpensToAllUnnamed(pn); 2235 } 2236 public void addOpensToAllUnnamed(Module m, Iterator<String> packages) { 2237 m.implAddOpensToAllUnnamed(packages); 2238 } 2239 public void addUses(Module m, Class<?> service) { 2240 m.implAddUses(service); 2241 } 2242 public boolean isReflectivelyExported(Module m, String pn, Module other) { 2243 return m.isReflectivelyExported(pn, other); 2244 } 2245 public boolean isReflectivelyOpened(Module m, String pn, Module other) { 2246 return m.isReflectivelyOpened(pn, other); 2247 } 2248 public ServicesCatalog getServicesCatalog(ModuleLayer layer) { 2249 return layer.getServicesCatalog(); 2250 } 2251 public Stream<ModuleLayer> layers(ModuleLayer layer) { 2252 return layer.layers(); 2253 } 2254 public Stream<ModuleLayer> layers(ClassLoader loader) { 2255 return ModuleLayer.layers(loader); 2256 } 2257 2258 public String newStringNoRepl(byte[] bytes, Charset cs) throws CharacterCodingException { 2259 return StringCoding.newStringNoRepl(bytes, cs); 2260 } 2261 2262 public byte[] getBytesNoRepl(String s, Charset cs) throws CharacterCodingException { 2263 return StringCoding.getBytesNoRepl(s, cs); 2264 } 2265 2266 public String newStringUTF8NoRepl(byte[] bytes, int off, int len) { 2267 return StringCoding.newStringUTF8NoRepl(bytes, off, len); 2268 } 2269 2270 public byte[] getBytesUTF8NoRepl(String s) { 2271 return StringCoding.getBytesUTF8NoRepl(s); 2272 } 2273 2274 public void setCause(Throwable t, Throwable cause) { 2275 t.setCause(cause); 2276 } 2277 }); 2278 } 2279 } --- EOF ---