// Copyright (c) 2014, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved. // This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the // LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant // of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory. package org.rocksdb; /** * RocksObject is the base-class of all RocksDB classes that has a pointer to * some c++ rocksdb object. * * RocksObject has dispose() function, which releases its associated c++ resource. * This function can be either called manually, or being called automatically * during the regular Java GC process. However, since Java may wrongly assume a * RocksObject only contains a long member variable and think it is small in size, * Java may give RocksObject low priority in the GC process. For this, it is * suggested to call dispose() manually. However, it is safe to let RocksObject go * out-of-scope without manually calling dispose() as dispose() will be called * in the finalizer during the regular GC process. */ public abstract class RocksObject { protected RocksObject() { nativeHandle_ = 0; owningHandle_ = true; } /** * Release the c++ object manually pointed by the native handle. * * Note that dispose() will also be called during the GC process * if it was not called before its RocksObject went out-of-scope. * However, since Java may wrongly wrongly assume those objects are * small in that they seems to only hold a long variable. As a result, * they might have low priority in the GC process. To prevent this, * it is suggested to call dispose() manually. * * Note that once an instance of RocksObject has been disposed, * calling its function will lead undefined behavior. */ public final synchronized void dispose() { if (isOwningNativeHandle() && isInitialized()) { disposeInternal(); } nativeHandle_ = 0; disOwnNativeHandle(); } /** * The helper function of dispose() which all subclasses of RocksObject * must implement to release their associated C++ resource. */ protected abstract void disposeInternal(); /** * Revoke ownership of the native object. * * This will prevent the object from attempting to delete the underlying * native object in its finalizer. This must be used when another object * takes over ownership of the native object or both will attempt to delete * the underlying object when garbage collected. * * When disOwnNativeHandle() is called, dispose() will simply set nativeHandle_ * to 0 without releasing its associated C++ resource. As a result, * incorrectly use this function may cause memory leak, and this function call * will not affect the return value of isInitialized(). * * @see dispose() * @see isInitialized() */ protected void disOwnNativeHandle() { owningHandle_ = false; } /** * Returns true if the current RocksObject is responsable to release its * native handle. * * @return true if the current RocksObject is responsible to release its * native handle. * * @see disOwnNativeHandle() * @see dispose() */ protected boolean isOwningNativeHandle() { return owningHandle_; } /** * Returns true if the associated native handle has been initialized. * * @return true if the associated native handle has been initialized. * * @see dispose() */ protected boolean isInitialized() { return (nativeHandle_ != 0); } /** * Simply calls dispose() and release its c++ resource if it has not * yet released. */ @Override protected void finalize() { dispose(); } /** * A long variable holding c++ pointer pointing to some RocksDB C++ object. */ protected long nativeHandle_; /** * A flag indicating whether the current RocksObject is responsible to * release the c++ object stored in its nativeHandle_. */ private boolean owningHandle_; }