public final class StringConcatFactory extends Object
Methods to facilitate the creation of String concatenation methods, that can be used to efficiently concatenate a known number of arguments of known types, possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. These methods are typically used as bootstrap methods for
invokedynamic call sites, to support the string concatenation feature of the Java Programming Language.
Indirect access to the behavior specified by the provided
MethodHandle proceeds in order through two phases:
CallSite holds the MethodHandle pointing to the exact concatenation method. The concatenation methods may be shared among different CallSites, e.g. if linkage methods produce them as pure functions.
MethodHandle is invoked with the static arguments and any additional dynamic arguments provided on invocation, as if by MethodHandle.invoke(Object...). This class provides two forms of linkage methods: a simple version (makeConcat(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType)) using only the dynamic arguments, and an advanced version (makeConcatWithConstants(java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, String, Object...) using the advanced forms of capturing the constant arguments. The advanced strategy can produce marginally better invocation bytecode, at the expense of exploding the number of shapes of string concatenation methods present at runtime, because those shapes would include constant static arguments as well.
There is a JVM limit (classfile structural constraint): no method can call with more than 255 slots. This limits the number of static and dynamic arguments one can pass to bootstrap method. Since there are potential concatenation strategies that use MethodHandle combinators, we need to reserve a few empty slots on the parameter lists to capture the temporal results. This is why bootstrap methods in this factory do not accept more than 200 argument slots. Users requiring more than 200 argument slots in concatenation are expected to split the large concatenation in smaller expressions.
| Modifier and Type | Method | Description |
|---|---|---|
static CallSite |
makeConcat |
Facilitates the creation of optimized String concatenation methods, that can be used to efficiently concatenate a known number of arguments of known types, possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. |
static CallSite |
makeConcatWithConstants |
Facilitates the creation of optimized String concatenation methods, that can be used to efficiently concatenate a known number of arguments of known types, possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments. |
public static CallSite makeConcat(MethodHandles.Lookup lookup, String name, MethodType concatType) throws StringConcatException
invokedynamic call sites, to support the string concatenation feature of the Java Programming Language. When the target of the CallSite returned from this method is invoked, it returns the result of String concatenation, taking all function arguments passed to the linkage method as inputs for concatenation. The target signature is given by concatType. For a target accepting:
Assume the linkage arguments are as follows:
concatType, describing the CallSite signatureThen the following linkage invariants must hold:
concatType is less than or equal to 200concatType is assignable from String
lookup - Represents a lookup context with the accessibility privileges of the caller. Specifically, the lookup context must have full privilege access. When used with invokedynamic, this is stacked automatically by the VM.name - The name of the method to implement. This name is arbitrary, and has no meaning for this linkage method. When used with invokedynamic, this is provided by the NameAndType of the InvokeDynamic structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.concatType - The expected signature of the CallSite. The parameter types represent the types of concatenation arguments; the return type is always assignable from String. When used with invokedynamic, this is provided by the NameAndType of the
InvokeDynamic structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.concatType.StringConcatException - If any of the linkage invariants described here are violated, or the lookup context does not have private access privileges.NullPointerException - If any of the incoming arguments is null. This will never happen when a bootstrap method is called with invokedynamic.public static CallSite makeConcatWithConstants(MethodHandles.Lookup lookup, String name, MethodType concatType, String recipe, Object... constants) throws StringConcatException
invokedynamic call sites, to support the string concatenation feature of the Java Programming Language. When the target of the CallSite returned from this method is invoked, it returns the result of String concatenation, taking all function arguments and constants passed to the linkage method as inputs for concatenation. The target signature is given by concatType, and does not include constants. For a target accepting:
The concatenation recipe is a String description for the way to construct a concatenated String from the arguments and constants. The recipe is processed from left to right, and each character represents an input to concatenation. Recipe characters mean:
toString to perform a one-time String conversion.Assume the linkage arguments are as follows:
concatType, describing the CallSite signaturerecipe, describing the String recipeconstants, the vararg array of constantsThen the following linkage invariants must hold:
concatType is less than or equal to 200concatType is equal to number of \1 tags in recipe
concatType is assignable from String, and matches the return type of the returned MethodHandle
constants is equal to number of \2 tags in recipe
lookup - Represents a lookup context with the accessibility privileges of the caller. Specifically, the lookup context must have full privilege access. When used with invokedynamic, this is stacked automatically by the VM.name - The name of the method to implement. This name is arbitrary, and has no meaning for this linkage method. When used with invokedynamic, this is provided by the NameAndType of the InvokeDynamic structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.concatType - The expected signature of the CallSite. The parameter types represent the types of dynamic concatenation arguments; the return type is always assignable from String. When used with
invokedynamic, this is provided by the
NameAndType of the InvokeDynamic structure and is stacked automatically by the VM.recipe - Concatenation recipe, described above.constants - A vararg parameter representing the constants passed to the linkage method.concatType.StringConcatException - If any of the linkage invariants described here are violated, or the lookup context does not have private access privileges.NullPointerException - If any of the incoming arguments is null, or any constant in recipe is null. This will never happen when a bootstrap method is called with invokedynamic.
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