The tasks and initial investigation
I try to set up two Oracle Coherence near cache instances at one java swing application. The idea a solution could be found here. My case is a bit more complicated and this is where the game starts.
Short description
In my case there is an account service. It can have two endpoints: SIT and UAT. In order to create two such services, I need to load two 'instances' of the Coherence in order to override the endpoints with system variables (tangosol.coherence.cacheconfig).
I have:
- the main code of the app is located in the mainapp.jar;
- the AccountService interface that is located in the account-interfaces.jar;
- the AccountServiceImpl class that is located in the account-impl.jar and implements the AccountService interface;
- my main application has the following structure
bin: startup.bat, startup.sh conf: app.properties lib: mainapp.jar, account-interfaces.jar, account-impl.jar, coherence.jar
Approach tried
I created a dedicated child-first classLoader - InverseClassLoader and made the AppLaunchClassLoader (the default Thread.currentThread().GetContextClassLoader() classLoader) it's parent. With the InverseClassLoader I load the AccountServiceImpl class:
Class<AccountServiceImpl> acImplClass = contextClassLoader.selfLoad(AccountServiceImpl.class).loadClass(AccountServiceImpl.class);
Constructor<AccountServiceImpl> acConstructor =
acImplClass .getConstructor(String.class);
AccountService acService = acConstructor .newInstance(serviceURL);
Issues and questions
- I get the 'AccountServiceImpl cannot be cast to AccountService' exceptions, which means that those two classes loaded by different classloaders. But those classloaders are in the parent-child relationship. So am I right that even if a class is loaded by a parent (interface - 'abstract' type) it can't be used with a class (concrete impl) loaded by a child classloader? Why then we need this parent-child relation?
- I specified the AccountService interface in a code and it got loaded by a default classloader. I tried wrap the code above is a thread and set the InverseClassLoader it's context classloader. Nothing changed. So am I right that I can't use such interface-implementation coding (as usual coding) and need to use reflection all the time to invoke concrete methods all the time? (Hope there is a solution) ;
- Say, I listed both the AccountService and AccountServiceImpl classes for being loaded by the InverseClassLoader. What if I need other classes, that are accessible by those two, to be also loaded by the InverseClassLoader? It there a way to say that all 'related' classes must be loaded by the same classloader?
Update
Here is the InverseClassLoader:
public class InvertedClassLoader extends URLClassLoader {
private final Set<String> classesToNotDelegate = new HashSet<>();
public InvertedClassLoader(URL... urls) {
super(urls, Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader());
}
public InvertedClassLoader selfLoad(Class<?> classToNotDelegate) {
classesToNotDelegate.add(classToNotDelegate.getName());
return this;
}
@Override
public Class<?> loadClass(String className, boolean resolve) throws ClassNotFoundException {
if (shouldNotDelegate(className)) {
System.out.println("CHILD LOADER: " + className);
Class<?> clazz = findClass(className);
if (resolve) {
resolveClass(clazz);
}
return clazz;
}
else {
System.out.println("PARENT LOADER: " + className);
return super.loadClass(className, resolve);
}
}
public <T> Class<T> loadClass(Class<? extends T> classToLoad) throws ClassNotFoundException {
final Class<?> clazz = loadClass(classToLoad.getName());
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
final Class<T> castedClass = (Class<T>) clazz;
return castedClass;
}
private boolean shouldNotDelegate(String className) {
if (classesToNotDelegate.contains(className) || className.contains("tangosol") ) {
return true;
}
return false;
}