Background:
I have a MainTest class that has many buttons, each of which instantiate a class that I am coding/testing. I want the code/test cycle for these classes to be quick, and see the effect of my changes quickly, a few times a minute. MainTest which is stable takes about 20 seconds to load, which would not be a problem had I not needed to reload it for each change in the classes it instantiates. I want to load MainTest once, and when it instantiates another class, let's call it ChildTest, numerous times (upon button event), it should reload the latest version of ChildTest.
The question in short:
How do you tell the java 'new' command to reload the class from disk and not from jvm cache?
I tried Class.ForName but it didn't make a difference.
I have also tried using a custom classloader (copied from open source), to no avail.

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1are you using a testing framework like JUnit or is it a homegrown testbench? – matt b Oct 19 '10 at 18:53
6 Answers
There's no hope of "overloading" the new
operator but you could certainly write a custom class loader that simply reloads the bytecode every time you ask it to load a class. No out-of-the-box classloaders will do what you're looking for because they all assume that the class definition will not change through the life of the JVM.
But here's how you make it happen. Create a class loader called, say, Reloader
which overrides the methods loadClass
and findClass
methods so that they simply reload the class files from disk every time they are called (instead of "caching" them for later use). Then you just have to call new Reloader().loadClass("foo.bar.MyClassName")
any time you suspect the class definition has changed (e.g. as part of your testing framework's lifecycle methods).
This article fills in some of the details but misses some important points, especially about using new instances of the classloader for subsequent reloads and delegating to the default classloader when appropriate. Here is a simple working example which repeatedly loads the class MyClass
and assumes its class file exists in the relative "./bin" directory:
public class Reloader extends ClassLoader {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
do {
Object foo = new Reloader().loadClass("MyFoo").newInstance();
System.out.println("LOADED: " + foo); // Overload MyFoo#toString() for effect
System.out.println("Press <ENTER> when MyFoo.class has changed");
System.in.read();
} while (true);
}
@Override
public Class<?> loadClass(String s) {
return findClass(s);
}
@Override
public Class<?> findClass(String s) {
try {
byte[] bytes = loadClassData(s);
return defineClass(s, bytes, 0, bytes.length);
} catch (IOException ioe) {
try {
return super.loadClass(s);
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ignore) { }
ioe.printStackTrace(System.out);
return null;
}
}
private byte[] loadClassData(String className) throws IOException {
File f = new File("bin/" + className.replaceAll("\\.", "/") + ".class");
int size = (int) f.length();
byte buff[] = new byte[size];
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(f);
DataInputStream dis = new DataInputStream(fis);
dis.readFully(buff);
dis.close();
return buff;
}
}
At each invocation of the "do/while" block in the main method, a new Reloader is instantiated which loads the class from disk and returns it to the caller. So if you overwrite the bin/MyClass.class
file to contain a new implementation with a different, overloaded toString
method, then you should see the new implementation each time.

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I am actually working with the CustomClassLoader of that article, but am having trouble getting it to do what I want. It sounds like the right approach, but I will have to dig into the article, I guess. – nat101 Oct 19 '10 at 19:25
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You'll need to take care not to use the "new" operator for the changing class or else the default, system class loader will be used instead of your own. Try using something like this instead `MyClass foo = myReloader.loadClass("MyClass").newInstance();` – maerics Oct 19 '10 at 19:43
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1Running the above example results in a "StackOverflow" error, unless there is a "MyFoo" class. – Erel Segal-Halevi Jan 07 '13 at 07:13
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1This is damnly important, "At each invocation of the "do/while" block in the main method, a new Reloader is instantiated" – didxga May 21 '13 at 09:32
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@ErelSegalHalevi: yes, this simple example just demonstrates the concept; it doesn't claim to be robust enough for anything other than basic proof-of-concept. – maerics Jun 26 '13 at 17:36
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If anybody is interested, I have re-written a full example [at this GitHub repository](https://github.com/evacchi/class-reloader) where the path of the class is inferred from the original (system) ClassLoader. – Edoardo Vacchi Jan 02 '14 at 15:15
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When reloading a file with this CustomClassLoader, I get `java.lang.SecurityException: Prohibited package name: java.lang`, not exactly sure why – Alexander Mills Feb 11 '19 at 23:32
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Yeah I also don't know why we have to create a new instance of the ClassLoader each time? (new Reloader().loadClass()). – Alexander Mills Feb 11 '19 at 23:33
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hello, thanks for sharing your example, I don't understand why when I mock class A I don't see the change, I have open jdk13, I opened an issue in your repository. – 0x52 Apr 08 '20 at 01:10
It sounds like you want ot use the hot deployment when can be used with the debugger. When you debug a problem and recomiple some of its classes you can get the option to reload the changed classes.
EDIT: Apart from using the debugging API, you can use Instrumentation. http://download-llnw.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/instrument/package-summary.html
However, since using a debugger is by far the simplest way to do this, if this doesn't work, you are likely to run into the same problems.
It sounds like what you need to test smaller pieces of work so it takes less than a second run some subset of your application.
Or you could load your application faster by providing a dump and re-load facility for the memory. This way you could start your application from a snapshot (perhaps immediately)

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1I can't really use the debugger for this purpose, too slow. (extensive gui.) But my question is, if the debugger can do it, why can't I? – nat101 Oct 19 '10 at 19:19
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You can if you use the debuggging API to do it. However, this is not simple to use. Changing the classloader will not change an already loaded class changing its code. see edit. – Peter Lawrey Oct 20 '10 at 06:07
Sounds a little scary, but this should help.
http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/lang/ClassLoader.html
ClassLoader can dynamically load classes at runtime, I would read the api to determine if loading it again overrides the previous version.

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This wouldn't be very difficult to accomplish, just extend the ClassLoader and choose to always create a new instance from the source file. The API gives a brief overview of how you could do this to dynamically get a file from a network. Your case would be from a constant file source. – Valchris Oct 19 '10 at 19:34
I found an article on exactly this problem.
http://www.zeroturnaround.com/blog/reloading-objects-classes-classloaders/
BUT, maerics answer looks good too. will try it later.

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You can give a try to Java Rebel. It is a "development-only" class-loader designed to do exactly what you need but, perhaps, it could be expensive for your needs. In your case, Peter Lawrey's solution could be enough.

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I am not sure how to do this in code, but NetBeans does have an "Apply Code Changes" button that will do this.
However, it can only change the implementation of the class, it cannot change it's signature. This means you cannot add, remove, or change instance variables or methods. This is due to the design of the JVM which does not allow these to be changed once a class has been loaded once.
Since NetBeans can do it, there must be a way, but I do not know how to do it manually.
If you run in an IDE that supports this feature, you can just click the button each time you modify a class. It will then recompile that class and reload it.

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I am using Eclipse which automatically compiles upon save. The question is how to get the newly compiled class loaded into a jvm that alread has the previous version of the same class loaded. – nat101 Oct 19 '10 at 19:21