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Java™ Platform Standard Ed. 6 |
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public interface ClassFileTransformer
An agent provides an implementation of this interface in order to transform class files. The transformation occurs before the class is defined by the JVM.
Note the term class file is used as defined in the chapter The class File Format of The Java Virtual Machine Specification, to mean a sequence of bytes in class file format, whether or not they reside in a file.
Instrumentation
,
Instrumentation.addTransformer(java.lang.instrument.ClassFileTransformer, boolean)
,
Instrumentation.removeTransformer(java.lang.instrument.ClassFileTransformer)
Method Summary | |
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byte[] |
transform(ClassLoader loader,
String className,
Class<?> classBeingRedefined,
ProtectionDomain protectionDomain,
byte[] classfileBuffer)
The implementation of this method may transform the supplied class file and return a new replacement class file. |
Method Detail |
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byte[] transform(ClassLoader loader, String className, Class<?> classBeingRedefined, ProtectionDomain protectionDomain, byte[] classfileBuffer) throws IllegalClassFormatException
There are two kinds of transformers, determined by the canRetransform
parameter of
Instrumentation.addTransformer(ClassFileTransformer,boolean)
:
canRetransform
as true
canRetransform
as false or where added with
Instrumentation.addTransformer(ClassFileTransformer)
Once a transformer has been registered with
addTransformer
,
the transformer will be called for every new class definition and every class redefinition.
Retransformation capable transformers will also be called on every class retransformation.
The request for a new class definition is made with
ClassLoader.defineClass
or its native equivalents.
The request for a class redefinition is made with
Instrumentation.redefineClasses
or its native equivalents.
The request for a class retransformation is made with
Instrumentation.retransformClasses
or its native equivalents.
The transformer is called during the processing of the request, before the class file bytes
have been verified or applied.
When there are multiple transformers, transformations are composed by chaining the
transform
calls.
That is, the byte array returned by one call to transform
becomes the input
(via the classfileBuffer
parameter) to the next call.
Transformations are applied in the following order:
For retransformations, the retransformation incapable transformers are not
called, instead the result of the previous transformation is reused.
In all other cases, this method is called.
Within each of these groupings, transformers are called in the order registered.
Native transformers are provided by the ClassFileLoadHook
event
in the Java Virtual Machine Tool Interface).
The input (via the classfileBuffer
parameter) to the first
transformer is:
ClassLoader.defineClass
definitions.getDefinitionClassFile()
where
definitions
is the parameter to
Instrumentation.redefineClasses
Instrumentation.retransformClasses
If the implementing method determines that no transformations are needed,
it should return null
.
Otherwise, it should create a new byte[]
array,
copy the input classfileBuffer
into it,
along with all desired transformations, and return the new array.
The input classfileBuffer
must not be modified.
In the retransform and redefine cases, the transformer must support the redefinition semantics: if a class that the transformer changed during initial definition is later retransformed or redefined, the transformer must insure that the second class output class file is a legal redefinition of the first output class file.
If the transformer throws an exception (which it doesn't catch),
subsequent transformers will still be called and the load, redefine
or retransform will still be attempted.
Thus, throwing an exception has the same effect as returning null
.
To prevent unexpected behavior when unchecked exceptions are generated
in transformer code, a transformer can catch Throwable
.
If the transformer believes the classFileBuffer
does not
represent a validly formatted class file, it should throw
an IllegalClassFormatException
;
while this has the same effect as returning null. it facilitates the
logging or debugging of format corruptions.
loader
- the defining loader of the class to be transformed,
may be null
if the bootstrap loaderclassName
- the name of the class in the internal form of fully
qualified class and interface names as defined in
The Java Virtual Machine Specification.
For example, "java/util/List"
.classBeingRedefined
- if this is triggered by a redefine or retransform,
the class being redefined or retransformed;
if this is a class load, null
protectionDomain
- the protection domain of the class being defined or redefinedclassfileBuffer
- the input byte buffer in class file format - must not be modified
null
if no transform is performed.
IllegalClassFormatException
- if the input does not represent a well-formed class fileInstrumentation.redefineClasses(java.lang.instrument.ClassDefinition...)
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Java™ Platform Standard Ed. 6 |
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Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.