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If I have a class that utilizes an IO resource, such as a disk flat file, DB, or some other form of external resource, what are pros and cons of closing those streams/connections in an overridden finalize() method to be run by GC? I though this could leverage the existing JVM GC and reduce the exposure to the risk of relying on the client to invoke a class method called something like closeResources() as well as writing spaghetti-like try-catches (nested try-catches and ifs being my least favorite programming constructs).

As a concrete example, I have a simple file reading wrapper. The class is constructed with String filePath, it reads the file into a List<String[]> . I don't wan't to have to close the BufferedReader in multiple places like close it if there is a problem opening the file (catch clause) but also close it if the file reads fine etc. I want to put it in one place and make sure it is ALWAYS closed no matter what when the object gets GC.

Is this approach a good practice or am I trying to afford myself too high level a convenience within the scope of Java?

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  • Is the BufferedReader variable local to the constructor, to other method, or is it an instance variable ? Oct 18, 2012 at 15:51

3 Answers 3

2

This is not a great idea as the finalize() method is not guaranteed to be called.

It's easier and better to just close the resources when your code is done with them.

If you hate writing the nested try-finally blocks to close the resources correctly, use something like commons-io's IOUtils to silently close the resources (or write your own simple util method to silently close them):

InputStream stream = ...;
try {
    ...
}
finally {
    IOUtils.closeQuietly(stream);
}
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  • 2
    imo, i'd use google guava, as it has a lot of functionality, instead of including all the apache libraries. with google guava, you can use the Files class
    – epoch
    Oct 18, 2012 at 15:48
2

When the IO resource is an instance variable, then you should close it in the finalize() method.

Why ?

  1. Because beeing an instance variable, you need it in an open state because some method will be using it repeated times.

  2. If you close it in a method other than finalize, then you are creating a temporal coupling, meaning the class user needs to know that he has to call certain methods in a certain temporal order, i.e, A before B etc.

EDIT:

Java documentation states that garbage collector is not guaranteed to run at any specific time, and will not run finalize() as long as there's any references to the object. If references linger, it's a memory leak, a programming error. finalize() is the best option when the resource is not local to a method. If the resource is local to a method, then close it in the finally end of a try/cath block.

6
  • thanks for elaborating. what's conflicting with @matt b is that you assume that finalize() is guaranteed to be executed. i am curious to find out more on that.
    – amphibient
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:06
  • basically, what it boils down to is whether finalize() is guaranteed or not and generally how reliable it is
    – amphibient
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:08
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    @foampile Java documentation states that garbage collector is not guaranteed to run at any specific time, and will not run finalize() as long as there's any references to the object. If references linger, it's a memory leak, a programming error. finalize() is the best option when the resource is not local to a method. If the resource is local to a method, then close it in the finally end of a try/cath block. Oct 18, 2012 at 16:11
  • @foampile try/catch/finally blocks are not spagetti code. Au contraire . It's well structured code. Error code checking and tag-jumpig is spagetti code. try/catch/finally (Exception handling) was created to avoid spagetti code. Oct 18, 2012 at 16:17
  • i didn't say they all are. but when you have a try/catch/finally and then in the finally then you have another try { close } catch {do nothing}, that is more mundane code than i like to have in my classes
    – amphibient
    Oct 18, 2012 at 16:21
0

Yes, finally block is always the best approach to release the resources such as connection, I/O Sreams etc.

1
  • i am talking about overriding Object.finalize(), not the final block of a try/catch
    – amphibient
    Oct 18, 2012 at 15:55

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