There are several things to know:
- For most things, dealing with the thread’s context class loader is obsolete, as it has no impact. It’s more like a convention; setting it has an impact if there’s some other code querying and using it. For the standard class loading process, it doesn’t have any meaning. It’s unfortunate that the documentation doesn’t mention that and make it look like a relevant thing. Perhaps, it was intended to have more meaning when it was added.
- As pointed out by Erwin Bolwidt, when loading
A
via your custom loader, it will delegate to its parent loader, returning a class A
loaded by the parent.
- When resolving class references, the JVM will always use the defining loader of the referrer. So when the reference from
A
to B
is resolved, the JVM will always use the parent loader which defined the class A
The last point implies that even if you modify your custom class loader to look up its own classes first instead of following the standard model of querying the parent first, it doesn’t solve the issue if it has no own A
, as then, it still returns the parent’s A
whose references will be resolved using the parent. Since you are invoking defineClass
before asking for A
, the lookup order doesn’t matter at all, as your custom loader has an already defined B
that it returned if anyone ever asked it for B
…
So you could let your custom loader also load and define A
. Or you use Reflection with access override to defineClass
on the system ClassLoader
before it loads B
. The cleanest solution is to implement the class modification logic as a Java Agent which can use the Instrumentation API to intercept and change the definition of B
right at its loading time.