I have learned that the JNI interface pointer (JNIEnv *) is only valid in the current thread. Suppose I started a new thread inside a native method; how it can asynchronously send events to a Java method? As this new thread can't have a reference of (JNIEnv *). Storing a global variable for (JNIEnv *) apparently will not work?
2 Answers
You can obtain a pointer to the JVM (JavaVM*
) with JNIEnv->GetJavaVM
. You can safely store that pointer as a global variable. Later, in the new thread, you can either use AttachCurrentThread
to attach the new thread to the JVM if you created it in C/C++ or simply GetEnv
if you created the thread in java code which I do not assume since JNI would pass you a JNIEnv*
then and you wouldn't have this problem.
// JNIEnv* env; (initialized somewhere else)
JavaVM* jvm;
env->GetJavaVM(&jvm);
// now you can store jvm somewhere
// in the new thread:
JNIEnv* myNewEnv;
JavaVMAttachArgs args;
args.version = JNI_VERSION_1_6; // choose your JNI version
args.name = NULL; // you might want to give the java thread a name
args.group = NULL; // you might want to assign the java thread to a ThreadGroup
jvm->AttachCurrentThread((void**)&myNewEnv, &args);
// And now you can use myNewEnv
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17Note that the second argument to
AttachCurrentThread
can be NULL if you don't need any special settings, and you should be sure to callDetachCurrentThread
when you're finished if you weren't attached to begin with (otherwise you'll accumulate uselessThread
objects that can't ever be GC'd). Oct 15, 2012 at 18:30 -
the definition of AttachCurrentThread function changes in the NDK r9. here is the document link. docs.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/guide/jni/spec/…– ZephyrJun 6, 2014 at 21:29
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Shouldn't
JNIEnv->GetJavaVM
acceptenv
as the first parameter? Jul 7, 2014 at 12:59 -
@DenisKniazhev
env
basically is the first parameter becauseGetJavaVM
is invoked on theenv
pointer.– main--Jul 7, 2014 at 13:19 -
2@DenisKniazhev Correct. C doesn't have classes, so you can't invoke a method on a pointer. In C++, JNI provides wrapper classes that automatically pass the env pointer, but in C you have to pass it manually.– main--Jul 7, 2014 at 20:29
Within synchronous calls using JNI from Java to C++ the "environment" has already been setup by the JVM, however going in the other direction from an arbitrary C++ thread it may not have been
Therefore you need to follow these steps
- get hold of the JVM environment context using
GetEnv
- attach the context if necessary using
AttachCurrentThread
- call the method as normal using
CallVoidMethod
- detach using
DetachCurrentThread
Full example. Note I have written about this in the past in more detail on my blog
JavaVM* g_vm;
env->GetJavaVM(&g_vm);
void callback(int val) {
JNIEnv * g_env;
// double check it's all ok
int getEnvStat = g_vm->GetEnv((void **)&g_env, JNI_VERSION_1_6);
if (getEnvStat == JNI_EDETACHED) {
std::cout << "GetEnv: not attached" << std::endl;
if (g_vm->AttachCurrentThread((void **) &g_env, NULL) != 0) {
std::cout << "Failed to attach" << std::endl;
}
} else if (getEnvStat == JNI_OK) {
//
} else if (getEnvStat == JNI_EVERSION) {
std::cout << "GetEnv: version not supported" << std::endl;
}
g_env->CallVoidMethod(g_obj, g_mid, val);
if (g_env->ExceptionCheck()) {
g_env->ExceptionDescribe();
}
g_vm->DetachCurrentThread();
}
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14The only pieces of this answer that are related to the question are
GetEnv
,AttachCurrentThread
andDetachCurrentThread
and they are not even explained.– main--Oct 15, 2012 at 18:08 -
1That solves my problem completely, however above explanation by main was beautiful– AkhileshOct 15, 2012 at 18:14
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g_obj = env->NewGlobalRef(obj); -------> is throwing error: Request for member 'NewGlobalRef' in something not a structure or union– MaticalJun 29, 2015 at 15:00
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resolved the above error myself. I saved the file as .c but was using c++ syntax.– MaticalJun 29, 2015 at 15:13
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Thank you! This seems to have fixed a very stubborn but intermittent problem in my app. Apr 5, 2016 at 22:50