This is a hack misusing the fact that Properties
extends Map
, an old unfortunate design decision.
public final class JvmWideSingleton
{
private static final JvmWideSingleton INSTANCE;
static {
// There should be just one system class loader object in the whole JVM.
synchronized(ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader()) {
Properties sysProps = System.getProperties();
// The key is a String, because the .class object would be different across classloaders.
JvmWideSingleton singleton = (JvmWideSingleton) sysProps.get(JvmWideSingleton.class.getName());
// Some other class loader loaded JvmWideSingleton earlier.
if (singleton != null) {
INSTANCE = singleton;
}
else {
// Otherwise this classloader is the first one, let's create a singleton.
// Make sure not to do any locking within this.
INSTANCE = new JvmWideSingleton();
System.getProperties().put(JvmWideSingleton.class.getName(), INSTANCE);
}
}
}
public static JvmWideSingleton getSingleton() {
return INSTANCE;
}
}
This could be made parametrized, but then the initialization would be lazy and go to getSingleton()
.
Properties
is Hashtable
-based, so it is thread safe (as per the documentation). So one could use props.computeIfAbsent()
. But I like it this way more.
Also read here: Scope of the Java System Properties
I just wrote it and there is a chance there's something I overlooked that would prevent this from working.