21

E.g I have class Singleton with static field instance:

public class Singleton {

    private static Singleton instance;

    // other code, construct, getters, no matter    
}

I can load this class twice with two different classloaders. How could I avoid it? It is unsafe and dangerous.

Also, if I set instance to null, would it set to null for both classes?

Singleton singleton = Singleton.getInstance();
singleton = null;
3
  • 2
    If you really want to achieve a singleton design pattern, then follow enum type in Java - "a single-element enum type is the best way to implement a singleton"
    – Lion
    Mar 1, 2013 at 11:46
  • 9
    the enum pattern would not prevent the presence of one instance per class loader, would it?
    – keuleJ
    Mar 1, 2013 at 11:49
  • Unfortunately enums can be by different classloaders, which as you can imagine can cause all sort of problems. Mar 1, 2013 at 13:49

2 Answers 2

32

If you want a true Singleton across classloaders, then you need a common parent to load the class in question, or you need to specify the classloader yourself.

Update: From the comment from @Pshemo below a fair bit of the content in the blog below might come directly from a JavaWorld Article. I've left the blog entry in as it may still help someone, but its worth knowing where the content originally came from.

Original: There is a blog entry that gives you a way to do this" (although I havent tried it!), and it looks fairly reasonable

As requested below here a code snippet from my link above - I do suggest you visit the blog though for the full context:

private static Class getClass(String classname) throws ClassNotFoundException {
    ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
    if(classLoader == null) 
        classLoader = Singleton.class.getClassLoader();
      return (classLoader.loadClass(classname));
}
7
  • 1
    Nice answer! It would be even better if you included a code example of the solution here, with credit to the linked article. Mar 1, 2013 at 13:21
  • 3
    How does this code actually help? How will this be invoked to make sure that the singleton remains a singleton across ClassLoaders? Feb 10, 2014 at 17:25
  • There is one more very good web resource to understand this issue. weblogs.java.net/blog/2005/08/24/… Jun 30, 2014 at 9:39
  • 3
    Are you sure that Sneha is the author of that post (or at least part about class loaders)? From what I see linked post was published 8 JANUARY 2009 but it looks the same as part of quite old article from javaworld published Apr 25, 2003. Post on blog contains even sentence "The preceding method can be used instead of Class.forName()" which seems out of context because there is no Class.forName() method used anywhere earlier, while it makes sense in javaworld since Example 10 uses reflection.
    – Pshemo
    Nov 26, 2014 at 19:30
  • 3
    Here is a Internet Archive Wayback Machine link for the defunct java.net blog URL provided by @AnkitKumar: web.archive.org/web/20051117213814/http://weblogs.java.net:80/…. This author is Kirill Grouchnikov and the title is "How single can your singleton instance be?"
    – buzz3791
    Nov 3, 2017 at 16:05
2

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.

2
  • One bug in there... fixing Nov 22, 2017 at 23:59
  • It will be create a real singleton, but depending on your use case it won't work because you will get Caused by: java.lang.ClassCastException: class somepackage.config.Config cannot be cast to class somepackage.config.Config cause the same class on different classloaders is a different class. So depending on the use case people want one singleton per classloader as the jvm default.
    – deFreitas
    Feb 24, 2023 at 23:03

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