Is there a penalty for calling newInstance() or is it the same mechanism underneath? How much overhead if any does newInstance() have over the new keyword* ?
*: Discounting the fact that newInstance() implies using reflection.
In a real world test, creating 18129 instances of a class via "Constuctor.newInstance" passing in 10 arguments -vs- creating the instances via "new" the program took no measurable difference in time.
This wasn't any sort of micro benchmark.
This is with JDK 1.6.0_12 on Windows 7 x86 beta.
Given that Constructor.newInstance is going to be very simlilar to Class.forName.newInstance I would say that the overhead is hardly anything given the functionality that you can get using newInstance over new.
As always you should test it yourself to see.
Be wary of microbenchmarks, but I found this blog entry where someone found that new
was about twice as fast as newInstance
with JDK 1.4. It sounds like there is a difference, and as expected, reflection is slower. However, it sounds like the difference may not be a dealbreaker, depending on the frequency of new object instances vs how much computation is being done.
There's a difference - in 10 times. Absolute difference is tiny but if your write low latency application cumulative CPU time lost might be significant.
long start, end;
int X = 10000000;
ArrayList l = new ArrayList(X);
start = System.nanoTime();
for(int i = 0; i < X; i++){
String.class.newInstance();
}
end = System.nanoTime();
log("T: ", (end - start)/X);
l.clear();
start = System.nanoTime();
for(int i = 0; i < X; i++){
new String();
}
end = System.nanoTime();
log("T: ", (end - start)/X);
Output:
T: 105
T: 11
Tested on Xeon W3565 @ 3.2Ghz, Java 1.6