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Infer reports resource leaks in C, Objective-C and Java. In general, resources
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are entities such as files, sockets, connections, etc, that need to be closed
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after being used.
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### Resource leak in C
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This is an example of a resource leak in C code:
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```c
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-(void) resource_leak_bug {
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FILE *fp;
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fp=fopen("c:\\test.txt", "r"); // file opened and not closed.
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}
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```
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### Resource leak in Java
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For the remaining of this section, we will consider examples of resource leaks
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in Java code.
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TIP: A common source of bugs is <b>exceptions skipping past close()
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statements</b>. That is the first thing to look for if INFER reports a potential
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resource leak.
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### Basics and Standard Idiom
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Some objects in Java, the <i>resources</i>, are supposed to be closed when you
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stop using them, and failure to close is a <i>resource leak</i>. Resources
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include input streams, output streams, readers, writers, sockets, http
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connections, cursors, and json parsers.
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The standard idiom is
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```java
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// Standard idiom
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Allocate resource
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try {
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do some stuff
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} finally {
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close resource
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}
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```
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or more for example,
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```java
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// Standard Idiom
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public static void foo () throws IOException{
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FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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try {
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fos.write(7);
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} finally {
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fos.close();
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}
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}
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```
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and you should use the standard idiom for the most part, when you don't want to
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return the resource to the surrounding context.
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Sometimes people just leave out close(), and that is a bug, but more typically
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exceptional paths are the root of the problem, as in
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```java
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// leak because of exception
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public static void foo () throws IOException {
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FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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fos.write(7); //DOH! What if exception?
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fos.close();
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}
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```
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where an exception in fos.write will cause execution to skip past the close()
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statement.
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#### Multiple Resources Bugs
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We can deal with multiple resources correctly and simply just by nesting the
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standard idiom.
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```java
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// Two Resources nested
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public static void foo() throws IOException {
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FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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try {
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FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
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try {
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fos.write(fis.read());
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} finally {
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fos.close();
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}
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} finally {
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fis.close();
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}
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}
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```
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Bugs often occur when using multiple resources in other ways because of
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exceptions in close() methods. For example,
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```java
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// Classic Two Resources Bug
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public static void foo() throws IOException {
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FileInputStream fis = null;
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FileOutputStream fos = null;
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try {
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fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
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fos.write(fis.read());
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} finally {
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if (fis!=null) fis.close();
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if (fos!=null) fos.close();
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}
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}
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```
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Here, if there is an exception in the call to fis.close() execution will skip
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past fos.close(); a leak.
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Another way, besides the standard idiom, to deal with this problem is to swallow
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exceptions.
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```java
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// Two Resources Fix 1
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public static void foo() throws IOException {
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FileInputStream fis = null;
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FileOutputStream fos = null;
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try {
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fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"));
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fos.write(fis.read());
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} finally {
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try {
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if (fis!=null) fis.close();
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} catch (Exception e) {}; // Exception swallowing
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if (fos!=null) fos.close();
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}
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}
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```
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You can also swallow the exception on the output stream. Some people prefer not
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to swallow output stream exceptions, and also flush before closing.
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http://code.google.com/p/guava-libraries/issues/detail?id=1118
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Notice that the nested standard idiom does not need the checks for null, which
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are in there in this case to protect against the case when one of the
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allocations throws an exception, in which case one would get a
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NullPointerException.
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### Nested_Allocations
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When a resource allocation is included as an argument to a constructor, if the
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constructor fails it can leave an an unreachable resource that no one can close.
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For example gzipOutputStream = new GZIPOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(out));
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is bad in case the outer constructor, GZIPOutputStream, throws an exception. In
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that case, no one will have a hold of the FileOutputStream and so no one will be
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able to close it.
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In such a case you need to move the allocation the FileOutputStream out of the
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nested position and name it, so you are able to close if anything goes wrong
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during execution of the GZIPOutputStream constructor.
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Here are resources that can throw exceptions i their constructor(s).
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- ObjectInputStream , ObjectOutputStream, PipedInputStream, PipedOutputStream,
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PipedReader, PipedWriter, JarInputStream, JarOutputStream, GZIPInputStream,
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GZIPOutputStream , ZipFile all throw IOException
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- PrintStream throws UnsupportedEncodingException
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The constructors for FileInputStream, FileOutputStream and RandomAccessFile
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throw FileNotFoundException, but these cases are not problematic in the sense
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that their arguments are not resources and so they do not cause the nested
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resource leak.
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### Allocation of JSonParser and Cursor resources
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Some resources are created inside libraries instead of by "new".
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Cursor is an interface, the actual resources are something like SQLiteCursor.
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So, every time you call a function that returns a Cursor object, there is an
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allocation.
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For instance, in the functions from SQLiteDatabase query(…) and rawQuery(…)
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allocate a cursor resource. For SQLiteQueryBuilder, ContentProviderClient,
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ContentResolver. MediaStore and DownloadManager it is only query(…) Cursor
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objects cursor created by these functions need to be closed (i.e.,
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cursor.close()).
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Similarly, JsonParser is an abstract class, and create a resource in functions
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from the class JsonFactory createParser(byte[] data) createParser(byte[] data,
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int offset, int len) createParser(String content) createParser(URL url)
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createParser(File f) JsonParser objects js created by these functions need to be
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closed (jp.close()). On the other hand . JasonParsers gotten from
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createParser(InputStream in) and createParser(Reader r) give you JsonParsers
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that don’t need to be closed. This is because they receive the resource from
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somewhere that will maintain the responsibility to close it.
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### Escaping resources and exceptions
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Sometimes you want to return a resource to the outside, in which case you should
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not close it, but you still need to be careful of exceptions in case control
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skips past the return leaving no one to close. Here is a simple example of a
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positive use of escaping resources.
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```java
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// An escaping resource, shouldn't close
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public BugReportAttachment createAttachment(File reportDirectory, String fileName)
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throws FileNotFoundException {
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File file = new File(reportDirectory, fileName);
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OutputStream stream = new FileOutputStream(file);
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return new BugReportAttachment(Uri.fromFile(file), stream);
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}
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```
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In this case it is intended that an object that wraps `stream` is passed to the
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caller of `createAttachment`. You should certainly not close stream here,
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because it is being passed to the outside.
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But for escaping resources like this you still need to be careful of exceptions.
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For example, in
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```java
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// An escaping resource, and a leak
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public BugReportAttachment createAttachment(File reportDirectory, String fileName)
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throws FileNotFoundException {
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File file = new File(reportDirectory, fileName);
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OutputStream stream = new FileOutputStream(file);
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stream.write(7);
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return new BugReportAttachment(Uri.fromFile(file), stream);
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}
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```
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if stream.write(7) throws an exception, then no one will have a hold of stream,
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and no one will be able to close it; a leak.
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### Java 7's try-with-resources
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**(For use with Java 7 only)**
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Clearly, accounting for the ramifications of all the exceptional cases is
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complicated, and there is a better way in Java 7.
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```java
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// Two Resources Fix 2; via try-with-resources
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public static void foo() throws IOException {
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try (
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FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File("whatever.txt"));
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FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(new File("everwhat.txt"))
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) {
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fos.write(fis.read());
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}
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}
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```
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All the complicated exceptional cases above are (apparently) covered by this
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construct, and the result is much simpler.
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So, if you are trying to fix a potential leak in code with multiples resources
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you can go ahead and try to understand whether the potential leak is real. Or,
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if the code is complex and it is hard to figure out, it would be perfectly
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legitimate to simply convert the code over to try-with-resources if you have
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access to Java 7, so as to save yourself some brain-cycles. You will also end up
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with cleaner code.
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If try-with-resources is so great you should <i>always</i> use it. But you
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shouldn't… Try-with-resources gives resources static scoping, and works via a
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stack discipline. Sometimes, you want a resource to persist beyond scope, as in
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the escaping example above. In an escaping example maybe you could refactor lots
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of code so that try-with-resources applies, and maybe you cannot in a sensible
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way. This just illustrates that, though you might hear people say that
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try-with-resources "solves" the resource problem, it does not. It is very
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useful, but you cannot use it blindly when you see a resource-allocation site.
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