/* * Copyright (c) 2012, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * */ package java.lang.invoke; import java.lang.annotation.*; /** * A field may be annotated as stable if all of its component variables * changes value at most once. * A field's value counts as its component value. * If the field is typed as an array, then all the non-null components * of the array, of depth up to the rank of the field's array type, * also count as component values. * By extension, any variable (either array or field) which has annotated * as stable is called a stable variable, and its non-null or non-zero * value is called a stable value. *
* Since all fields begin with a default value of null for references * (resp., zero for primitives), it follows that this annotation indicates * that the first non-null (resp., non-zero) value stored in the field * will never be changed. *
* If the field is not of an array type, there are no array elements, * then the value indicated as stable is simply the value of the field. * If the dynamic type of the field value is an array but the static type * is not, the components of the array are not regarded as stable. *
* If the field is an array type, then both the field value and * all the components of the field value (if the field value is non-null) * are indicated to be stable. * If the field type is an array type with rank {@code N > 1}, * then each component of the field value (if the field value is non-null), * is regarded as a stable array of rank {@code N-1}. *
* Fields which are declared {@code final} may also be annotated as stable. * Since final fields already behave as stable values, such an annotation * indicates no additional information, unless the type of the field is * an array type. *
* It is (currently) undefined what happens if a field annotated as stable * is given a third value. In practice, if the JVM relies on this annotation * to promote a field reference to a constant, it may be that the Java memory * model would appear to be broken, if such a constant (the second value of the field) * is used as the value of the field even after the field value has changed. */ /* package-private */ @Target(ElementType.FIELD) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @interface Stable { }