CONTENTS | PREV | NEXT | Java Object Serialization Specification version 6.0 |
CHAPTER 6 |
Topics:
The stream format satisfies the following design goals:
A class object is represented by the following:
An ObjectStreamClass
object for a Class that is not
a dynamic proxy class is represented by the following:
writeObject
method, and whether the
class is serializable, externalizable, or an enum typeLjava/lang/Object;
") as specified in The Java
Virtual Machine Specification.annotateClass
methodObjectStreamClass
of its supertype (null if the
superclass is not serializable)An ObjectStreamClass
object for a dynamic proxy
class is represented by the following:
getInterfaces
method on the Class object.annotateProxyClass
method.java.lang.reflect.Proxy
.String
objects consists of length information followed
by the contents of the string encoded in modified UTF-8. The
modified UTF-8 encoding is the same as used in the Java Virtual
Machine and in the java.io.DataInput
and
DataOutput
interfaces; it differs from standard UTF-8
in the representation of supplementary characters and of the null
character. The form of the length information depends on the length
of the string in modified UTF-8 encoding. If the modified UTF-8
encoding of the given String
is less than 65536 bytes
in length, the length is written as 2 bytes representing an
unsigned 16-bit integer. Starting with the Java 2 platform,
Standard Edition, v1.3, if the length of the string in modified
UTF-8 encoding is 65536 bytes or more, the length is written in 8
bytes representing a signed 64-bit integer. The typecode preceding
the String
in the serialization stream indicates which
format was used to write the String
.
Arrays are represented by the following:
ObjectStreamClass
object.Enum constants are represented by the following:
New objects in the stream are represented by the following:
writeObject
/readObject
methods, there may
be optional objects and/or block-data records of primitive types
written by the writeObject
method followed by an
endBlockData
code.All primitive data written by classes is buffered and wrapped in
block-data records, regardless if the data is written to the stream
within a writeObject
method or written directly to the
stream from outside a writeObject
method. This data
can only be read by the corresponding readObject
methods or be read directly from the stream. Objects written by the
writeObject
method terminate any previous block-data
record and are written either as regular objects or null or back
references, as appropriate. The block-data records allow error
recovery to discard any optional data. When called from within a
class, the stream can discard any data or objects until the
endBlockData
.
ObjectOutputStream.useProtocolVersion
takes as a
parameter the protocol version to use to write the serialization
stream.
The Stream Protocol Versions are as follows:
ObjectStreamConstants.PROTOCOL_VERSION_1
: Indicates
the initial stream format.
ObjectStreamConstants.PROTOCOL_VERSION_2
: Indicates
the new external data format. Primitive data is written in block
data mode and is terminated with TC_ENDBLOCKDATA.
Block data boundaries have been standardized. Primitive data written in block data mode is normalized to not exceed 1024 byte chunks. The benefit of this change was to tighten the specification of serialized data format within the stream. This change is fully backward and forward compatible.
PROTOCOL_VERSION_2
.
JDK 1.1 defaults to
writing PROTOCOL_VERSION_1
.
JDK 1.1.7 and greater can read both versions.
Releases prior to JDK 1.1.7 can only read
PROTOCOL_VERSION_1
.
The table below contains the grammar for the stream format. Nonterminal symbols are shown in italics. Terminal symbols in a fixed width font. Definitions of nonterminals are followed by a ":". The definition is followed by one or more alternatives, each on a separate line. The following table describes the notation:
Note that the symbol (utf) is used to designate a string written using 2-byte length information, and (long-utf) is used to designate a string written using 8-byte length information. For details, refer to Section 6.2, "Stream Elements".
A Serialized stream is represented by any stream satisfying the stream rule.
stream: magic version contents
contents: content contents content
content: object blockdata
object: newObject newClass newArray newString newEnum newClassDesc prevObject nullReference exception TC_RESET
newClass: TC_CLASS classDesc newHandle
classDesc: newClassDesc nullReference (ClassDesc)prevObject // an object required to be of type // ClassDesc
superClassDesc: classDesc
newClassDesc: TC_CLASSDESC className serialVersionUID newHandle classDescInfo TC_PROXYCLASSDESC newHandle proxyClassDescInfo
classDescInfo: classDescFlags fields classAnnotation superClassDesc
className: (utf)
serialVersionUID: (long)
classDescFlags: (byte) // Defined in Terminal Symbols and // Constants
proxyClassDescInfo: (int)<count> proxyInterfaceName[count] classAnnotation superClassDesc
proxyInterfaceName:
(utf)
fields: (short)<count> fieldDesc[count]
fieldDesc: primitiveDesc objectDesc
primitiveDesc: prim_typecode fieldName
objectDesc: obj_typecode fieldName className1
fieldName: (utf)
className1: (String)object // String containing the field's type, // in field descriptor format
classAnnotation: endBlockData contents endBlockData // contents written by annotateClass
prim_typecode: `B' // byte `C' // char `D' // double `F' // float `I' // integer `J' // long `S' // short `Z' // boolean
obj_typecode: `[` // array `L' // object
newArray: TC_ARRAY classDesc newHandle (int)<size> values[size]
newObject: TC_OBJECT classDesc newHandle classdata[] // data for each class
classdata: nowrclass // SC_SERIALIZABLE & classDescFlag && // !(SC_WRITE_METHOD & classDescFlags) wrclass objectAnnotation // SC_SERIALIZABLE & classDescFlag && // SC_WRITE_METHOD & classDescFlags externalContents // SC_EXTERNALIZABLE & classDescFlag && // !(SC_BLOCKDATA & classDescFlags objectAnnotation // SC_EXTERNALIZABLE & classDescFlag&& // SC_BLOCKDATA & classDescFlags
nowrclass: values // fields in order of class descriptor
wrclass: nowrclass
objectAnnotation: endBlockData contents endBlockData // contents written by writeObject // or writeExternal PROTOCOL_VERSION_2.
blockdata: blockdatashort blockdatalong
blockdatashort: TC_BLOCKDATA (unsigned byte)<size> (byte)[size]
blockdatalong: TC_BLOCKDATALONG (int)<size> (byte)[size]
endBlockData : TC_ENDBLOCKDATA
externalContent: // Only parseable by readExternal ( bytes) // primitive data object
externalContents: // externalContent written by externalContent // writeExternal in PROTOCOL_VERSION_1. externalContents externalContent
newString: TC_STRING newHandle (utf) TC_LONGSTRING newHandle (long-utf)
newEnum: TC_ENUM classDesc newHandle enumConstantName
enumConstantName: (String)object
prevObject TC_REFERENCE (int)handle
nullReference TC_NULL
exception: TC_EXCEPTION reset (Throwable)object reset
magic: STREAM_MAGIC
version STREAM_VERSION
values: // The size and types are described by the // classDesc for the current object
newHandle: // The next number in sequence is assigned // to the object being serialized or deserialized
reset: // The set of known objects is discarded // so the objects of the exception do not // overlap with the previously sent objects // or with objects that may be sent after // the exception
java.io.ObjectStreamConstants
define the terminal and
constant values expected in a stream.
final static short STREAM_MAGIC = (short)0xaced; final static short STREAM_VERSION = 5; final static byte TC_NULL = (byte)0x70; final static byte TC_REFERENCE = (byte)0x71; final static byte TC_CLASSDESC = (byte)0x72; final static byte TC_OBJECT = (byte)0x73; final static byte TC_STRING = (byte)0x74; final static byte TC_ARRAY = (byte)0x75; final static byte TC_CLASS = (byte)0x76; final static byte TC_BLOCKDATA = (byte)0x77; final static byte TC_ENDBLOCKDATA = (byte)0x78; final static byte TC_RESET = (byte)0x79; final static byte TC_BLOCKDATALONG = (byte)0x7A; final static byte TC_EXCEPTION = (byte)0x7B; final static byte TC_LONGSTRING = (byte) 0x7C; final static byte TC_PROXYCLASSDESC = (byte) 0x7D; final static byte TC_ENUM = (byte) 0x7E; final static int baseWireHandle = 0x7E0000;The flag byte classDescFlags may include values of
final static byte SC_WRITE_METHOD = 0x01; //if SC_SERIALIZABLE final static byte SC_BLOCK_DATA = 0x08; //if SC_EXTERNALIZABLE final static byte SC_SERIALIZABLE = 0x02; final static byte SC_EXTERNALIZABLE = 0x04; final static byte SC_ENUM = 0x10;The flag SC_WRITE_METHOD is set if the Serializable class writing the stream had a
writeObject
method that may have
written additional data to the stream. In this case a
TC_ENDBLOCKDATA marker is always expected to terminate the
data for that class.
The flag
SC_BLOCKDATA is set if the Externalizable
class is written into the stream using
STREAM_PROTOCOL_2
. By default, this is the protocol
used to write Externalizable
objects into the stream
in JDK 1.2. JDK 1.1 writes STREAM_PROTOCOL_1.
The flag
SC_SERIALIZABLE is set if the class that wrote the stream
extended java.io.Serializable
but not
java.io.Externalizable
, the class reading the stream
must also extend java.io.Serializable
and the default
serialization mechanism is to be used.
The flag
SC_EXTERNALIZABLE is set if the class that wrote the
stream extended java.io.Externalizable
, the class
reading the data must also extend Externalizable
and
the data will be read using its writeExternal
and
readExternal
methods.
The flag SC_ENUM is set if the class that wrote the stream was an enum type. The receiver's corresponding class must also be an enum type. Data for constants of the enum type will be written and read as described in Section 1.12, "Serialization of Enum Constants".
class List implements java.io.Serializable { int value; List next; public static void main(String[] args) { try { List list1 = new List(); List list2 = new List(); list1.value = 17; list1.next = list2; list2.value = 19; list2.next = null; ByteArrayOutputStream o = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); ObjectOutputStream out = new ObjectOutputStream(o); out.writeObject(list1); out.writeObject(list2); out.flush(); ... } catch (Exception ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } } }The resulting stream contains:
00: ac ed 00 05 73 72 00 04 4c 69 73 74 69 c8 8a 15 >....sr..Listi...<
10: 40 16 ae 68 02 00 02 49 00 05 76 61 6c 75 65 4c >Z......I..valueL<
20: 00 04 6e 65 78 74 74 00 06 4c 4c 69 73 74 3b 78 >..nextt..LList;x<
30: 70 00 00 00 11 73 71 00 7e 00 00 00 00 00 13 70 >p....sq.~......p<
40: 71 00 7e 00 03 >q.~..<