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The Invocation API allows software vendors to load the Java VM into an arbitrary native application. Vendors can deliver Java-enabled applications without having to link with the Java VM source code.
This chapter begins with an overview of the Invocation API. This is followed by reference pages for all Invocation API functions. It covers the following topics:
The following code example illustrates how to use
functions in the Invocation API. In this example, the C++ code
creates a Java VM and invokes a static method, called Main.test
. For clarity, we omit error checking.
#include <jni.h> /* where everything is defined */ ... JavaVM *jvm; /* denotes a Java VM */ JNIEnv *env; /* pointer to native method interface */ JavaVMInitArgs vm_args; /* JDK/JRE 6 VM initialization arguments */ JavaVMOption* options = new JavaVMOption[1]; options[0].optionString = "-Djava.class.path=/usr/lib/java"; vm_args.version = JNI_VERSION_1_6; vm_args.nOptions = 1; vm_args.options = options; vm_args.ignoreUnrecognized = false; /* load and initialize a Java VM, return a JNI interface * pointer in env */ JNI_CreateJavaVM(&jvm, (void**)&env, &vm_args); delete options; /* invoke the Main.test method using the JNI */ jclass cls = env->FindClass("Main"); jmethodID mid = env->GetStaticMethodID(cls, "test", "(I)V"); env->CallStaticVoidMethod(cls, mid, 100); /* We are done. */ jvm->DestroyJavaVM();
This example uses three functions in the API. The Invocation API allows a native application to use the JNI interface pointer to access VM features. The design is similar to Netscape’s JRI Embedding Interface.
The JNI_CreateJavaVM()
function loads and initializes a Java VM and returns a pointer to
the JNI interface pointer. The thread that called JNI_CreateJavaVM()
is considered to be the
main thread.
The JNI interface pointer (JNIEnv
) is valid only in the current thread. Should
another thread need to access the Java VM, it must first call
AttachCurrentThread()
to attach itself
to the VM and obtain a JNI interface pointer. Once attached to the
VM, a native thread works just like an ordinary Java thread running
inside a native method. The native thread remains attached to the
VM until it calls DetachCurrentThread()
to detach itself.
The attached thread should have enough stack space
to perform a reasonable amount of work. The allocation of stack
space per thread is operating system-specific. For example, using
pthreads, the stack size can be specified in the pthread_attr_t
argument to pthread_create
.
A native thread attached to the VM must call
DetachCurrentThread()
to detach itself before exiting.
A thread cannot detach itself if there are Java methods on the call
stack.
The JNI_DestroyJavaVM()
function
unloads a Java VM.
The VM waits until the
current thread is the only non-daemon user thread before it
actually unloads. User threads include both Java threads and
attached native threads. This restriction exists because a Java
thread or attached native thread may be holding system resources,
such as locks, windows, and so on. The VM
cannot automatically free these resources. By
restricting the
current thread to be the only running thread when the VM is
unloaded, the burden of releasing system resources held by
arbitrary threads is on the programmer.
Once a native library is loaded, it is visible from all class loaders. Therefore two classes in different class loaders may link with the same native method. This leads to two problems:
Each class loader manages its own set of
native libraries. The same JNI native library cannot be
loaded into more than one class loader. Doing so causes
UnsatisfiedLinkError
to be thrown. For example,
System.loadLibrary
throws an
UnsatisfiedLinkError
when used to load a native
library into two class loaders. The benefits of the new approach
are:
To facilitate version control and resource management, JNI libraries optionally export the following two functions:
jint JNI_OnLoad(JavaVM *vm, void *reserved);
JNI_OnLoad
when the native library is
loaded (for example, through System.loadLibrary
).
JNI_OnLoad
must return the JNI version needed by the
native library.
In order to use any of the new JNI functions, a native library must
export a JNI_OnLoad
function that returns JNI_VERSION_1_2
.
If the native library does not export a JNI_OnLoad
function,
the VM assumes that the library only requires JNI version JNI_VERSION_1_1
.
If the VM does not recognize the version number returned by JNI_OnLoad
,
the VM will unload the library and act as if the library was
+never loaded.
JNI_Onload_L(JavaVM *vm, void *reserved);
If a library L is statically linked, then upon the first invocation of
System.loadLibrary("L")
or equivalent API, a
JNI_OnLoad_L
function will be invoked with the same arguments and
expected return value as specified for the JNI_OnLoad
function.
JNI_OnLoad_L
must return the JNI version needed by
the native library. This version must be JNI_VERSION_1_8
or later.
If the VM does not recognize the version number returned by JNI_OnLoad_L
,
the VM will act as if the library was never loaded.
Exported from native libraries that contain native method implementation.
void JNI_OnUnload(JavaVM *vm, void *reserved);
JNI_OnUnload
when the class loader
containing the native library is garbage collected. This function
can be used to perform cleanup operations. Because this function is
called in an unknown context (such as from a finalizer), the
programmer should be conservative on using Java VM services, and
refrain from arbitrary Java call-backs.
Note that JNI_OnLoad
and JNI_OnUnload
are two functions optionally supplied by JNI libraries, not
exported from the VM.
JNI_OnUnload_L(JavaVM *vm, void *reserved);
When the class loader containing a statically linked native library L is
garbage collected, the VM will invoke the JNI_OnUnload_L
function of the
library if such a function is exported. This function can be used to perform
cleanup operations. Because this function is called in an unknown context
(such as from a finalizer), the programmer should be conservative on using
Java VM services, and refrain from arbitrary Java call-backs.
dlopen
on a UNIX(R)
system, does not fully accomplish this goal. A native function is
normally called from the Java class loader to perform a call to the
host operating system that will load the library into memory and
return a handle to the native library. This handle will be stored
and used in subsequent searches for native library entry points. The
Java native class loader will complete the load process once the
handle is successfully returned to register the library.
The JavaVM
type is a
pointer to the Invocation API function table. The following code
example shows this function table.
typedef const struct JNIInvokeInterface *JavaVM; const struct JNIInvokeInterface ... = { NULL, NULL, NULL, DestroyJavaVM, AttachCurrentThread, DetachCurrentThread, GetEnv, AttachCurrentThreadAsDaemon };
Note that three Invocation API functions,
JNI_GetDefaultJavaVMInitArgs()
,
JNI_GetCreatedJavaVMs()
, and JNI_CreateJavaVM()
, are not part of the JavaVM
function table. These functions can be used without a preexisting
JavaVM
structure.
jint
JNI_GetDefaultJavaVMInitArgs(void *vm_args);
Returns a default configuration for the Java VM. Before calling this function, native code must set the vm_args->version field to the JNI version it expects the VM to support. After this function returns, vm_args->version will be set to the actual JNI version the VM supports.
Exported from the native library that implements the Java virtual machine.
vm_args
: a pointer to a
JavaVMInitArgs
structure in to which the
default arguments are filled.
Returns JNI_OK
if the
requested version is supported; returns a JNI error code (a
negative number) if the requested version is not supported.
jint
JNI_GetCreatedJavaVMs(JavaVM **vmBuf, jsize bufLen, jsize
*nVMs);
Returns all Java VMs that have been created. Pointers to VMs are written in the buffer vmBuf in the order they are created. At most bufLen number of entries will be written. The total number of created VMs is returned in *nVMs.
Creation of multiple VMs in a single process is not supported.
Exported from the native library that implements the Java virtual machine.
vmBuf
: pointer to the
buffer where the VM structures will be placed.
bufLen
: the length of
the buffer.
nVMs
: a pointer to an
integer.
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
jint JNI_CreateJavaVM(JavaVM
**p_vm, void **p_env, void *vm_args);
Loads and initializes a Java VM. The current
thread becomes the main thread. Sets the env
argument to the JNI interface pointer of the
main thread.
The second argument to JNI_CreateJavaVM
is always a pointer to JNIEnv *
, while the third argument is a pointer to a
JavaVMInitArgs
structure which uses
option strings to encode arbitrary VM start up options:
typedef struct JavaVMInitArgs { jint version; jint nOptions; JavaVMOption *options; jboolean ignoreUnrecognized; } JavaVMInitArgs;
The options
field is an array of the following type:
typedef struct JavaVMOption { char *optionString; /* the option as a string in the default platform encoding */ void *extraInfo; } JavaVMOption;
The size of the array is denoted by the nOptions field in
JavaVMInitArgs
. If ignoreUnrecognized
is
JNI_TRUE
, JNI_CreateJavaVM
ignore all
unrecognized option strings that begin with "-X
" or
"_
". If ignoreUnrecognized
is
JNI_FALSE
, JNI_CreateJavaVM
returns
JNI_ERR
as soon as it encounters any unrecognized
option strings. All Java VMs must recognize the following set of
standard options:
optionString | meaning |
---|---|
-D<name>=<value> |
Set a system property |
-verbose[:class|gc|jni] |
Enable verbose output. The options can be followed by a
comma-separated list of names indicating what kind of messages will
be printed by the VM. For example, "-verbose:gc,class "
instructs the VM to print GC and class loading related messages.
Standard names include: gc , class , and
jni . All nonstandard (VM-specific) names must begin
with "X ". |
vfprintf |
extraInfo is a pointer to the
vfprintf hook. |
exit |
extraInfo is a pointer to the exit
hook. |
abort |
extraInfo is a pointer to the abort
hook. |
In addition, each VM implementation may support its own set of
non-standard option strings. Non-standard option names must begin
with "-X
" or an underscore ("_
"). For
example, the JDK/JRE supports -Xms
and
-Xmx
options to allow programmers specify the initial
and maximum heap size. Options that begin with "-X
"
are accessible from the "java
" command line.
Here is the example code that creates a Java VM in the JDK/JRE:
JavaVMInitArgs vm_args; JavaVMOption options[4]; options[0].optionString = "-Djava.compiler=NONE"; /* disable JIT */ options[1].optionString = "-Djava.class.path=c:\myclasses"; /* user classes */ options[2].optionString = "-Djava.library.path=c:\mylibs"; /* set native library path */ options[3].optionString = "-verbose:jni"; /* print JNI-related messages */ vm_args.version = JNI_VERSION_1_2; vm_args.options = options; vm_args.nOptions = 4; vm_args.ignoreUnrecognized = TRUE; /* Note that in the JDK/JRE, there is no longer any need to call * JNI_GetDefaultJavaVMInitArgs. */ res = JNI_CreateJavaVM(&vm, (void **)&env, &vm_args); if (res < 0) ...
Exported from the native library that implements the Java virtual machine.
p_vm
: pointer to the
location where the resulting VM structure will be placed.
p_env
: pointer to the
location where the JNI interface pointer for the main thread will
be placed.
vm_args
: Java VM
initialization arguments.
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
jint DestroyJavaVM(JavaVM *vm);
Unloads a Java VM and reclaims its resources.
Any thread, whether attached or not, can invoke this function. If the current thread is attached, the VM waits until the current thread is the only non-daemon user-level Java thread. If the current thread is not attached, the VM attaches the current thread and then waits until the current thread is the only non-daemon user-level thread.
Index 3 in the JavaVM interface function table.
vm
: the Java VM that
will be destroyed.
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
Unloading of the VM is not supported.
jint
AttachCurrentThread(JavaVM *vm, void **p_env, void
*thr_args);
Attaches the current thread to a Java VM. Returns
a JNI interface pointer in the JNIEnv
argument.
Trying to attach a thread that is already attached is a no-op.
A native thread cannot be attached simultaneously to two Java VMs.
When a thread is attached to the VM, the context class loader is the bootstrap loader.
Index 4 in the JavaVM interface function table.
vm
: the VM to which the
current thread will be attached.
p_env
: pointer to the
location where the JNI interface pointer of the current thread will
be placed.
thr_args
: can be NULL
or a pointer to a JavaVMAttachArgs
structure to specify additional information:
The second argument to
AttachCurrentThread
is always a pointer to
JNIEnv
. The third argument to
AttachCurrentThread
was reserved, and should be set to
NULL
.
You pass a pointer to the following structure to specify additional information:
typedef struct JavaVMAttachArgs { jint version; char *name; /* the name of the thread as a modified UTF-8 string, or NULL */ jobject group; /* global ref of a ThreadGroup object, or NULL */ } JavaVMAttachArgs
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
jint AttachCurrentThreadAsDaemon(JavaVM* vm, void** penv, void* args);
Same semantics as AttachCurrentThread, but the newly-created java.lang.Thread instance is a daemon.
If the thread has already been attached via either AttachCurrentThread or AttachCurrentThreadAsDaemon, this routine simply sets the value pointed to by penv to the JNIEnv of the current thread. In this case neither AttachCurrentThread nor this routine have any effect on the daemon status of the thread.
Index 7 in the JavaVM interface function table.
vm: the virtual machine instance to which the current thread will be attached.
penv: a pointer to the location in which the JNIEnv interface pointer for the current thread will be placed.
args: a pointer to a JavaVMAttachArgs structure.
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
None.
jint
DetachCurrentThread(JavaVM *vm);
Detaches the current thread from a Java VM. All Java monitors held by this thread are released. All Java threads waiting for this thread to die are notified.
The main thread can be detached from the VM.Index 5 in the JavaVM interface function table.
vm
: the VM from which
the current thread will be detached.
Returns JNI_OK
on
success; returns a suitable JNI error code (a negative number) on
failure.
jint GetEnv(JavaVM *vm, void **env, jint
version);
Index 6 in the JavaVM interface function table.
vm
: The virtual machine instance from
which the interface will be retrieved.env
: pointer to the location where the
JNI interface pointer for the current thread will be placed.version
: The requested JNI
version.If the current thread is not attached to the VM, sets
*env
to NULL
, and returns
JNI_EDETACHED
. If the specified version is not
supported, sets *env
to NULL
, and returns
JNI_EVERSION
. Otherwise, sets *env
to the
appropriate interface, and returns JNI_OK
.
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