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CHAPTER 1
Serializable
or the
Externalizable
interface. For JavaTM
objects, the serialized form must be able to identify and verify
the JavaTM class from which the contents of the object
were saved and to restore the contents to a new instance. For
serializable objects, the stream includes sufficient information to
restore the fields in the stream to a compatible version of the
class. For Externalizable objects, the class is solely responsible
for the external format of its contents.
Objects to be stored and retrieved frequently refer to other objects. Those other objects must be stored and retrieved at the same time to maintain the relationships between the objects. When an object is stored, all of the objects that are reachable from that object are stored as well.
The goals for serializing JavaTM objects are to:
// Serialize today's date to a file. FileOutputStream f = new FileOutputStream("tmp"); ObjectOutput s = new ObjectOutputStream(f); s.writeObject("Today"); s.writeObject(new Date()); s.flush();First an
OutputStream
, in
this case a FileOutputStream
, is needed to receive the
bytes. Then an ObjectOutputStream
is created that
writes to the FileOutputStream
. Next, the string
"Today" and a Date object are written to the stream. More
generally, objects are written with the writeObject
method and primitives are written to the stream with the methods of
DataOutput
.
The writeObject
method (see Section 2.3, "The writeObject
Method") serializes the specified object and traverses its
references to other objects in the object graph recursively to
create a complete serialized representation of the graph. Within a
stream, the first reference to any object results in the object
being serialized or externalized and the assignment of a handle for
that object. Subsequent references to that object are encoded as
the handle. Using object handles preserves sharing and circular
references that occur naturally in object graphs. Subsequent
references to an object use only the handle allowing a very compact
representation.
Special handling is required for
arrays, enum constants, and objects of type Class
,
ObjectStreamClass
, and String
. Other
objects must implement either the Serializable
or the
Externalizable
interface to be saved in or restored
from a stream.
Primitive data types are written to
the stream with the methods in the DataOutput
interface, such as writeInt
, writeFloat
,
or writeUTF
. Individual bytes and arrays of bytes are
written with the methods of OutputStream
. Except for
serializable fields, primitive data is written to the stream in
block-data records, with each record prefixed by a marker and an
indication of the number of bytes in the record.
ObjectOutputStream
can
be extended to customize the information about classes in the
stream or to replace objects to be serialized. Refer to the
annotateClass
and replaceObject
method
descriptions for details.
// Deserialize a string and date from a file. FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream("tmp"); ObjectInputStream s = new ObjectInputStream(in); String today = (String)s.readObject(); Date date = (Date)s.readObject();First an
InputStream
, in
this case a FileInputStream
, is needed as the source
stream. Then an ObjectInputStream
is created that
reads from the InputStream
. Next, the string
"Today" and a Date object are read from the stream.
Generally, objects are read with the readObject
method
and primitives are read from the stream with the methods of
DataInput
.
The readObject
method deserializes the
next object in the stream and traverses its references to other
objects recursively to create the complete graph of objects
serialized.
Primitive data types are read from
the stream with the methods in the DataInput
interface, such as readInt
, readFloat
, or
readUTF
. Individual bytes and arrays of bytes are read
with the methods of InputStream
. Except for
serializable fields, primitive data is read from block-data
records.
ObjectInputStream
can
be extended to utilize customized information in the stream about
classes or to replace objects that have been deserialized. Refer to
the resolveClass
and resolveObject
method
descriptions for details.
Each object that acts as a container
implements an interface which allows primitives and objects to be
stored in or retrieved from it. These interfaces are the
ObjectOutput
and ObjectInput
interfaces
which:
To be stored in an Object Stream,
each object must implement either the Serializable
or
the Externalizable
interface:
Serializable
class, Object Serialization can automatically save and restore
fields of each class of an object and automatically handle classes
that evolve by adding fields or supertypes. A serializable class
can declare which of its fields are saved or restored, and write
and read optional values and objects.Externalizable
class, Object Serialization delegates to the class complete control
over its external format and how the state of the supertype(s) is
saved and restored.Serializable
class,
serialPersistentFields
. This field must be initialized
with an array of ObjectStreamField
objects that list
the names and types of the serializable fields. The modifiers for
the field are required to be private, static, and final. If the
field's value is null or is otherwise not an instance of
ObjectStreamField[]
, or if the field does not have the
required modifiers, then the behavior is as if the field were not
declared at all.
For example, the following declaration duplicates the default behavior.
class List implements Serializable { List next; private static final ObjectStreamField[] serialPersistentFields = {new ObjectStreamField("next", List.class)};
}By using
serialPersistentFields
to define the Serializable
fields for a class, there no longer is a limitation that a
serializable field must be a field within the current definition of
the Serializable
class. The writeObject
and readObject
methods of the
Serializable
class can map the current implementation
of the class to the serializable fields of the class using the
interface that is described in Section 1.7, "Accessing
Serializable Fields of a Class." Therefore, the fields for
a Serializable
class can change in a later release, as
long as it maintains the mapping back to its Serializable fields
that must remain compatible across release boundaries.
serialPersistentFields
for an inner class (though it
is possible to set it for static member classes). For other
restrictions pertaining to serialization of inner class instances,
see section Section 1.10,
"The Serializable Interface".
@serial
,
@serialField
, and @serialData
, provide a
way to document the serialized form for a Serializable class within
the source code.
@serial
tag should
be placed in the javadoc comment for a default serializable field.
The syntax is as follows: @serial
field-description The optional field-description
describes the meaning of the field and its acceptable values. The
field-description can span multiple lines. When a field is
added after the initial release, a @since tag indicates
the version the field was added. The field-description for
@serial
provides serialization-specific documentation
and is appended to the javadoc comment for the field within the
serialized form documentation.@serialField
tag
is used to document an ObjectStreamField
component of
a serialPersistentFields
array. One of these tags
should be used for each ObjectStreamField
component.
The syntax is as follows: @serialField
field-name
field-type field-description@serialData
tag
describes the sequences and types of data written or read. The tag
describes the sequence and type of optional data written by
writeObject
or all data written by the
Externalizable.writeExternal
method. The syntax is as
follows: @serialData
data-description When a class is declared
Serializable, the serializable state of the object is defined by
serializable fields (by name and type) plus optional data. Optional
data can only be written explicitly by the writeObject
method of a Serializable
class. Optional data can be
read by the Serializable
class'
readObject
method or serialization will skip unread
optional data.
When a class is declared Externalizable, the data that is written to the stream by the class itself defines the serialized state. The class must specify the order, types, and meaning of each datum that is written to the stream. The class must handle its own evolution, so that it can continue to read data written by and write data that can be read by previous versions. The class must coordinate with the superclass when saving and restoring data. The location of the superclasses data in the stream must be specified.
The designer of a Serializable class must ensure that the information saved for the class is appropriate for persistence and follows the serialization-specified rules for interoperability and evolution. Class evolution is explained in greater detail in Chapter 5, "Versioning of Serializable Objects."
Serializable
interface and do no further
customization. The serializable fields are mapped to the
corresponding fields of the class and values are either written to
the stream from those fields or are read in and assigned
respectively. If the class provides writeObject
and
readObject
methods, the default mechanism can be
invoked by calling defaultWriteObject
and
defaultReadObject
. When the writeObject
and readObject
methods are implemented, the class has
an opportunity to modify the serializable field values before they
are written or after they are read.
When the default mechanism cannot be
used, the serializable class can use the putFields
method of ObjectOutputStream
to put the values for the
serializable fields into the stream. The writeFields
method of ObjectOutputStream
puts the values in the
correct order, then writes them to the stream using the existing
protocol for serialization. Correspondingly, the
readFields
method of ObjectInputStream
reads the values from the stream and makes them available to the
class by name in any order. See Section 2.2, "The
ObjectOutputStream.PutField Class" and Section 3.2, "The
ObjectInputStream.GetField Class." for a detailed
description of the Serializable Fields API.
ObjectOutput
interface
provides an abstract, stream-based interface to object storage. It
extends the DataOutput interface so those methods can be used for
writing primitive data types. Objects that implement this interface
can be used to store primitives and objects.
package java.io; public interface ObjectOutput extends DataOutput { public void writeObject(Object obj) throws IOException; public void write(int b) throws IOException; public void write(byte b[]) throws IOException; public void write(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException; public void flush() throws IOException; public void close() throws IOException; }
The
writeObject
method is used to write an object. The
exceptions thrown reflect errors while accessing the object or its
fields, or exceptions that occur in writing to storage. If any
exception is thrown, the underlying storage may be corrupted. If
this occurs, refer to the object that is implementing this
interface for more information.
ObjectInput
interface
provides an abstract stream based interface to object retrieval. It
extends the DataInput
interface so those methods for
reading primitive data types are accessible in this interface.
package java.io; public interface ObjectInput extends DataInput { public Object readObject() throws ClassNotFoundException, IOException; public int read() throws IOException; public int read(byte b[]) throws IOException; public int read(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException; public long skip(long n) throws IOException; public int available() throws IOException; public void close() throws IOException; }The
readObject
method is
used to read and return an object. The exceptions thrown reflect
errors while accessing the objects or its fields or exceptions that
occur in reading from the storage. If any exception is thrown, the
underlying storage may be corrupted. If this occurs, refer to the
object implementing this interface for additional information.
Serializable
interface is defined to
identify classes which implement the serializable protocol:
package java.io; public interface Serializable {};A Serializable class must do the following:
serialPersistentFields
member to explicitly declare
them serializable or use the transient keyword to denote
nonserializable fields.)writeObject
method
to control what information is saved or to append additional
information to the streamreadObject
method
either to read the information written by the corresponding
writeObject
method or to update the state of the
object after it has been restoredwriteReplace
method
to allow a class to nominate a replacement object to be written to
the streamreadResolve
method
to allow a class to designate a replacement object for the object
just read from the streamObjectOutputStream
and
ObjectInputStream
allow the serializable classes on
which they operate to evolve (allow changes to the classes that are
compatible with the earlier versions of the classes). See Section 5.5, "Compatible
JavaTM Type Evolution" for information about the
mechanism which is used to allow compatible changes.
javac
(or other
JavaTM compilers) to implement inner classes are
implementation dependent and may vary between compilers;
differences in such fields can disrupt compatibility as well as
result in conflicting default serialVersionUID
values.
The names assigned to local and anonymous inner classes are also
implementation dependent and may differ between compilers. Since
inner classes cannot declare static members other than compile-time
constant fields, they cannot use the
serialPersistentFields
mechanism to designate
serializable fields. Finally, because inner classes associated with
outer instances do not have zero-argument constructors
(constructors of such inner classes implicitly accept the enclosing
instance as a prepended parameter), they cannot implement
Externalizable
. None of the issues listed above,
however, apply to static member classes.
Externalizable
interface is defined as follows:
package java.io; public interface Externalizable extends Serializable { public void writeExternal(ObjectOutput out) throws IOException; public void readExternal(ObjectInput in) throws IOException, java.lang.ClassNotFoundException; }The class of an Externalizable object must do the following:
java.io.Externalizable
interfacewriteExternal
method to save the state of the
objectreadExternal
method to read the data written by the
writeExternal
method from the stream and restore the
state of the objectwriteExternal
and readExternal
methods be solely responsible for the
format, if an externally defined format is writtenwriteExternal
and
readExternal
methods are public and raise the risk
that a client may be able to write or read information in the
object other than by using its methods and fields. These methods
must be used only when the information held by the object is not
sensitive or when exposing it does not present a security risk.
Externalizable
interface mechanism cannot be used for
inner classes and they should implement the
Serializable
interface, if they must be serialized.
Several limitations exist for serializable inner classes as well,
however; see Section 1.10,
"The Serializable Interface", for a full enumeration.
readResolve
method
to allow a class to designate a replacement object for the object
just read from the streamObjectOutputStream
writes
the value returned by the enum constant's name
method. To deserialize an enum constant,
ObjectInputStream
reads the constant name from the
stream; the deserialized constant is then obtained by calling the
java.lang.Enum.valueOf
method, passing the
constant's enum type along with the received constant name as
arguments. Like other serializable or externalizable objects, enum
constants can function as the targets of back references appearing
subsequently in the serialization stream.
The process by which enum constants
are serialized cannot be customized: any class-specific
writeObject
, readObject
,
readObjectNoData
, writeReplace
, and
readResolve
methods defined by enum types are ignored
during serialization and deserialization. Similarly, any
serialPersistentFields
or
serialVersionUID
field declarations are also
ignored--all enum types have a fixed serialVersionUID
of 0L
. Documenting serializable fields and data for
enum types is unnecessary, since there is no variation in the type
of data sent.
The easiest technique is to mark fields that contain sensitive data as private transient. Transient fields are not persistent and will not be saved by any persistence mechanism. Marking the field will prevent the state from appearing in the stream and from being restored during deserialization. Since writing and reading (of private fields) cannot be superseded outside of the class, the transient fields of the class are safe.
Particularly sensitive classes
should not be serialized at all. To accomplish this, the object
should not implement either the Serializable
or the
Externalizable
interface.
Some classes may find it beneficial
to allow writing and reading but specifically handle and revalidate
the state as it is deserialized. The class should implement
writeObject
and readObject
methods to
save and restore only the appropriate state. If access should be
denied, throwing a NotSerializableException
will
prevent further access.