Summary

Define an efficient standard API for stack walking that allows easy filtering of, and lazy access to, the information in stack traces.

Non-Goal

It is not a goal to convert all existing stack walking code in the JDK to use this new API.

Motivation

There is no standard API to traverse selected frames on the execution stack efficiently and access the Class instance of each frame.

There are existing APIs that provide access to a thread's stack:

Throwable::getStackTrace and Thread::getStackTrace return an array of StackTraceElement objects, which contain the class name and method name of each stack-trace element.

SecurityManager::getClassContext is a protected method, which allows a SecurityManager subclass to access the class context.

These APIs require the VM to eagerly capture a snapshot of the entire stack, and they return information representing the entire stack. There is no way to avoid the cost of examining all the frames if the caller is only interested in the top few frames on the stack. Both the Throwable::getStackTrace and Thread::getStackTrace methods return an array of StackTraceElement objects, which contain class names and method names but not the actual Class instances. For applications interested in the entire stack, the specification allows the VM implementation to omit some frames in the stack for performance. In other words, Thread::getStackTrace may return a partial stack trace.

These APIs do not satisfy the use cases that currently depend upon the JDK-internal sun.reflect.Reflection::getCallerClass method, or else their performance overhead is intolerable. These use cases include:

Walk the stack until the immediate caller's class is found. Every JDK caller-sensitive API looks up its immediate caller's class in order to determine the behavior of the API. For example, the Class::forName and ResourceBundle::getBundle methods use the immediate caller's class loader to load a class and a resource bundle respectively. Reflective APIs such as Class::getMethod use the immediate caller's class loader to determine the security checks to be performed.

Walk the stack, filtering out the stack frames of specific implementation classes to find the first non-filtered frame. The java.util.logging API, Log4j, and the Groovy runtime filter intermediate stack frames (typically implementation-specific and reflection frames) to find the caller's class.

Walk the stack to find all protection domains, until the first privileged frame is reached. This is required in order to do permission checks.

Walk the entire stack, possibly with a depth limit. This is required to generate the stack trace of any Throwable object, and to implement the Thread::dumpStack method.

Description

This JEP will define a stack-walking API that allows laziness and frame filtering, supports short walks that stop at a frame matching given criteria, and also supports long walks that traverse the entire stack.

The JVM will be enhanced to provide a flexible mechanism to traverse and materialize the required stack-frame information and allow efficient lazy access to additional stack frames when required. Native JVM transitions will be minimized. The implementation will need to have a stable view of a thread's stack: Returning a stream holding a stack pointer for further manipulation in an uncontrolled manner will not work since, as soon as the stream factory returns, the JVM will be free to reorganize the control stack (via deoptimization, for example). This will influence the API's definition.

The API will specify its behavior when running with a security manager, so that access to the Class objects in stack frames do not compromise security.

The proposal is to define a capability-based StackWalker API to traverse the stack. The security permission check will be performed on each StackWalker object when it is constructed rather than each time it is used. It will define the following methods:

public <T> T walk(Function<Stream<StackFrame>, T> function); public Class<?> getCallerClass();

The walk method opens a sequential stream of StackFrame for the current thread and then applies the function with the StackFrame stream. The spliterator of the stream performs the stack frame traversal in an ordered manner. The Stream<StackFrame> object can only be traversed once and will be closed when the walk method returns. The stream becomes invalid to use once it is closed. For example, to find the first caller filtering a known list of implementation class:

Optional<Class<?>> frame = new StackWalker().walk((s) -> { s.filter(f -> interestingClasses.contains(f.getDeclaringClass())) .map(StackFrame::getDeclaringClass) .findFirst(); });

To snapshot the stack trace of the current thread,

List<StackFrame> stack = new StackWalker().walk((s) -> s.collect(Collectors.toList()));

The getCallerClass() method is for convenience to find the caller's frame and is the replacement for sun.reflect.Reflection.getCallerClass . An equivalent way to get the caller class using the walk method is:

walk((s) -> s.map(StackFrame::declaringClass).skip(2).findFirst());

Alternatives

An alternative API choice would be for the walk method to return Stream<StackFrame> . Such an alternative will not work as the returned stream object may be used in an uncontrolled manner for further manipulation. When a stream of stack frames is created, as soon as the stream factory returns, the JVM is free to reorganize the control stack (via deoptimization, for example) and there is no robust way to detect if the stack has been mutated.