Oracle will remove the internal sun.misc.Unsafe class in Java 9. While most people are probably rather indifferent regarding this change, some other people – mostly library developers – are not. There had been a couple of recent articles in the blogosphere painting a dark picture of what this change will imply:

Maintaining a public API is extremely difficult, especially when the API is as popular as that of the JDK. There is simply (almost) no way to keep people from shooting themselves in the foot. Oracle (and previously Sun) have always declared the sun.* packages as internal and not to be used. Citing from the page called “Why Developers Should Not Write Programs That Call ‘sun’ Packages”:

The sun.* packages are not part of the supported, public interface. A Java program that directly calls into sun.* packages is not guaranteed to work on all Java-compatible platforms. In fact, such a program is not guaranteed to work even in future versions on the same platform.

This disclaimer is just one out of many similar disclaimers and warnings. Whoever goes ahead and uses Unsafe does so … “unsafely“.

What do we learn from this?

The concrete solution to solving this misery is being discussed and still open. A good idea would be to provide a formal and public replacement before removing Unsafe , in order to allow for migration paths of the offending libraries.

But there’s a more important message to all of this. The message is:

When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a thumb

Translated to this situation: The hammer is Unsafe and given that it’s a very poor hammer, but the only option, well, library developers might just not have had much of a choice. They’re not really to blame. In fact, they took a gamble in one of the world’s most stable and backwards compatible software environments (= Java) and they fared extremely well for more than 10 years. Would you have made a different choice in a similar situation? Or, let me ask differently. Was betting on AWT or Swing a much safer choice at the time?

If something can somehow be used by someone, then it will be, no matter how obviously they’re gonna shoot themselves in the foot. The only way to currently write a library / API and really prevent users from accessing internals is to put everything in a single package and make everything package-private. This is what we’ve been doing in jOOQ from the beginning, knowing that jOOQ’s internals are extremely delicate and subject to change all the time.

For more details about this rationale, read also:

However, this solution has a severe drawback for those developing those internals. It’s a hell of a package with almost no structure. That makes development rather difficult.

What would be a better Java, then?

Java has always had an insufficient set of visibilities:

public

protected

default (package-private)

(package-private) private

There should be a fifth visibility that behaves like public but prevents access from “outside” of a module. In a way, that’s between the existing public and default visibilities. Let’s call this the hypothetical module visibility.

In fact, not only should we be able to declare this visibility on a class or member, we should be able to govern module inter-dependencies on a top level, just like the Ceylon language allows us to do:

module org.hibernate "3.0.0.beta" { import ceylon.collection "1.0.0"; import java.base "7"; shared import java.jdbc "7"; }

This reads very similar to OSGi’s bundle system, where bundles can be imported / exported, although the above module syntax is much much simpler than configuring OSGi.

A sophisticated module system would go even further. Not only would it match OSGi’s features, it would also match those of Maven. With the possibility of declaring dependencies on a Java language module basis, we might no longer need the XML-based Maven descriptors, as those could be generated from a simple module syntax (or Gradle, or ant/ivy).

And with all of this in place, classes like sun.misc.Unsafe could be declared as module -visible for only a few JDK modules – not the whole world. I’m sure the number of people abusing reflection to get a hold of those internals would decrease by 50%.

Conclusion

I do hope that in a future Java, this Ceylon language feature (and also Fantom language feature, btw) will be incorporated into the Java language. A nice overview of Java 9 / Jigsaw’s modular encapsulation can be seen in this blog post:

Until then, if you’re an API designer, do know that all disclaimers won’t work. Your internal APIs will be used and abused by your clients. They’re part of your ordinary public API from day 1 after you publish them. It’s not your user’s fault. That’s how things work.