001/* 002 * Copyright (C) 2008 The Guava Authors 003 * 004 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 005 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 006 * You may obtain a copy of the License at 007 * 008 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 009 * 010 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 011 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 012 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 013 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 014 * limitations under the License. 015 */ 016 017package com.google.common.collect; 018 019import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull; 020import static com.google.common.collect.CollectPreconditions.checkNonnegative; 021import static com.google.common.collect.ObjectArrays.checkElementsNotNull; 022 023import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible; 024import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible; 025import com.google.common.annotations.J2ktIncompatible; 026import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue; 027import com.google.errorprone.annotations.DoNotCall; 028import com.google.errorprone.annotations.DoNotMock; 029import java.io.InvalidObjectException; 030import java.io.ObjectInputStream; 031import java.io.Serializable; 032import java.util.AbstractCollection; 033import java.util.Arrays; 034import java.util.Collection; 035import java.util.Collections; 036import java.util.HashSet; 037import java.util.Iterator; 038import java.util.List; 039import javax.annotation.CheckForNull; 040import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable; 041 042/** 043 * A {@link Collection} whose contents will never change, and which offers a few additional 044 * guarantees detailed below. 045 * 046 * <p><b>Warning:</b> avoid <i>direct</i> usage of {@link ImmutableCollection} as a type (just as 047 * with {@link Collection} itself). Prefer subtypes such as {@link ImmutableSet} or {@link 048 * ImmutableList}, which have well-defined {@link #equals} semantics, thus avoiding a common source 049 * of bugs and confusion. 050 * 051 * <h3>About <i>all</i> {@code Immutable-} collections</h3> 052 * 053 * <p>The remainder of this documentation applies to every public {@code Immutable-} type in this 054 * package, whether it is a subtype of {@code ImmutableCollection} or not. 055 * 056 * <h4>Guarantees</h4> 057 * 058 * <p>Each makes the following guarantees: 059 * 060 * <ul> 061 * <li><b>Shallow immutability.</b> Elements can never be added, removed or replaced in this 062 * collection. This is a stronger guarantee than that of {@link 063 * Collections#unmodifiableCollection}, whose contents change whenever the wrapped collection 064 * is modified. 065 * <li><b>Null-hostility.</b> This collection will never contain a null element. 066 * <li><b>Deterministic iteration.</b> The iteration order is always well-defined, depending on 067 * how the collection was created. Typically this is insertion order unless an explicit 068 * ordering is otherwise specified (e.g. {@link ImmutableSortedSet#naturalOrder}). See the 069 * appropriate factory method for details. View collections such as {@link 070 * ImmutableMultiset#elementSet} iterate in the same order as the parent, except as noted. 071 * <li><b>Thread safety.</b> It is safe to access this collection concurrently from multiple 072 * threads. 073 * <li><b>Integrity.</b> This type cannot be subclassed outside this package (which would allow 074 * these guarantees to be violated). 075 * </ul> 076 * 077 * <h4>"Interfaces", not implementations</h4> 078 * 079 * <p>These are classes instead of interfaces to prevent external subtyping, but should be thought 080 * of as interfaces in every important sense. Each public class such as {@link ImmutableSet} is a 081 * <i>type</i> offering meaningful behavioral guarantees. This is substantially different from the 082 * case of (say) {@link HashSet}, which is an <i>implementation</i>, with semantics that were 083 * largely defined by its supertype. 084 * 085 * <p>For field types and method return types, you should generally use the immutable type (such as 086 * {@link ImmutableList}) instead of the general collection interface type (such as {@link List}). 087 * This communicates to your callers all of the semantic guarantees listed above, which is almost 088 * always very useful information. 089 * 090 * <p>On the other hand, a <i>parameter</i> type of {@link ImmutableList} is generally a nuisance to 091 * callers. Instead, accept {@link Iterable} and have your method or constructor body pass it to the 092 * appropriate {@code copyOf} method itself. 093 * 094 * <p>Expressing the immutability guarantee directly in the type that user code references is a 095 * powerful advantage. Although Java offers certain immutable collection factory methods, such as 096 * {@link Collections#singleton(Object)} and <a 097 * href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/java/util/Set.html#immutable">{@code Set.of}</a>, 098 * we recommend using <i>these</i> classes instead for this reason (as well as for consistency). 099 * 100 * <h4>Creation</h4> 101 * 102 * <p>Except for logically "abstract" types like {@code ImmutableCollection} itself, each {@code 103 * Immutable} type provides the static operations you need to obtain instances of that type. These 104 * usually include: 105 * 106 * <ul> 107 * <li>Static methods named {@code of}, accepting an explicit list of elements or entries. 108 * <li>Static methods named {@code copyOf} (or {@code copyOfSorted}), accepting an existing 109 * collection whose contents should be copied. 110 * <li>A static nested {@code Builder} class which can be used to populate a new immutable 111 * instance. 112 * </ul> 113 * 114 * <h4>Warnings</h4> 115 * 116 * <ul> 117 * <li><b>Warning:</b> as with any collection, it is almost always a bad idea to modify an element 118 * (in a way that affects its {@link Object#equals} behavior) while it is contained in a 119 * collection. Undefined behavior and bugs will result. It's generally best to avoid using 120 * mutable objects as elements at all, as many users may expect your "immutable" object to be 121 * <i>deeply</i> immutable. 122 * </ul> 123 * 124 * <h4>Performance notes</h4> 125 * 126 * <ul> 127 * <li>Implementations can be generally assumed to prioritize memory efficiency, then speed of 128 * access, and lastly speed of creation. 129 * <li>The {@code copyOf} methods will sometimes recognize that the actual copy operation is 130 * unnecessary; for example, {@code copyOf(copyOf(anArrayList))} should copy the data only 131 * once. This reduces the expense of habitually making defensive copies at API boundaries. 132 * However, the precise conditions for skipping the copy operation are undefined. 133 * <li><b>Warning:</b> a view collection such as {@link ImmutableMap#keySet} or {@link 134 * ImmutableList#subList} may retain a reference to the entire data set, preventing it from 135 * being garbage collected. If some of the data is no longer reachable through other means, 136 * this constitutes a memory leak. Pass the view collection to the appropriate {@code copyOf} 137 * method to obtain a correctly-sized copy. 138 * <li>The performance of using the associated {@code Builder} class can be assumed to be no 139 * worse, and possibly better, than creating a mutable collection and copying it. 140 * <li>Implementations generally do not cache hash codes. If your element or key type has a slow 141 * {@code hashCode} implementation, it should cache it itself. 142 * </ul> 143 * 144 * <h4>Example usage</h4> 145 * 146 * <pre>{@code 147 * class Foo { 148 * private static final ImmutableSet<String> RESERVED_CODES = 149 * ImmutableSet.of("AZ", "CQ", "ZX"); 150 * 151 * private final ImmutableSet<String> codes; 152 * 153 * public Foo(Iterable<String> codes) { 154 * this.codes = ImmutableSet.copyOf(codes); 155 * checkArgument(Collections.disjoint(this.codes, RESERVED_CODES)); 156 * } 157 * } 158 * }</pre> 159 * 160 * <h3>See also</h3> 161 * 162 * <p>See the Guava User Guide article on <a href= 163 * "https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/ImmutableCollectionsExplained">immutable collections</a>. 164 * 165 * @since 2.0 166 */ 167@DoNotMock("Use ImmutableList.of or another implementation") 168@GwtCompatible(emulated = true) 169@SuppressWarnings("serial") // we're overriding default serialization 170@ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault 171// TODO(kevinb): I think we should push everything down to "BaseImmutableCollection" or something, 172// just to do everything we can to emphasize the "practically an interface" nature of this class. 173public abstract class ImmutableCollection<E> extends AbstractCollection<E> implements Serializable { 174 /* 175 * We expect SIZED (and SUBSIZED, if applicable) to be added by the spliterator factory methods. 176 * These are properties of the collection as a whole; SIZED and SUBSIZED are more properties of 177 * the spliterator implementation. 178 */ 179 180 ImmutableCollection() {} 181 182 /** Returns an unmodifiable iterator across the elements in this collection. */ 183 @Override 184 public abstract UnmodifiableIterator<E> iterator(); 185 186 private static final Object[] EMPTY_ARRAY = {}; 187 188 @Override 189 @J2ktIncompatible // Incompatible return type change. Use inherited (unoptimized) implementation 190 public final Object[] toArray() { 191 return toArray(EMPTY_ARRAY); 192 } 193 194 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 195 @Override 196 /* 197 * This suppression is here for two reasons: 198 * 199 * 1. b/192354773 in our checker affects toArray declarations. 200 * 201 * 2. `other[size] = null` is unsound. We could "fix" this by requiring callers to pass in an 202 * array with a nullable element type. But probably they usually want an array with a non-nullable 203 * type. That said, we could *accept* a `@Nullable T[]` (which, given that we treat arrays as 204 * covariant, would still permit a plain `T[]`) and return a plain `T[]`. But of course that would 205 * require its own suppression, since it is also unsound. toArray(T[]) is just a mess from a 206 * nullness perspective. The signature below at least has the virtue of being relatively simple. 207 */ 208 @SuppressWarnings("nullness") 209 public final <T extends @Nullable Object> T[] toArray(T[] other) { 210 checkNotNull(other); 211 int size = size(); 212 213 if (other.length < size) { 214 Object[] internal = internalArray(); 215 if (internal != null) { 216 return Platform.copy(internal, internalArrayStart(), internalArrayEnd(), other); 217 } 218 other = ObjectArrays.newArray(other, size); 219 } else if (other.length > size) { 220 other[size] = null; 221 } 222 copyIntoArray(other, 0); 223 return other; 224 } 225 226 /** If this collection is backed by an array of its elements in insertion order, returns it. */ 227 @CheckForNull 228 @Nullable 229 Object[] internalArray() { 230 return null; 231 } 232 233 /** 234 * If this collection is backed by an array of its elements in insertion order, returns the offset 235 * where this collection's elements start. 236 */ 237 int internalArrayStart() { 238 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 239 } 240 241 /** 242 * If this collection is backed by an array of its elements in insertion order, returns the offset 243 * where this collection's elements end. 244 */ 245 int internalArrayEnd() { 246 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 247 } 248 249 @Override 250 public abstract boolean contains(@CheckForNull Object object); 251 252 /** 253 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 254 * 255 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 256 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 257 */ 258 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 259 @Deprecated 260 @Override 261 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 262 public final boolean add(E e) { 263 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 264 } 265 266 /** 267 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 268 * 269 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 270 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 271 */ 272 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 273 @Deprecated 274 @Override 275 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 276 public final boolean remove(@CheckForNull Object object) { 277 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 278 } 279 280 /** 281 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 282 * 283 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 284 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 285 */ 286 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 287 @Deprecated 288 @Override 289 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 290 public final boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> newElements) { 291 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 292 } 293 294 /** 295 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 296 * 297 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 298 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 299 */ 300 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 301 @Deprecated 302 @Override 303 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 304 public final boolean removeAll(Collection<?> oldElements) { 305 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 306 } 307 308 /** 309 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 310 * 311 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 312 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 313 */ 314 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 315 @Deprecated 316 @Override 317 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 318 public final boolean retainAll(Collection<?> elementsToKeep) { 319 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 320 } 321 322 /** 323 * Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified. 324 * 325 * @throws UnsupportedOperationException always 326 * @deprecated Unsupported operation. 327 */ 328 @Deprecated 329 @Override 330 @DoNotCall("Always throws UnsupportedOperationException") 331 public final void clear() { 332 throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); 333 } 334 335 /** 336 * Returns an {@code ImmutableList} containing the same elements, in the same order, as this 337 * collection. 338 * 339 * <p><b>Performance note:</b> in most cases this method can return quickly without actually 340 * copying anything. The exact circumstances under which the copy is performed are undefined and 341 * subject to change. 342 * 343 * @since 2.0 344 */ 345 public ImmutableList<E> asList() { 346 return isEmpty() ? ImmutableList.<E>of() : ImmutableList.<E>asImmutableList(toArray()); 347 } 348 349 /** 350 * Returns {@code true} if this immutable collection's implementation contains references to 351 * user-created objects that aren't accessible via this collection's methods. This is generally 352 * used to determine whether {@code copyOf} implementations should make an explicit copy to avoid 353 * memory leaks. 354 */ 355 abstract boolean isPartialView(); 356 357 /** 358 * Copies the contents of this immutable collection into the specified array at the specified 359 * offset. Returns {@code offset + size()}. 360 */ 361 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 362 int copyIntoArray(@Nullable Object[] dst, int offset) { 363 for (E e : this) { 364 dst[offset++] = e; 365 } 366 return offset; 367 } 368 369 @J2ktIncompatible // serialization 370 @GwtIncompatible // serialization 371 Object writeReplace() { 372 // We serialize by default to ImmutableList, the simplest thing that works. 373 return new ImmutableList.SerializedForm(toArray()); 374 } 375 376 @J2ktIncompatible // serialization 377 private void readObject(ObjectInputStream stream) throws InvalidObjectException { 378 throw new InvalidObjectException("Use SerializedForm"); 379 } 380 381 /** 382 * Abstract base class for builders of {@link ImmutableCollection} types. 383 * 384 * @since 10.0 385 */ 386 @DoNotMock 387 public abstract static class Builder<E> { 388 static final int DEFAULT_INITIAL_CAPACITY = 4; 389 390 static int expandedCapacity(int oldCapacity, int minCapacity) { 391 if (minCapacity < 0) { 392 throw new AssertionError("cannot store more than MAX_VALUE elements"); 393 } 394 // careful of overflow! 395 int newCapacity = oldCapacity + (oldCapacity >> 1) + 1; 396 if (newCapacity < minCapacity) { 397 newCapacity = Integer.highestOneBit(minCapacity - 1) << 1; 398 } 399 if (newCapacity < 0) { 400 newCapacity = Integer.MAX_VALUE; 401 // guaranteed to be >= newCapacity 402 } 403 return newCapacity; 404 } 405 406 Builder() {} 407 408 /** 409 * Adds {@code element} to the {@code ImmutableCollection} being built. 410 * 411 * <p>Note that each builder class covariantly returns its own type from this method. 412 * 413 * @param element the element to add 414 * @return this {@code Builder} instance 415 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code element} is null 416 */ 417 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 418 public abstract Builder<E> add(E element); 419 420 /** 421 * Adds each element of {@code elements} to the {@code ImmutableCollection} being built. 422 * 423 * <p>Note that each builder class overrides this method in order to covariantly return its own 424 * type. 425 * 426 * @param elements the elements to add 427 * @return this {@code Builder} instance 428 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code elements} is null or contains a null element 429 */ 430 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 431 public Builder<E> add(E... elements) { 432 for (E element : elements) { 433 add(element); 434 } 435 return this; 436 } 437 438 /** 439 * Adds each element of {@code elements} to the {@code ImmutableCollection} being built. 440 * 441 * <p>Note that each builder class overrides this method in order to covariantly return its own 442 * type. 443 * 444 * @param elements the elements to add 445 * @return this {@code Builder} instance 446 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code elements} is null or contains a null element 447 */ 448 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 449 public Builder<E> addAll(Iterable<? extends E> elements) { 450 for (E element : elements) { 451 add(element); 452 } 453 return this; 454 } 455 456 /** 457 * Adds each element of {@code elements} to the {@code ImmutableCollection} being built. 458 * 459 * <p>Note that each builder class overrides this method in order to covariantly return its own 460 * type. 461 * 462 * @param elements the elements to add 463 * @return this {@code Builder} instance 464 * @throws NullPointerException if {@code elements} is null or contains a null element 465 */ 466 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 467 public Builder<E> addAll(Iterator<? extends E> elements) { 468 while (elements.hasNext()) { 469 add(elements.next()); 470 } 471 return this; 472 } 473 474 /** 475 * Returns a newly-created {@code ImmutableCollection} of the appropriate type, containing the 476 * elements provided to this builder. 477 * 478 * <p>Note that each builder class covariantly returns the appropriate type of {@code 479 * ImmutableCollection} from this method. 480 */ 481 public abstract ImmutableCollection<E> build(); 482 } 483 484 abstract static class ArrayBasedBuilder<E> extends ImmutableCollection.Builder<E> { 485 // The first `size` elements are non-null. 486 @Nullable Object[] contents; 487 int size; 488 boolean forceCopy; 489 490 ArrayBasedBuilder(int initialCapacity) { 491 checkNonnegative(initialCapacity, "initialCapacity"); 492 this.contents = new @Nullable Object[initialCapacity]; 493 this.size = 0; 494 } 495 496 /* 497 * Expand the absolute capacity of the builder so it can accept at least the specified number of 498 * elements without being resized. Also, if we've already built a collection backed by the 499 * current array, create a new array. 500 */ 501 private void getReadyToExpandTo(int minCapacity) { 502 if (contents.length < minCapacity) { 503 this.contents = 504 Arrays.copyOf(this.contents, expandedCapacity(contents.length, minCapacity)); 505 forceCopy = false; 506 } else if (forceCopy) { 507 this.contents = contents.clone(); 508 forceCopy = false; 509 } 510 } 511 512 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 513 @Override 514 public ArrayBasedBuilder<E> add(E element) { 515 checkNotNull(element); 516 getReadyToExpandTo(size + 1); 517 contents[size++] = element; 518 return this; 519 } 520 521 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 522 @Override 523 public Builder<E> add(E... elements) { 524 addAll(elements, elements.length); 525 return this; 526 } 527 528 final void addAll(@Nullable Object[] elements, int n) { 529 checkElementsNotNull(elements, n); 530 getReadyToExpandTo(size + n); 531 /* 532 * The following call is not statically checked, since arraycopy accepts plain Object for its 533 * parameters. If it were statically checked, the checker would still be OK with it, since 534 * we're copying into a `contents` array whose type allows it to contain nulls. Still, it's 535 * worth noting that we promise not to put nulls into the array in the first `size` elements. 536 * We uphold that promise here because our callers promise that `elements` will not contain 537 * nulls in its first `n` elements. 538 */ 539 System.arraycopy(elements, 0, contents, size, n); 540 size += n; 541 } 542 543 @CanIgnoreReturnValue 544 @Override 545 public Builder<E> addAll(Iterable<? extends E> elements) { 546 if (elements instanceof Collection) { 547 Collection<?> collection = (Collection<?>) elements; 548 getReadyToExpandTo(size + collection.size()); 549 if (collection instanceof ImmutableCollection) { 550 ImmutableCollection<?> immutableCollection = (ImmutableCollection<?>) collection; 551 size = immutableCollection.copyIntoArray(contents, size); 552 return this; 553 } 554 } 555 super.addAll(elements); 556 return this; 557 } 558 } 559 560 private static final long serialVersionUID = 0xdecaf; 561}