Package java.lang.invoke
java.lang.invoke package provides low-level primitives for interacting
 with the Java Virtual Machine.
 As described in the Java Virtual Machine Specification, certain types in this package are given special treatment by the virtual machine:
- The classes MethodHandleVarHandlecontain signature polymorphic methods which can be linked regardless of their type descriptor. Normally, method linkage requires exact matching of type descriptors.
- The JVM bytecode format supports immediate constants of
 the classes MethodHandleandMethodType.
- The invokedynamicinstruction makes use of bootstrapMethodHandleconstants to dynamically resolveCallSiteobjects for custom method invocation behavior.
- The ldcinstruction makes use of bootstrapMethodHandleconstants to dynamically resolve custom constant values.
Dynamic resolution of call sites and constants
The following low-level information summarizes relevant parts of the Java Virtual Machine specification. For full details, please see the current version of that specification.Dynamically-computed call sites
Aninvokedynamic instruction is originally in an unlinked state.
 In this state, there is no target method for the instruction to invoke.
 
 Before the JVM can execute an invokedynamic instruction,
 the instruction must first be linked.
 Linking is accomplished by calling a bootstrap method
 which is given the static information content of the call,
 and which must produce a CallSite
 that gives the behavior of the invocation.
 
 Each invokedynamic instruction statically specifies its own
 bootstrap method as a constant pool reference.
 The constant pool reference also specifies the invocation's name and method type descriptor,
 just like invokestatic and the other invoke instructions.
 
Dynamically-computed constants
The constant pool may contain constants taggedCONSTANT_Dynamic,
 equipped with bootstrap methods which perform their resolution.
 Such a dynamic constant is originally in an unresolved state.
 Before the JVM can use a dynamically-computed constant, it must first be resolved.
 Dynamically-computed constant resolution is accomplished by calling a bootstrap method
 which is given the static information content of the constant,
 and which must produce a value of the constant's statically declared type.
 
 Each dynamically-computed constant statically specifies its own
 bootstrap method as a constant pool reference.
 The constant pool reference also specifies the constant's name and field type descriptor,
 just like getstatic and the other field reference instructions.
 (Roughly speaking, a dynamically-computed constant is to a dynamically-computed call site
 as a CONSTANT_Fieldref is to a CONSTANT_Methodref.)
 
Execution of bootstrap methods
Resolving a dynamically-computed call site or constant starts with resolving constants from the constant pool for the following items:- the bootstrap method, a CONSTANT_MethodHandle
- the ClassorMethodTypederived from type component of theCONSTANT_NameAndTypedescriptor
- static arguments, if any (note that static arguments can themselves be dynamically-computed constants)
 The bootstrap method is then invoked, as if by
 MethodHandle.invoke,
 with the following arguments:
 
- a MethodHandles.Lookup, which is a lookup object on the caller class in which dynamically-computed constant or call site occurs
- a String, the name mentioned in theCONSTANT_NameAndType
- a MethodTypeorClass, the resolved type descriptor of theCONSTANT_NameAndType
- a Class, the resolved type descriptor of the constant, if it is a dynamic constant
- the additional resolved static arguments, if any
 For a dynamically-computed call site, the returned result must be a non-null reference to a
 CallSite.
 The type of the call site's target must be exactly equal to the type
 derived from the invocation's type descriptor and passed to
 the bootstrap method. If these conditions are not met, a BootstrapMethodError is thrown.
 On success the call site then becomes permanently linked to the invokedynamic
 instruction.
 
 For a dynamically-computed constant, the first parameter of the bootstrap
 method must be assignable to MethodHandles.Lookup. If this condition
 is not met, a BootstrapMethodError is thrown.
 On success the result of the bootstrap method is cached as the resolved
 constant value.
 
 If an exception, E say, occurs during execution of the bootstrap method, then
 resolution fails and terminates abnormally. E is rethrown if the type of
 E is Error or a subclass, otherwise a
 BootstrapMethodError that wraps E is thrown.
 If this happens, the same error will be thrown for all
 subsequent attempts to execute the invokedynamic instruction or load the
 dynamically-computed constant.
 
Timing of resolution
Aninvokedynamic instruction is linked just before its first execution.
 A dynamically-computed constant is resolved just before the first time it is used
 (by pushing it on the stack or linking it as a bootstrap method parameter).
 The bootstrap method call implementing the linkage occurs within
 a thread that is attempting a first execution or first use.
 
 If there are several such threads, the bootstrap method may be
 invoked in several threads concurrently.
 Therefore, bootstrap methods which access global application
 data must take the usual precautions against race conditions.
 In any case, every invokedynamic instruction is either
 unlinked or linked to a unique CallSite object.
 
 In an application which requires invokedynamic instructions with individually
 mutable behaviors, their bootstrap methods should produce distinct
 CallSite objects, one for each linkage request.
 Alternatively, an application can link a single CallSite object
 to several invokedynamic instructions, in which case
 a change to the target method will become visible at each of
 the instructions.
 
If several threads simultaneously execute a bootstrap method for a single dynamically-computed call site or constant, the JVM must choose one bootstrap method result and install it visibly to all threads. Any other bootstrap method calls are allowed to complete, but their results are ignored.
 Discussion:
 These rules do not enable the JVM to share call sites,
 or to issue “causeless” bootstrap method calls.
 Every invokedynamic instruction transitions at most once from unlinked to linked,
 just before its first invocation.
 There is no way to undo the effect of a completed bootstrap method call.
 
Types of bootstrap methods
For a dynamically-computed call site, the bootstrap method is invoked with parameter typesMethodHandles.Lookup, String, MethodType, and the types
 of any static arguments; the return type is CallSite.
 
 For a dynamically-computed constant, the bootstrap method is invoked with parameter types
 MethodHandles.Lookup, String, Class, and the types of any
 static arguments; the return type is the type represented by the Class.
 
 Because MethodHandle.invoke allows for
 adaptations between the invoked method type and the bootstrap method handle's method type,
 there is flexibility in the declaration of the bootstrap method.
 For a dynamically-computed constant the first parameter type of the bootstrap method handle
 must be assignable to MethodHandles.Lookup, other than that constraint the same degree
 of flexibility applies to bootstrap methods of dynamically-computed call sites and
 dynamically-computed constants.
 Note: this constraint allows for the future possibility where the bootstrap method is
 invoked with just the parameter types of static arguments, thereby supporting a wider
 range of methods compatible with the static arguments (such as methods that don't declare
 or require the lookup, name, and type meta-data parameters).
 
 For example, for dynamically-computed call site, a the first argument
 could be Object instead of MethodHandles.Lookup, and the return type
 could also be Object instead of CallSite.
 (Note that the types and number of the stacked arguments limit
 the legal kinds of bootstrap methods to appropriately typed
 static methods and constructors.)
 
 If a pushed value is a primitive type, it may be converted to a reference by boxing conversion.
 If the bootstrap method is a variable arity method (its modifier bit 0x0080 is set),
 then some or all of the arguments specified here may be collected into a trailing array parameter.
 (This is not a special rule, but rather a useful consequence of the interaction
 between CONSTANT_MethodHandle constants, the modifier bit for variable arity methods,
 and the asVarargsCollector transformation.)
 
 Given these rules, here are examples of legal bootstrap method declarations for
 dynamically-computed call sites, given various numbers N of extra arguments.
 The first row (marked *) will work for any number of extra arguments.
 
| N | Sample bootstrap method | 
|---|---|
| * | 
 | 
| 0 | 
 | 
| 1 | CallSite bootstrap(Lookup caller, String name, MethodType type, Object arg) | 
| 2 | 
 | 
String and Integer (or int), respectively.
 The second-to-last example assumes that all extra arguments are of type
 String.
 The other examples work with all types of extra arguments.  Note that all
 the examples except the second and third also work with dynamically-computed
 constants if the return type is changed to be compatible with the
 constant's declared type (such as Object, which is always compatible).
 
 Since dynamically-computed constants can be provided as static arguments to bootstrap
 methods, there are no limitations on the types of bootstrap arguments.
 However, arguments of type boolean, byte, short, or char
 cannot be directly supplied by CONSTANT_Integer
 constant pool entries, since the asType conversions do
 not perform the necessary narrowing primitive conversions.
 
 In the above examples, the return type is always CallSite,
 but that is not a necessary feature of bootstrap methods.
 In the case of a dynamically-computed call site, the only requirement is that
 the return type of the bootstrap method must be convertible
 (using the asType conversions) to CallSite, which
 means the bootstrap method return type might be Object or
 ConstantCallSite.
 In the case of a dynamically-resolved constant, the return type of the bootstrap
 method must be convertible to the type of the constant, as
 represented by its field type descriptor.  For example, if the
 dynamic constant has a field type descriptor of "C"
 (char) then the bootstrap method return type could be
 Object, Character, or char, but not
 int or Integer.
- Since:
- 1.7
- 
Interface Summary Interface Description MethodHandleInfo A symbolic reference obtained by cracking a direct method handle into its consitutent symbolic parts.TypeDescriptor An entity that has a field or method type descriptorTypeDescriptor.OfField<F extends TypeDescriptor.OfField<F>> An entity that has a field type descriptorTypeDescriptor.OfMethod<F extends TypeDescriptor.OfField<F>,M extends TypeDescriptor.OfMethod<F,M>> An entity that has a method type descriptor
- 
Class Summary Class Description CallSite ConstantBootstraps Bootstrap methods for dynamically-computed constants.ConstantCallSite AConstantCallSiteis aCallSitewhose target is permanent, and can never be changed.LambdaMetafactory Methods to facilitate the creation of simple "function objects" that implement one or more interfaces by delegation to a providedMethodHandle, possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments.MethodHandle A method handle is a typed, directly executable reference to an underlying method, constructor, field, or similar low-level operation, with optional transformations of arguments or return values.MethodHandleProxies This class consists exclusively of static methods that help adapt method handles to other JVM types, such as interfaces.MethodHandles This class consists exclusively of static methods that operate on or return method handles.MethodHandles.Lookup A lookup object is a factory for creating method handles, when the creation requires access checking.MethodType A method type represents the arguments and return type accepted and returned by a method handle, or the arguments and return type passed and expected by a method handle caller.MutableCallSite AMutableCallSiteis aCallSitewhose target variable behaves like an ordinary field.SerializedLambda Serialized form of a lambda expression.StringConcatFactory Methods to facilitate the creation of String concatenation methods, that can be used to efficiently concatenate a known number of arguments of known types, possibly after type adaptation and partial evaluation of arguments.SwitchPoint ASwitchPointis an object which can publish state transitions to other threads.VarHandle A VarHandle is a dynamically strongly typed reference to a variable, or to a parametrically-defined family of variables, including static fields, non-static fields, array elements, or components of an off-heap data structure.VarHandle.VarHandleDesc A nominal descriptor for aVarHandleconstant.VolatileCallSite AVolatileCallSiteis aCallSitewhose target acts like a volatile variable.
- 
Enum Summary Enum Description VarHandle.AccessMode The set of access modes that specify how a variable, referenced by a VarHandle, is accessed.
- 
Exception Summary Exception Description LambdaConversionException LambdaConversionExceptionStringConcatException StringConcatException is thrown byStringConcatFactorywhen linkage invariants are violated.WrongMethodTypeException Thrown to indicate that code has attempted to call a method handle via the wrong method type.