On Fri, 2 May 2025 15:17:25 GMT, Chen Liang <li...@openjdk.org> wrote:
>> The recent patch #23866 makes calling `ClassValue::remove()` from >> `ClassValue::computeValue()` end up in infinite loops while fixing the stale >> value risk from the method. >> >> The proposed fix is to preserve the stale value risk fix, and update the >> remove-from-compute behavior from the original designated no-op behavior to >> throwing an exception, as the original behavior conflicts with the stale >> value fix. >> >> The implementation track the owner thread in promises (accessed in locked >> section); as a result, we can fail-fast on recursive removals from >> `computeValue`. I did not choose to use `ThreadTracker` as it is designed >> for single tracker and multiple threads, while this case here sees often >> just one thread, and the threads outlive the promise objects. >> >> Also updated the API specs for `remove` to more concisely describe the >> memory effects. Please review the associated CSR as well. > > Chen Liang has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional > commit since the last revision: > > Update src/java.base/share/classes/java/lang/ClassValue.java > > Co-authored-by: Shaojin Wen <shaojin.we...@alibaba-inc.com> src/java.base/share/classes/java/lang/ClassValue.java line 463: > 461: var updated = entry.refreshVersion(classValue.version); > 462: if (updated != entry) { > 463: put(classValue.identity, updated); This appears to associate a value and contradicts the `readAccess` method name and the comment on the method that says "A simple read access to this map". Did I misunderstand what `readAccess` is meant in the context of `ClassValue` semantics? ------------- PR Review Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/24043#discussion_r2080052630