Method chaining is a convenient mechanism that allows multiple method invocations on the same object to occur in a single statement. A method-chaining implementation consists of a series of methods that return the this reference. This implementation allows a caller to invoke methods in a chain by performing the next method invocation on the return value of the previous method in the chain.

Although the methods used in method chaining can be atomic, the chain they comprise is inherently nonatomic. Consequently, callers of methods that are involved in method chaining must provide sufficient locking to guarantee that the entire chain of invocations is atomic, as shown in VNA03-J. Do not assume that a group of calls to independently atomic methods is atomic.

Noncompliant Code Example

Method chaining is a useful design pattern for building an object and setting its optional fields. A class that supports method chaining provides several setter methods that each return the this reference. However, if accessed concurrently, a thread may observe shared fields to contain inconsistent values. This noncompliant code example shows the JavaBeans pattern, which is not thread-safe:

final class USCurrency {
  // Change requested, denomination (optional fields)
  private int quarters = 0;
  private int dimes = 0;
  private int nickels = 0;
  private int pennies = 0;

  public USCurrency() {}

  // Setter methods
  public USCurrency setQuarters(int quantity) {
    quarters = quantity;
    return this;
  }
  public USCurrency setDimes(int quantity) {
    dimes = quantity;
    return this;
  }
  public USCurrency setNickels(int quantity) {
    nickels = quantity;
    return this;
  }
  public USCurrency setPennies(int quantity) {
    pennies = quantity;
    return this;
  }
}

// Client code:
class ExampleClientCode {

  private final USCurrency currency = new USCurrency();
  // ...

  public ExampleClientCode() {

    Thread t1 = new Thread(new Runnable() {
        @Override public void run() {
          currency.setQuarters(1).setDimes(1);
        }
    });
    t1.start();

    Thread t2 = new Thread(new Runnable() {
        @Override public void run() {
          currency.setQuarters(2).setDimes(2);
        }
    });
    t2.start();

    //...
  }
}

The JavaBeans pattern uses a no-argument constructor and a series of parallel setter methods to build an object. This pattern is not thread-safe and can lead to inconsistent object state when the object is modified concurrently. In this noncompliant code example, the client constructs a USCurrency object and starts two threads that use method chaining to set the optional values of the USCurrency object. This example code might result in the USCurrency instance being left in an inconsistent state, for example, with two quarters and one dime or one quarter and two dimes.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution uses the variant of the Builder pattern [Gamma 1995], suggested by Bloch [Bloch 2008], to ensure the thread-safety and atomicity of object creation.

final class USCurrency {
  private final int quarters;
  private final int dimes;
  private final int nickels;
  private final int pennies;

  public USCurrency(Builder builder) {
    this.quarters = builder.quarters;
    this.dimes = builder.dimes;
    this.nickels = builder.nickels;
    this.pennies = builder.pennies;
  }

  // Static class member
  public static class Builder {
    private int quarters = 0;
    private int dimes = 0;
    private int nickels = 0;
    private int pennies = 0;

    public static Builder newInstance() {
      return new Builder();
    }

    private Builder() {}

    // Setter methods
    public Builder setQuarters(int quantity) {
      this.quarters = quantity;
      return this;
    }
    public Builder setDimes(int quantity) {
      this.dimes = quantity;
      return this;
    }
    public Builder setNickels(int quantity) {
      this.nickels = quantity;
      return this;
    }
    public Builder setPennies(int quantity) {
      this.pennies = quantity;
      return this;
    }

    public USCurrency build() {
      return new USCurrency(this);
    }
  }
}

// Client code:
class ExampleClientCode  {

  private volatile USCurrency currency;
  // ...

  public ExampleClientCode() {

    Thread t1 = new Thread(new Runnable() {
        @Override public void run() {
          currency = USCurrency.Builder.newInstance().
                         setQuarters(1).setDimes(1).build();
        }
    });
    t1.start();

    Thread t2 = new Thread(new Runnable() {
        @Override public void run() {
          currency = USCurrency.Builder.newInstance().
                         setQuarters(2).setDimes(2).build();
        }
    });
    t2.start();

    //...
  }
}

The Builder.newInstance() factory method is called with any required arguments to obtain a Builder instance. The optional parameters are set using the setter methods of the builder. The object construction concludes with the invocation of the build() method. This pattern makes the USCurrency class immutable and consequently thread-safe.

Note that the currency field cannot be declared final because it is assigned a new immutable object. It is, however, declared volatile in compliance with VNA01-J. Ensure visibility of shared references to immutable objects.

When input must be validated, ensure that the values are defensively copied prior to validation (see OBJ06-J. Defensively copy mutable inputs and mutable internal components for more information). The Builder class also complies with OBJ08-J. Do not expose private members of an outer class from within a nested class because it maintains a copy of the variables defined in the scope of the containing class. The private members within the nested class take precedence and, as a result, maintain encapsulation.

Risk Assessment

Using method chaining in multithreaded environments without performing external locking can lead to nondeterministic behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

VNA04-J

Low

Probable

Medium

P4

L3

Bibliography

[API 2014]

 

[Bloch 2008]

Item 2, "Consider a Builder When Faced with Many Constructor Parameters"

 


5 Comments

  1. In the last paragraph before Risk Assessment, the following sentence seems unnecessary:

    When input must be validated, ensure that the values are defensively copied prior to validation. (See rule OBJ06-J. Defensively copy mutable inputs and mutable internal components for more information.)

    1. I think that sentence's purpose is to introduce the reference to the VNA rule in the following sentence. But the sentence you cite does indeed provide no new information.

  2. Why does this rule specifically call out chained method calls?  This problem would be equally valid even if the setters in the NCS were not chainable.

    1. Robert's guess is correct.  It's called out exactly because assuming that chained calls are atomic is a common error.

      I'm fine with merging this into VNA03-J if that's the group consensus.  We just need to be sure to highlight this particular case.

  3. Probably no good reason.  I would guess it was because it is a common error to assume chained calls are atomic.

    This rule can probably be merged with VNA03-J, as a specific example of that problem.