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  1. Proceedings of the 21st annual ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming systems, languages, and applications (OOPSLA '06)
  2. Uniform proxies for Java
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Eliminating distinctions of class: using prototypes to model virtual classes
A framework for implementing pluggable type systems
Adapting virtual machine techniques for seamless aspect support
Javana: a system for building customized Java program analysis tools
Declarative, formal, and extensible syntax definition for aspectJ
A flexible framework for implementing software transactional memory
A flow-based approach for variant parametric types
A formal framework for component deployment
Isolating and relating concerns in requirements using latent semantic analysis
Conscientious software
On system design
J&: nested intersection for scalable software composition
Design fragments make using frameworks easier
Efficient control flow quantification
The DaCapo benchmarks: java benchmarking development and analysis
Method-specific dynamic compilation using logistic regression
Eliminating synchronization-related atomic operations with biased locking and bulk rebiasing
Concepts: linguistic support for generic programming in C++
An operational semantics and type safety prooffor multiple inheritance in C++
Understanding the shape of Java software
Intentional software
The paradoxical success of aspect-oriented programming
Statically scoped object adaptation with expanders
JTL: the Java tools language
Uniform proxies for Java
Virgil: objects on the head of a pin
Replay compilation: improving debuggability of a just-in-time compiler
Generic ownership for generic Java
Efficient software model checking of data structure properties
XSnippet: mining For sample code

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Uniform proxies for Java

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Eugster, Patrick
Abstract The proxy abstraction has a longlasting tradition in object settings. From design pattern to inherent language support, from remote method invocations to simple forms of behavioral reflection - incarnations as well as applications of proxies are innumerable.Since version 1.3, Java supports the concept of dynamic proxy. Such an object conforms to a set of types specified by the program and can be used wherever an expression of any of these types is expected, yet reifies invocations performed on it. Dynamic proxies have been applied to implement paradigms as diverse as behavioral reflection, structural conformance, or multi-methods. Alas, these proxies are only available "for interfaces". The case of creating dynamic proxies for a set of types including a class type has not been considered, meaning that it is currently not possible to create a dynamic proxy mimicking an instance of a given class. This weakness strongly limits any application of dynamic proxies.In this paper we unfold the current support for dynamic proxies in Java, assessing it in the light of a set of generic criteria for proxy implementations. We present an approach to supporting dynamic proxies "for classes" in Java, consisting in transformations performed on classes at load-time, including a generic scheme for enforcing encapsulation upon field accesses. These transformations seemlessly extend the scope of the current support for dynamic proxies. We discuss the precise benefits and costs of our extension in terms of the criteria introduced, and illustrate the usefulness of uniformly available proxies by implementing future method invocations both safely and transparently.
Starting Page 139
Ending Page 152
Page Count 14
File Format PDF
ISBN 1595933484
DOI 10.1145/1167473.1167485
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2006-10-23
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword Java Proxy Transformation Future
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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