This section contains examples of problems developers might encounter when using reflection to locate, invoke, or get information about methods.
NoSuchMethodException Due to Type Erasure
The
example illustrates what happens when type erasure is not taken into consideration by code which searches for a particular method in a class.
MethodTrouble
import java.lang.reflect.Method; public class MethodTrouble<T> { public void lookup(T t) {} public void find(Integer i) {} public static void main(String... args) { try { String mName = args[0]; Class cArg = Class.forName(args[1]); Class<?> c = (new MethodTrouble<Integer>()).getClass(); Method m = c.getMethod(mName, cArg); System.out.format("Found:%n %s%n", m.toGenericString()); // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (NoSuchMethodException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (ClassNotFoundException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } }$ java MethodTrouble lookup java.lang.Integer java.lang.NoSuchMethodException: MethodTrouble.lookup(java.lang.Integer) at java.lang.Class.getMethod(Class.java:1605) at MethodTrouble.main(MethodTrouble.java:12) $ java MethodTrouble lookup java.lang.Object Found: public void MethodTrouble.lookup(T)When a method is declared with a generic parameter type, the compiler will replace the generic type with its upper bound, in this case, the upper bound of
T
isObject
. Thus, when the code searches forlookup(Integer)
, no method is found, despite the fact that the instance ofMethodTrouble
was created as follows:Class> c = (new MethodTrouble()).getClass(); Searching for
lookup(Object)
succeeds as expected.$ java MethodTrouble find java.lang.Integer Found: public void MethodTrouble.find(java.lang.Integer) $ java MethodTrouble find java.lang.Object java.lang.NoSuchMethodException: MethodTrouble.find(java.lang.Object) at java.lang.Class.getMethod(Class.java:1605) at MethodTrouble.main(MethodTrouble.java:12)In this case,
find()
has no generic parameters, so the parameter types searched for bygetMethod()
must match exactly.
Tip: Always pass the upper bound of the parameterized type when searching for a method.IllegalAccessException when Invoking a Method
An
IllegalAccessException
is thrown if an attempt is made to invoke aprivate
or otherwise inaccessible method.The
example shows a typical stack trace which results from trying to invoke a private method in an another class.
MethodTroubleAgain
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException; import java.lang.reflect.Method; class AnotherClass { private void m() {} } public class MethodTroubleAgain { public static void main(String... args) { AnotherClass ac = new AnotherClass(); try { Class<?> c = ac.getClass(); Method m = c.getDeclaredMethod("m"); // m.setAccessible(true); // solution Object o = m.invoke(ac); // IllegalAccessException // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (NoSuchMethodException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (InvocationTargetException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (IllegalAccessException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } }The stack trace for the exception thrown follows.
$ java MethodTroubleAgain java.lang.IllegalAccessException: Class MethodTroubleAgain can not access a member of class AnotherClass with modifiers "private" at sun.reflect.Reflection.ensureMemberAccess(Reflection.java:65) at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:588) at MethodTroubleAgain.main(MethodTroubleAgain.java:15)
Tip: An access restriction exists which prevents reflective invocation of methods which normally would not be accessible via direct invocation. (This includes---but is not limited to---private
methods in a separate class and public methods in a separate private class.) However,Method
is declared to extendAccessibleObject
which provides the ability to suppress this check viaAccessibleObject.setAccessible()
. If it succeeds, then subsequent invocations of this method object will not fail due to this problem.IllegalArgumentException from Method.invoke()
Method.invoke()
has been retrofitted to be a variable-arity method. This is an enormous convenience, however it can lead to unexpected behavior. Theexample shows various ways in which
MethodTroubleToo
Method.invoke()
can produce confusing results.import java.lang.reflect.Method; public class MethodTroubleToo { public void ping() { System.out.format("PONG!%n"); } public static void main(String... args) { try { MethodTroubleToo mtt = new MethodTroubleToo(); Method m = MethodTroubleToo.class.getMethod("ping"); switch(Integer.parseInt(args[0])) { case 0: m.invoke(mtt); // works break; case 1: m.invoke(mtt, null); // works (expect compiler warning) break; case 2: Object arg2 = null; m.invoke(mtt, arg2); // IllegalArgumentException break; case 3: m.invoke(mtt, new Object[0]); // works break; case 4: Object arg4 = new Object[0]; m.invoke(mtt, arg4); // IllegalArgumentException break; default: System.out.format("Test not found%n"); } // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (Exception x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } }$ java MethodTroubleToo 0 PONG!Since all of the parameters of
Method.invoke()
are optional except for the first, they can be omitted when the method to be invoked has no parameters.$ java MethodTroubleToo 1 PONG!The code in this case generates this compiler warning because
null
is ambiguous.$ javac MethodTroubleToo.java MethodTroubleToo.java:16: warning: non-varargs call of varargs method with inexact argument type for last parameter; cast to java.lang.Object for a varargs call cast to java.lang.Object[] for a non-varargs call and to suppress this warning m.invoke(mtt, null); // works (expect compiler warning) ^ 1 warningIt is not possible to determine whether
null
represents an empty array of arguments or a first argument ofnull
.$ java MethodTroubleToo 2 java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: wrong number of arguments at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method) at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39) at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25) at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597) at MethodTroubleToo.main(MethodTroubleToo.java:21)This fails despite the fact that the argument is
null
, because the type is aObject
andping()
expects no arguments at all.$ java MethodTroubleToo 3 PONG!This works because
new Object[0]
creates an empty array, and to a varargs method, this is equivalent to not passing any of the optional arguments.$ java MethodTroubleToo 4 java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: wrong number of arguments at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method) at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39) at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25) at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597) at MethodTroubleToo.main(MethodTroubleToo.java:28)Unlike the previous example, if the empty array is stored in an
Object
, then it is treated as anObject
. This fails for the same reason that case 2 fails,ping()
does not expect an argument.
Tip: When a methodfoo(Object... o)
is declared the compiler will put all of the arguments passed tofoo()
in an array of typeObject
. The implementation offoo()
is the same as if it were declaredfoo(Object[] o)
. Understanding this may help avoid the types of problems illustrated above.InvocationTargetException when Invoked Method Fails
An
InvocationTargetException
wraps all exceptions (checked and unchecked) produced when a method object is invoked. Theexample shows how to retrieve the original exception thrown by the invoked method.
MethodTroubleReturns
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException; import java.lang.reflect.Method; public class MethodTroubleReturns { private void drinkMe(int liters) { if (liters < 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException("I can't drink a negative amount of liquid"); } public static void main(String... args) { try { MethodTroubleReturns mtr = new MethodTroubleReturns(); Class<?> c = mtr.getClass(); Method m = c.getDeclaredMethod("drinkMe", int.class); m.invoke(mtr, -1); // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (InvocationTargetException x) { Throwable cause = x.getCause(); System.err.format("drinkMe() failed: %s%n", cause.getMessage()); } catch (Exception x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } }$ java MethodTroubleReturns drinkMe() failed: I can't drink a negative amount of liquid
Tip: If anInvocationTargetException
is thrown, the method was invoked. Diagnosis of the problem would be the same as if the method was called directly and threw the exception that is retrieved bygetCause()
. This exception does not indicate a problem with the reflection package or its usage.