script-astra/Android/Sdk/sources/android-35/android/system/SystemCleaner.java
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2025-01-20 18:15:20 +03:00

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Java

/*
* Copyright (C) 2022 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package android.system;
import java.lang.ref.Cleaner;
import jdk.internal.ref.CleanerFactory;
import libcore.util.NonNull;
/**
* Java.lang.ref.Cleaner encourages each library to create a Cleaner, with an associated
* thread, to process Cleaner Runnables for that library's registered cleaning actions.
* This approach isolates cleaning actions from different libraries from each other; a slow cleaning
* action in one library will only minimally affect cleaning actions in another.
*
* However, this comes at the cost of introducing one Cleaner thread per library that uses
* Cleaners. This could introduce dozens of additional threads per process, which is often
* not an acceptable cost, especially on memory-limited devices.
*
* SystemCleaner instead provides access to a shared Cleaner, shared across the entire process.
* It is greatly preferred when all cleaning actions registered by a client are known to
* complete quickly, without explicit I/O, interprocess communication, or network access.
* Registering a non-terminating or excessively slow cleaning action with the shared cleaner
* may cause the process to perform very badly, hang, or be killed.
*/
public final class SystemCleaner {
private SystemCleaner() {}
/**
* Return a single Cleaner that's shared across the entire process. Thread-safe.
* Unlike normal Cleaners, uncaught exceptions during cleaning will throw an uncaught
* exception from the daemon running the cleaning action. This will normally cause the
* process to crash, and thus cause the problem to be reported.
*/
@NonNull public static Cleaner cleaner() {
return CleanerFactory.cleaner();
}
}