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Apache Commons Lang, a package of Java utility classes for the classes that are in java.lang's hierarchy, or are considered to be so standard as to justify existence in java.lang. The code is tested using the latest revision of the JDK for supported LTS releases: 8, 11, 17 and 21 currently. See https://github.com/apache/commons-lang/blob/master/.github/workflows/maven.yml Please ensure your build environment is up-to-date and kindly report any build issues.

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/*
 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
 * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
 * The ASF licenses this file to You 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 org.apache.commons.lang3.builder;

import java.lang.reflect.AccessibleObject;
import java.lang.reflect.Field;
import java.lang.reflect.Modifier;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Set;

import org.apache.commons.lang3.ArrayUtils;

/**
 * 

* Assists in implementing {@link Object#hashCode()} methods. *

* *

* This class enables a good hashCode method to be built for any class. It follows the rules laid out in * the book Effective Java by Joshua Bloch. Writing a * good hashCode method is actually quite difficult. This class aims to simplify the process. *

* *

* The following is the approach taken. When appending a data field, the current total is multiplied by the * multiplier then a relevant value * for that data type is added. For example, if the current hashCode is 17, and the multiplier is 37, then * appending the integer 45 will create a hashcode of 674, namely 17 * 37 + 45. *

* *

* All relevant fields from the object should be included in the hashCode method. Derived fields may be * excluded. In general, any field used in the equals method must be used in the hashCode * method. *

* *

* To use this class write code as follows: *

* *
 * public class Person {
 *   String name;
 *   int age;
 *   boolean smoker;
 *   ...
 *
 *   public int hashCode() {
 *     // you pick a hard-coded, randomly chosen, non-zero, odd number
 *     // ideally different for each class
 *     return new HashCodeBuilder(17, 37).
 *       append(name).
 *       append(age).
 *       append(smoker).
 *       toHashCode();
 *   }
 * }
 * 
* *

* If required, the superclass hashCode() can be added using {@link #appendSuper}. *

* *

* Alternatively, there is a method that uses reflection to determine the fields to test. Because these fields are * usually private, the method, reflectionHashCode, uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible * to change the visibility of the fields. This will fail under a security manager, unless the appropriate permissions * are set up correctly. It is also slower than testing explicitly. *

* *

* A typical invocation for this method would look like: *

* *
 * public int hashCode() {
 *   return HashCodeBuilder.reflectionHashCode(this);
 * }
 * 
* * @since 1.0 * @version $Id: HashCodeBuilder.java 1144929 2011-07-10 18:26:16Z ggregory $ */ public class HashCodeBuilder implements Builder { /** *

* A registry of objects used by reflection methods to detect cyclical object references and avoid infinite loops. *

* * @since 2.3 */ private static final ThreadLocal> REGISTRY = new ThreadLocal>(); /* * NOTE: we cannot store the actual objects in a HashSet, as that would use the very hashCode() * we are in the process of calculating. * * So we generate a one-to-one mapping from the original object to a new object. * * Now HashSet uses equals() to determine if two elements with the same hashcode really * are equal, so we also need to ensure that the replacement objects are only equal * if the original objects are identical. * * The original implementation (2.4 and before) used the System.indentityHashCode() * method - however this is not guaranteed to generate unique ids (e.g. LANG-459) * * We now use the IDKey helper class (adapted from org.apache.axis.utils.IDKey) * to disambiguate the duplicate ids. */ /** *

* Returns the registry of objects being traversed by the reflection methods in the current thread. *

* * @return Set the registry of objects being traversed * @since 2.3 */ static Set getRegistry() { return REGISTRY.get(); } /** *

* Returns true if the registry contains the given object. Used by the reflection methods to avoid * infinite loops. *

* * @param value * The object to lookup in the registry. * @return boolean true if the registry contains the given object. * @since 2.3 */ static boolean isRegistered(Object value) { Set registry = getRegistry(); return registry != null && registry.contains(new IDKey(value)); } /** *

* Appends the fields and values defined by the given object of the given Class. *

* * @param object * the object to append details of * @param clazz * the class to append details of * @param builder * the builder to append to * @param useTransients * whether to use transient fields * @param excludeFields * Collection of String field names to exclude from use in calculation of hash code */ private static void reflectionAppend(Object object, Class clazz, HashCodeBuilder builder, boolean useTransients, String[] excludeFields) { if (isRegistered(object)) { return; } try { register(object); Field[] fields = clazz.getDeclaredFields(); AccessibleObject.setAccessible(fields, true); for (Field field : fields) { if (!ArrayUtils.contains(excludeFields, field.getName()) && (field.getName().indexOf('$') == -1) && (useTransients || !Modifier.isTransient(field.getModifiers())) && (!Modifier.isStatic(field.getModifiers()))) { try { Object fieldValue = field.get(object); builder.append(fieldValue); } catch (IllegalAccessException e) { // this can't happen. Would get a Security exception instead // throw a runtime exception in case the impossible happens. throw new InternalError("Unexpected IllegalAccessException"); } } } } finally { unregister(object); } } /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* Transient members will be not be used, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the * Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included. *

* *

* Two randomly chosen, non-zero, odd numbers must be passed in. Ideally these should be different for each class, * however this is not vital. Prime numbers are preferred, especially for the multiplier. *

* * @param initialNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the initial value * @param multiplierNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the multiplier * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the Object is null * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the number is zero or even */ public static int reflectionHashCode(int initialNonZeroOddNumber, int multiplierNonZeroOddNumber, Object object) { return reflectionHashCode(initialNonZeroOddNumber, multiplierNonZeroOddNumber, object, false, null); } /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* If the TestTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they * are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included. *

* *

* Two randomly chosen, non-zero, odd numbers must be passed in. Ideally these should be different for each class, * however this is not vital. Prime numbers are preferred, especially for the multiplier. *

* * @param initialNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the initial value * @param multiplierNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the multiplier * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @param testTransients * whether to include transient fields * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the Object is null * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the number is zero or even */ public static int reflectionHashCode(int initialNonZeroOddNumber, int multiplierNonZeroOddNumber, Object object, boolean testTransients) { return reflectionHashCode(initialNonZeroOddNumber, multiplierNonZeroOddNumber, object, testTransients, null); } /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* If the TestTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they * are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be included. Superclass fields will be included up to and including the specified * superclass. A null superclass is treated as java.lang.Object. *

* *

* Two randomly chosen, non-zero, odd numbers must be passed in. Ideally these should be different for each class, * however this is not vital. Prime numbers are preferred, especially for the multiplier. *

* * @param * the type of the object involved * @param initialNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the initial value * @param multiplierNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the multiplier * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @param testTransients * whether to include transient fields * @param reflectUpToClass * the superclass to reflect up to (inclusive), may be null * @param excludeFields * array of field names to exclude from use in calculation of hash code * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the Object is null * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the number is zero or even * @since 2.0 */ public static int reflectionHashCode(int initialNonZeroOddNumber, int multiplierNonZeroOddNumber, T object, boolean testTransients, Class reflectUpToClass, String... excludeFields) { if (object == null) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("The object to build a hash code for must not be null"); } HashCodeBuilder builder = new HashCodeBuilder(initialNonZeroOddNumber, multiplierNonZeroOddNumber); Class clazz = object.getClass(); reflectionAppend(object, clazz, builder, testTransients, excludeFields); while (clazz.getSuperclass() != null && clazz != reflectUpToClass) { clazz = clazz.getSuperclass(); reflectionAppend(object, clazz, builder, testTransients, excludeFields); } return builder.toHashCode(); } /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* This constructor uses two hard coded choices for the constants needed to build a hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* If the TestTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they * are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included. *

* * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @param testTransients * whether to include transient fields * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the object is null */ public static int reflectionHashCode(Object object, boolean testTransients) { return reflectionHashCode(17, 37, object, testTransients, null); } /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* This constructor uses two hard coded choices for the constants needed to build a hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* Transient members will be not be used, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the * Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included. *

* * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @param excludeFields * Collection of String field names to exclude from use in calculation of hash code * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the object is null */ public static int reflectionHashCode(Object object, Collection excludeFields) { return reflectionHashCode(object, ReflectionToStringBuilder.toNoNullStringArray(excludeFields)); } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** *

* This method uses reflection to build a valid hash code. *

* *

* This constructor uses two hard coded choices for the constants needed to build a hash code. *

* *

* It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will * throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is * also not as efficient as testing explicitly. *

* *

* Transient members will be not be used, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the * Object. *

* *

* Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included. *

* * @param object * the Object to create a hashCode for * @param excludeFields * array of field names to exclude from use in calculation of hash code * @return int hash code * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the object is null */ public static int reflectionHashCode(Object object, String... excludeFields) { return reflectionHashCode(17, 37, object, false, null, excludeFields); } /** *

* Registers the given object. Used by the reflection methods to avoid infinite loops. *

* * @param value * The object to register. */ static void register(Object value) { synchronized (HashCodeBuilder.class) { if (getRegistry() == null) { REGISTRY.set(new HashSet()); } } getRegistry().add(new IDKey(value)); } /** *

* Unregisters the given object. *

* *

* Used by the reflection methods to avoid infinite loops. * * @param value * The object to unregister. * @since 2.3 */ static void unregister(Object value) { Set registry = getRegistry(); if (registry != null) { registry.remove(new IDKey(value)); synchronized (HashCodeBuilder.class) { //read again registry = getRegistry(); if (registry != null && registry.isEmpty()) { REGISTRY.remove(); } } } } /** * Constant to use in building the hashCode. */ private final int iConstant; /** * Running total of the hashCode. */ private int iTotal = 0; /** *

* Uses two hard coded choices for the constants needed to build a hashCode. *

*/ public HashCodeBuilder() { iConstant = 37; iTotal = 17; } /** *

* Two randomly chosen, non-zero, odd numbers must be passed in. Ideally these should be different for each class, * however this is not vital. *

* *

* Prime numbers are preferred, especially for the multiplier. *

* * @param initialNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the initial value * @param multiplierNonZeroOddNumber * a non-zero, odd number used as the multiplier * @throws IllegalArgumentException * if the number is zero or even */ public HashCodeBuilder(int initialNonZeroOddNumber, int multiplierNonZeroOddNumber) { if (initialNonZeroOddNumber == 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("HashCodeBuilder requires a non zero initial value"); } if (initialNonZeroOddNumber % 2 == 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("HashCodeBuilder requires an odd initial value"); } if (multiplierNonZeroOddNumber == 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("HashCodeBuilder requires a non zero multiplier"); } if (multiplierNonZeroOddNumber % 2 == 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("HashCodeBuilder requires an odd multiplier"); } iConstant = multiplierNonZeroOddNumber; iTotal = initialNonZeroOddNumber; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a boolean. *

*

* This adds 1 when true, and 0 when false to the hashCode. *

*

* This is in contrast to the standard java.lang.Boolean.hashCode handling, which computes * a hashCode value of 1231 for java.lang.Boolean instances * that represent true or 1237 for java.lang.Boolean instances * that represent false. *

*

* This is in accordance with the Effective Java design. *

* * @param value * the boolean to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(boolean value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + (value ? 0 : 1); return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a boolean array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(boolean[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (boolean element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** *

* Append a hashCode for a byte. *

* * @param value * the byte to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(byte value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + value; return this; } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** *

* Append a hashCode for a byte array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(byte[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (byte element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a char. *

* * @param value * the char to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(char value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + value; return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a char array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(char[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (char element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a double. *

* * @param value * the double to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(double value) { return append(Double.doubleToLongBits(value)); } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a double array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(double[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (double element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a float. *

* * @param value * the float to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(float value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + Float.floatToIntBits(value); return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a float array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(float[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (float element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for an int. *

* * @param value * the int to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(int value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + value; return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for an int array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(int[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (int element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a long. *

* * @param value * the long to add to the hashCode * @return this */ // NOTE: This method uses >> and not >>> as Effective Java and // Long.hashCode do. Ideally we should switch to >>> at // some stage. There are backwards compat issues, so // that will have to wait for the time being. cf LANG-342. public HashCodeBuilder append(long value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + ((int) (value ^ (value >> 32))); return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a long array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(long[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (long element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for an Object. *

* * @param object * the Object to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(Object object) { if (object == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { if(object.getClass().isArray()) { // 'Switch' on type of array, to dispatch to the correct handler // This handles multi dimensional arrays if (object instanceof long[]) { append((long[]) object); } else if (object instanceof int[]) { append((int[]) object); } else if (object instanceof short[]) { append((short[]) object); } else if (object instanceof char[]) { append((char[]) object); } else if (object instanceof byte[]) { append((byte[]) object); } else if (object instanceof double[]) { append((double[]) object); } else if (object instanceof float[]) { append((float[]) object); } else if (object instanceof boolean[]) { append((boolean[]) object); } else { // Not an array of primitives append((Object[]) object); } } else { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + object.hashCode(); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for an Object array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(Object[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (Object element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a short. *

* * @param value * the short to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(short value) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + value; return this; } /** *

* Append a hashCode for a short array. *

* * @param array * the array to add to the hashCode * @return this */ public HashCodeBuilder append(short[] array) { if (array == null) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant; } else { for (short element : array) { append(element); } } return this; } /** *

* Adds the result of super.hashCode() to this builder. *

* * @param superHashCode * the result of calling super.hashCode() * @return this HashCodeBuilder, used to chain calls. * @since 2.0 */ public HashCodeBuilder appendSuper(int superHashCode) { iTotal = iTotal * iConstant + superHashCode; return this; } /** *

* Return the computed hashCode. *

* * @return hashCode based on the fields appended */ public int toHashCode() { return iTotal; } /** * Returns the computed hashCode. * * @return hashCode based on the fields appended * * @since 3.0 */ public Integer build() { return Integer.valueOf(toHashCode()); } /** *

* The computed hashCode from toHashCode() is returned due to the likelihood * of bugs in mis-calling toHashCode() and the unlikeliness of it mattering what the hashCode for * HashCodeBuilder itself is.

* * @return hashCode based on the fields appended * @since 2.5 */ @Override public int hashCode() { return toHashCode(); } }




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