I'm writing a C++ app with native threads (pthreads) and I need to call some Java methods etc. I'm not sure which JNI objects can be safely cached ie stored in my C++ object for use later, possibly/probably by a different thread. I do know that if my class' methods can be called by different threads I mustn't cache the JNIEnv, but instead cache the JavaVM and get a JNIEnv by attaching the current thread. But does that also mean I can't cache anything obtained from a JNIEnv? I need to use the objects obtained by the following JNIEnv methods:
FindClass, GetMethodID, NewObject, NewGlobalRef
Do those stay valid across threads, or do I have to get new ones every time? If the latter, is there a way to create an object in one native thread and be able to access the same object in a different thread?
Objects are not thread-specific. They are initially "local" references, and if you want to keep a copy you have to tell the VM that you're doing so by creating (and, eventually, deleting) a "global" reference.
See http://developer.android.com/training/articles/perf-jni.html, especially the "Local and Global References" section.
JNI methods like
FindClass
,GetMethodID
,GetFieldID
are expensive operation that are guaranteed to generate the same result over the life of the JVM. Since these operations are time consuming, it is wise to store the result somewhere to be reused later on in the native side (this is caching).JNI caching regards only these JNI function calls. If you want to cache any other C++ or Java object this is a different topic. (Just to be clear).
The cached classes, methods and fields do not depend on the thread they are retrieved from, so they are valid across different threads. At most you have to perform thread safe operations when getting or setting some object's field with
Set<type>Field
orGet<type>Field
.Since FindClass returns a local reference to the class object, you have to turn it into a global reference to guarantee its reuse after the function that retrieves it ends. You can achieve this by using NewGlobalReference:
Here you have an example of the all JNI Caching topic:
MyJni.cpp:
MyJni.java:
Have fun ;)