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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
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* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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package sun.jvm.hotspot.debugger;
This is a tag interface (similar to Cloneable) which indicates
that the contained address is "special" and is updated under the
hood by the VM. The purpose is to support implementation of
reflection on the current VM with these interfaces; if the Java
code implementing parts of the VM requires proxies for objects in
the heap, it must be the case that those proxies are updated if GC
occurs. This is the level at which this updating is handled. The
VM (and specifically the GC code) must have intimate knowledge of
the VM-specific implementation of this interface.
Note that in the case of debugging a remote VM, it is not
workable to handle the automatic updating of these handles.
If the debugger allows the VM to resume running, it will have to
look up once again any object references via the path they were
found (i.e., the activation on the stack as the root, etc.)
/** <P> This is a tag interface (similar to Cloneable) which indicates
that the contained address is "special" and is updated under the
hood by the VM. The purpose is to support implementation of
reflection on the current VM with these interfaces; if the Java
code implementing parts of the VM requires proxies for objects in
the heap, it must be the case that those proxies are updated if GC
occurs. This is the level at which this updating is handled. The
VM (and specifically the GC code) must have intimate knowledge of
the VM-specific implementation of this interface. </P>
<P> Note that in the case of debugging a remote VM, it is not
workable to handle the automatic updating of these handles.
If the debugger allows the VM to resume running, it will have to
look up once again any object references via the path they were
found (i.e., the activation on the stack as the root, etc.) </P>
*/
public interface OopHandle extends Address {
}