Java try/catch/finally best practices while acquiring/closing resources

Current best practice for try/catch/finally involving objects that are closeable (e.g. Files) is to use Java 7's try-with-resource statement, e.g.:

try (FileReader reader = new FileReader("ex.txt")) {
    System.out.println((char)reader.read());
} catch (IOException ioe) {
    ioe.printStackTrace();
}

In this case, the FileReader is automatically closed at the end of the try statement, without the need to close it in an explicit finally block. There are a few examples here:

http://ppkwok.blogspot.com/2012/11/java-cafe-2-try-with-resources.html

The official Java description is at:

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/language/try-with-resources.html


Note that the following is only applicable for Java 6 and earlier. For Java 7 and later, you should switch to using try-with-resources ... as described in other answers.

If you are trying to catch and report all exceptions at source (in Java 6 or earlier), a better solution is this:

ObjectOutputStream oos = null;
try {
   oos = new ObjectOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(file));
   oos.writeObject(shapes);
   oos.flush();
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
    // complain to user
} catch (IOException ex) {
    // notify user
} finally {
    if (oos != null) {
        try {
            oos.close();
        } catch (IOException ex) {
            // ignore ... any significant errors should already have been
            // reported via an IOException from the final flush.
        }
    }
}

Notes:

  • The standard Java wrapper streams, readers and writers all propagate close and flush to their wrapped streams, etc. So you only need to close or flush the outermost wrapper.
  • The purpose of flushing explicitly at the end of the try block is so that the (real) handler for IOException gets to see any write failures1.
  • When you do a close or flush on an output stream, there is a "once in a blue moon" chance that an exception will be thrown due to disc errors or file system full. You should not squash this exception!.

If you often have to "close a possibly null stream ignoring IOExceptions", then you could write yourself a helper method like this:

public void closeQuietly(Closeable closeable) {
    if (closeable != null) {
        try {
            closeable.close();
        } catch (IOException ex) {
            // ignore
        }
    }
}

then you can replace the previous finally block with:

} finally {
    closeQuietly(oos);
}

Another answer points out that a closeQuietly method is already available in an Apache Commons library ... if you don't mind adding a dependency to your project for a 10 line method.

But be careful that you only use closeQuietly on streams where IO exceptions really are irrelevant.

UPDATE : closeQuietly is deprecated in version 2.6 of the Apache Commons API. Java 7+ try-with-resources makes it redundant.


On the issue of flush() versus close() that people were asking about in comments:

  • The standard "filter" and "buffered" output streams and writers have an API contract that states that close() causes all buffered output to be flushed. You should find that all other (standard) output classes that do output buffering will behave the same way. So, for a standard class it is redundant to call flush() immediately before close().

  • For custom and 3rd-party classes, you need to investigate (e.g. read the javadoc, look at the code), but any close() method that doesn't flush buffered data is arguably broken.

  • Finally, there is the issue of what flush() actually does. What the javadoc says is this (for OutputStream ...)

    If the intended destination of this stream is an abstraction provided by the underlying operating system, for example a file, then flushing the stream guarantees only that bytes previously written to the stream are passed to the operating system for writing; it does not guarantee that they are actually written to a physical device such as a disk drive.

    So ... if you hope / imagine that calling flush() guarantees that your data will persist, you are wrong! (If you need to do that kind of thing, look at the FileChannel.force method ...)