When does a java object become non-null during construction?

If another thread were to check the someObject variable "during" construction, I believe it may (due to quirks in the memory model) see a partially initialized object. The new (as of Java 5) memory model means that any final fields should be set to their values before the object becomes visible to other threads (so long as the reference to the newly created object doesn't escape from the constructor in any other way) but beyond that there aren't many guarantees.

Basically, don't share data without appropriate locking (or guarantees given by static inializers etc) :) Seriously, memory models are seriously tricky, as is lock-free programming in general. Try to avoid this becoming a possibility.

In logical terms the assignment happens after the constructor runs - so if you observe the variable from the same thread it will be null during the constructor call. However, as I say there are memory model oddities.

EDIT: For the purposes of double-checked locking, you can get away with this if your field is volatile and if you're using Java 5 or higher. Prior to Java 5 the memory model wasn't strong enough for this. You need to get the pattern exactly right though. See Effective Java, 2nd edition, item 71 for more details.

EDIT: Here's my reasoning for arguing against Aaron's inlining being visible in a single thread. Suppose we have:

public class FooHolder
{
    public static Foo f = null;

    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        f = new Foo();
        System.out.println(f.fWasNull);
    }
}

// Make this nested if you like, I don't believe it affects the reasoning
public class Foo
{
    public boolean fWasNull;

    public Foo()
    {
        fWasNull = FooHolder.f == null;
    }
}

I believe this will always report true. From section 15.26.1:

Otherwise, three steps are required:

  • First, the left-hand operand is evaluated to produce a variable. If this evaluation completes abruptly, then the assignment expression completes abruptly for the same reason; the right-hand operand is not evaluated and no assignment occurs.
  • Otherwise, the right-hand operand is evaluated. If this evaluation completes abruptly, then the assignment expression completes abruptly for the same reason and no assignment occurs.
Otherwise, the value of the right-hand operand is converted to the type of the left-hand variable, is subjected to value set conversion (§5.1.13) to the appropriate standard value set (not an extended-exponent value set), and the result of the conversion is stored into the variable.

Then from section 17.4.5:

Two actions can be ordered by a happens-before relationship. If one action happens-before another, then the first is visible to and ordered before the second.

If we have two actions x and y, we write hb(x, y) to indicate that x happens-before y.

  • If x and y are actions of the same thread and x comes before y in program order, then hb(x, y).
  • There is a happens-before edge from the end of a constructor of an object to the start of a finalizer (§12.6) for that object.
  • If an action x synchronizes-with a following action y, then we also have hb(x, y).
  • If hb(x, y) and hb(y, z), then hb(x, z).

It should be noted that the presence of a happens-before relationship between two actions does not necessarily imply that they have to take place in that order in an implementation. If the reordering produces results consistent with a legal execution, it is not illegal.

In other words, it's okay for weird stuff to happen even within a single thread but that mustn't be observable. In this case the difference would be observable, which is why I believe it would be illegal.


someObject will be a null pointer right up until it is assigned a pointer value from the constructor of the type. Since assignment is from right to left it is possible for another thread to check someObject while the constructor is still running. This would be prior to the assignment of the pointer to the variable so someObject would still be null.


someObject will become non-null at some point during the construction. Typically, there are two cases:

  1. The optimizer has inlined the constructor
  2. The constructor is not inlined.

In the first case, the VM will execute this code (pseudocode):

someObject = malloc(SomeClass.size);
someObject.field = ...
....

So in this case, someObject is not null and it points to memory that is not 100% initialized, namely not all of the constructor code has been run! This is why double-checked locking doesn't work.

In the second case, the code from the constructor will run, a reference will be passed back (just like in a normal method call) and someObject will be set to the value of the refernce after all and every init code has run.

The problem is that there is no way to tell java not to assign someObject early. For example, you could try:

SomeClass tmp = new SomeClass();
someObject = tmp;

But since tmp is not used, the optimizer is allowed to ignore it, so it would produce the same code as above.

So this behavior is to allow the optimizer to produce faster code but it can bite you nastily when writing multi-threaded code. In single threaded code, this is usually not an issue since no code is executed until the constructor finishes.

[EDIT] Here is a good article which explains what's happening: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-dcl.html

PS: The book "Effective Java, Second Edition" by Joshua Bloch contains a solution for Java 5 and up:

private volatile SomeClass field;
public SomeClass getField () {
    SomeClass result = field;
    if (result == null) { // First check, no locking
        synchronized(this) {
            result = field;
            if (result == null) { // second check with locking
                field = result = new SomeClass ();
            }
        }
    }
    return result;
}

Looks weird but should work on every Java VM. Note that every bit is important; if you omit the double assign, you'll either get bad performance or partially initialized objects. For a complete explanation, buy the book.