ObjectOutputStream
implements object serialization. It maintains the
state of the stream including the set of objects already serialized. Its methods
control the traversal of objects to be serialized to save the specified objects and
the objects to which they refer.
package java.io; public class ObjectOutputStream extends OutputStream implements ObjectOutput, ObjectStreamConstants { public ObjectOutputStream(OutputStream out) throws IOException; public final void writeObject(Object obj) throws IOException; public final void defaultWriteObject(); throws IOException, NotActiveException; public void reset() throws IOException; protected void annotateClass(Class cl) throws IOException; protected Object replaceObject(Object obj) throws IOException; protected final boolean enableReplaceObject(boolean enable) throws SecurityException; protected void writeStreamHeader() throws IOException; public void write(int data) throws IOException; public void write(byte b[]) throws IOException; public void write(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException; public void flush() throws IOException; protected void drain() throws IOException; public void close() throws IOException; public void writeBoolean(boolean data) throws IOException; public void writeByte(int data) throws IOException; public void writeShort(int data) throws IOException; public void writeChar(int data) throws IOException; public void writeInt(int data) throws IOException; public void writeLong(long data) throws IOException; public void writeFloat(float data) throws IOException; public void writeDouble(double data) throws IOException; public void writeBytes(String data) throws IOException; public void writeChars(String data) throws IOException; public void writeUTF(String data) throws IOException; }
ObjectOutputStream
constructor requires an OutputStream. The
constructor calls writeStreamHeader
to write a magic number and version
to the stream, that will be read and verified by the corresponding
readStreamHeader
in the ObjectInputStream
constructor.
The writeObject
method is used to serialize an object to the stream. Objects
are serialized as follows:
writeObject
returns.
java.lang.String,
the string is written in Universal
Transfer Format (UTF) format, a handle is assigned to the string, and
writeObject returns.
writeObject
is called recursively to write the
ObjectStreamClass
of the array. The handle for the array is assigned. It is
followed by the length of the array. Each element of the array is then written
to the stream, after which writeObject
returns.
enableReplaceObject
, the replaceObject
method
is called to allow subclasses to substitute an object. If the object is replaced,
the mapping from the original object to the replacement is stored for later
use in step 3, and steps 2 through 7 are repeated on the new object. If the
replacement object is not one of the types covered by steps 2 through 7,
processing resumes using the replacement object at step 9.
writeObject
method, the defaultWriteObject
method is called to write the nonstatic and nontransient fields to the
stream. If the class does have a writeObject
method, it is called. It may
call defaultWriteObject
to save the state of the object, and then it can
write other information to the stream.
Externalizable
, the writeExternal method of the object
is called.
ObjectStreamException
the exception is
written to the stream using the exception protocol and the stream state is
discarded. For other exceptions
, the stream is aborted and left in an
unknown and unusable state.
The defaultWriteObject
method implements the default serialization
mechanism for the current class. This method may be called only from a class's
writeObject
method. The method writes all of the nonstatic and
nontransient fields of the current class to the stream. If called from outside the
writeObject
method, the NotActiveException is thrown.
The reset
method resets the stream state to be the same as if it had just been
constructed. Reset will discard the state of any objects already written to the
stream. The current point in the stream is marked as reset, so the
corresponding ObjectInputStream will reset at the same point. Objects
previously written to the stream will not be remembered as already having
been written to the stream. They will be written to the stream again. This is
useful when the contents of an object or objects must be sent again. Reset may
not be called while objects are being serialized. If called inappropriately, an
IOException is thrown.
The annotateClass
method is called while a Class is being serialized, and
after the class descriptor has been written to the stream. Subclasses may extend
this method and write other information to the stream about the class. This
information must be read by the resolveClass
method in a corresponding
ObjectInputStream
subclass.
The replaceObject
method is used by trusted subclasses to allow objects
within the graph to be replaced or monitored during serialization. Replacing
objects must be enabled explicitly by calling enableReplaceObject
before
calling writeObject
with the first object to be replaced. Once enabled,
replaceObject
is called for each object just prior to serializing the object for
the first time. A subclass's implementation may return a substitute object that
will be serialized instead of the original. The substitute object must be
serializable. All references in the stream to the original object will be replaced
by the substitute object.
When objects are being replaced, the subclass must ensure that the substituted
object is compatible with every field where the reference will be stored, or that
a complementary substitution will be made during deserialization. Objects,
whose type is not a subclass of the type of the field or array element, will later
abort the deserialization by raising a ClassCastException
and the reference
will not be stored.
The enableReplaceObject
method is used by trusted subclasses of
ObjectOutputStream to enable the substitution of one object for another during
serialization. Replacing objects is disabled until enableReplaceObject
is
called with a true
value. It may thereafter be disabled by setting it to false
.
The previous setting is returned. The enableReplaceObject
method checks
that the stream requesting the replacement can be trusted. Every reference to
objects is passed to replaceObject
. To ensure that the private state of objects
is not unintentionally exposed, only trusted streams may use replaceObject
.
Trusted classes are those classes with a class loader equal to null.
The writeStreamHeader
method writes the magic number and version to
the stream. This information must be read by the readStreamHeader
method
of ObjectInputStream
. Subclasses may need to implement this method to
identify the stream's unique format.
The flush
method is used to empty any buffers being held by the stream and
to forward the flush to the underlying stream. The drain
method may be used
by subclassers to empty only the ObjectOutputStream
's buffers without
forcing the underlying stream to be flushed.
All of the write methods for primitive types encode their values using a DataOutputStream to put them in the standard stream format. The bytes are buffered into block data records so they can be distinguished from the encoding of objects. This buffering allows primitive data to be skipped if necessary for class versioning. It also allows the stream to be parsed without invoking class-specific methods.
writeObject
method allows a class to control the
serialization of its own fields. Here is its signature:
private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream stream) throws IOException;
The class's writeObject method, if implemented, is responsible for saving the
state of the class. The defaultWriteObject
method should be called before
writing any optional data that will be needed by the corresponding
readObject
method to restore the state of the object. The responsibility for
the format, structure, and versioning of the optional data lies completely with
the class.
java.io.Externalizable
must implement the
writeExternal
method to save the entire state of the object. It must
coordinate with its superclasses to save their state. All of the methods of
ObjectOutput
are available to save the object's primitive typed fields and
object fields.
public void writeExternal(ObjectOutput stream) throws IOException;