I have noted that many Java 8 methods in Oracle JDK use Objects.requireNonNull()
, which internally throws NullPointerException
if the given object
Using requireNonNull()
as first statements in a method allow to identify right now/fast the cause of the exception.
The stacktrace indicates clearly that the exception was thrown as soon as the entry of the method because the caller didn't respect the requirements/contract.
Passing a null
object to another method may indeed provoke an exception at a time but the cause of the problem may be more complicated to understand as the exception will be thrown in a specific invocation on the null
object that may be much further.
Here is a concrete and real example that shows why we have to favor fail fast in general and more particularly using Object.requireNonNull()
or any way to perform a no null check on parameters designed to be not null
.
Suppose a Dictionary
class that composes a LookupService
and a List
of String
representing words contained in. These fields are designed to be not null
and one of these is passed in the Dictionary
constructor.
Now suppose a "bad" implementation of Dictionary
without null
check in the method entry (here that is the constructor):
public class Dictionary {
private final List<String> words;
private final LookupService lookupService;
public Dictionary(List<String> words) {
this.words = this.words;
this.lookupService = new LookupService(words);
}
public boolean isFirstElement(String userData) {
return lookupService.isFirstElement(userData);
}
}
public class LookupService {
List<String> words;
public LookupService(List<String> words) {
this.words = words;
}
public boolean isFirstElement(String userData) {
return words.get(0).contains(userData);
}
}
Now, let's invoke the Dictionary
constructor with a null
reference for the words
parameter :
Dictionary dictionary = new Dictionary(null);
// exception thrown lately : only in the next statement
boolean isFirstElement = dictionary.isFirstElement("anyThing");
The JVM throws the NPE at this statement :
return words.get(0).contains(userData);
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at LookupService.isFirstElement(LookupService.java:5) at Dictionary.isFirstElement(Dictionary.java:15) at Dictionary.main(Dictionary.java:22)
The exception is triggered in the LookupService
class while the origin of it is well earlier (the Dictionary
constructor). It makes the overall issue analysis much less obvious.
Is words
null
? Is words.get(0) null
? Both ?
Why the one, the other or maybe both are null
?
Is it a coding error in Dictionary
(constructor? invoked method?) ? Is it a coding error in LookupService
? (constructor? invoked method?) ?
Finally, we will have to inspect more code to find the error origin and in a more complex class maybe even use a debugger to understand more easily what it happened.
But why a simple thing (a lack of null check) become a complex issue ?
Because we allowed the initial bug/lack identifiable on a specific component leak on lower components.
Imagine that LookupService
was not a local service but a remote service or a third party library with few debugging information or imagine that you didn't have 2 layers but 4 or 5 layers of object invocations before that the null
be detected ? The problem would be still more complex to analyse.
So the way to favor is :
public Dictionary(List<String> words) {
this.words = Objects.requireNonNull(words);
this.lookupService = new LookupService(words);
}
In this way, no headache : we get the exception thrown as soon as this is received :
// exception thrown early : in the constructor
Dictionary dictionary = new Dictionary(null);
// we never arrive here
boolean isFirstElement = dictionary.isFirstElement("anyThing");
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at java.util.Objects.requireNonNull(Objects.java:203) at com.Dictionary.(Dictionary.java:15) at com.Dictionary.main(Dictionary.java:24)
Note that here I illustrated the issue with a constructor but a method invocation could have the same non null check constraint.
Null pointer exception is thrown when you access a member of an object which is null
at a later point. Objects.requireNonNull()
immediately checks the value and throws exception instantly without moving forward and making it easier to detect where the null exception actually occured.
But NullPointerException will be thrown anyway if a null object is dereferenced. So, why should one do this extra null check and throw NullPointerException?
It means you detect the problem immediately and reliably.
Consider:
.NET makes this better by separating NullReferenceException
("you dereferenced a null value") from ArgumentNullException
("you shouldn't have passed in null as an argument - and it was for this parameter). I wish Java did the same thing, but even with just a NullPointerException
, it's still much easier to fix code if the error is thrown at the earliest point at which it can be detected.
In addition to all the correct answers:
We use it in reactive streams. Usually the resulting NullpointerException
s are wrapped into other Exceptions depending on their occurance in the stream. Hence, we can later easily decide how to handle the error.
Just an example: Imagine you have
<T> T parseAndValidate(String payload) throws ParsingException { ... };
<T> T save(T t) throws DBAccessException { ... };
where parseAndValidate
wrapps the NullPointerException
from requireNonNull
in a ParsingException
.
Now you can decide, e.g. when to do a retry or not:
...
.map(this::parseAndValidate)
.map(this::save)
.retry(Retry.<T>allBut(ParsingException.class))
Without the check, the NullPointerException will occure in the save
method, which will result in endless retries. Even worth, imagine a long living subscription, adding
.onErrorContinue(
throwable -> throwable.getClass().equals(ParsingException.class),
parsingExceptionConsumer()
)
Now the RetryExhaustException
will kill your subscription.
Because you can make things explicit by doing so. Like:
public class Foo {
private final Bar bar;
public Foo(Bar bar) {
Objects.requireNonNull(bar, "bar must not be null");
this.bar = bar;
}
Or shorter:
this.bar = Objects.requireNonNull(bar, "bar must not be null");
Now you know:
new()
Compare that to: you create a Foo object today, and tomorrow you invoke a method that uses that field and throws. Most likely, you will not know tomorrow why that reference was null yesterday when it got passed to the constructor!
In other words: by explicitly using this method to check incoming references you can control the point in time when the exception will be thrown. And most of the time, you want to fail as fast as possible!
The major advantages are:
bar
isn't null - and thus you do not need any if (bar == null)
checks in other places!In the context of compiler extensions that implement Nullability checking (eg: uber/NullAway), Objects.requireNonNull
should be used somewhat sparingly for occasions when you have a nullable field that you happen to know is not null at a certain point in your code.
In this way, there are two main usages:
Validation
Nullability marking (changing from @Nullable to @Nonnull)
Example usage of Nullability marking:
@Nullable
Foo getFoo(boolean getNull) { return getNull ? null : new Foo(); }
// Changes contract from Nullable to Nonnull without compiler error
@Nonnull Foo myFoo = Objects.requireNonNull(getFoo(false));