When does the JVM load classes?

Garrett Hall picture Garrett Hall · Sep 26, 2011 · Viewed 12.5k times · Source

Assume I have the following class:

class Caller {
  public void createSomething() {
    new Something();
  }
}

Would executing this line:

static void main() {
   Class<?> clazz = Caller.class;
}

cause the JVM to load the class Something or is the class loading deferred until the method createSomething() is called?

Answer

Matthew Farwell picture Matthew Farwell · Sep 26, 2011

A class is loaded only when you require information about that class.

public class SomethingCaller {
    public static Something something = null; // (1) does not cause class loading
    public static Class<?> somethingClass = Something.class; // (2) causes class loading

    public void doSomething() {
        new Something(); // (3) causes class loading
    }
}

The lines (2) & (3) would cause the class to be loaded. The Something.class object contains information (line (2)) which could only come from the class definition, so you need to load the class. The call to the constructor (3) obviously requires the class definition. Similarly for any other method on the class.

However, line (1) doesn't cause the class to be loaded, because you don't actually need any information, it's just a reference to an object.

EDIT: In your changed question, you ask whether referring to Something.class loads the class. Yes it does. It does not load the class until main() is executed though. Using the following code:

public class SomethingTest {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        new SomethingCaller();
    }
}

public class SomethingCaller {
    public void doSomething() {
        Class<?> somethingClass = Something.class;
    }
}

public class Something {}

This code does not cause the Something.class to be loaded. However, if I call doSomething(), the class is loaded. To test this, create the above classes, compile them and delete the Something.class file. The above code does not crash with a ClassNotFoundException.