user235273
user235273

Reputation:

How is Groovy able to access private methods of a Java class?

Groovy can access private methods and variables of a Java class. How does Groovy do this behind the scene? Is it because of the use of invokedynamic bytecode instruction which is used by MethodHandle class? I think Java uses invokespecial instruction for calling private methods and invokevirtual for public right which respects access modifiers?

Upvotes: 4

Views: 4181

Answers (3)

Etienne
Etienne

Reputation: 739

you can use java.lang.reflect

import java.lang.reflect.Method

// ....

Method method = a.getClass().getDeclaredMethod('initializeSeoCode')
method.setAccessible(true)
java.lang.Object r = method.invoke(a)

Upvotes: 1

Nicolas Filotto
Nicolas Filotto

Reputation: 44965

Groovy is written in Java, so it hopefully doesn't rely on the byte code directly, it doesn't it using the Reflection API.

For more details check for java.lang.reflect in the source code, you will then see how it uses the Reflection API behind the scene.

Upvotes: 2

BretC
BretC

Reputation: 4199

You can do this in Java anyway by using reflection, for example, this method will set the value of a private static field...

public static void setStaticField(Class<?> clazz, String fieldName, Object value) {
    try {
        Field field = clazz.getDeclaredField(fieldName);
        field.setAccessible(true);
        field.set(null, value);
    } catch (Exception ex) {
        throw new IllegalArgumentException("Could not set field '" + fieldName + "' of type '" + clazz.getName() + "' to: " + value, ex);
    }
}

Notice field.setAccessible(true)

This can be prevented by having an appropriate Security Manager Policy set up. See How to restrict developers to use reflection to access private methods and constructors in Java?

Upvotes: 1

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