How to use WeakReference in Java and Android development?

JavaAndroidWeak References

Java Problem Overview


I have been a java developer for 2 years.

But I have never wrote a WeakReference in my code. How to use WeakReference to make my application more efficient especially the Android application?

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

Using a WeakReference in Android isn't any different than using one in plain old Java.

You should think about using one whenever you need a reference to an object, but you don't want that reference to protect the object from the garbage collector. A classic example is a cache that you want to be garbage collected when memory usage gets too high (often implemented with WeakHashMap).

Be sure to check out SoftReference and PhantomReference as well.

EDIT: Tom has raised some concerns over implementing a cache with WeakHashMap. Here is an article laying out the problems: WeakHashMap is not a cache!

Tom is right that there have been complaints about poor Netbeans performance due to WeakHashMap caching.

I still think it would be a good learning experience to implement a cache with WeakHashMap and then compare it against your own hand-rolled cache implemented with SoftReference. In the real world, you probably wouldn't use either of these solutions, since it makes more sense to use a 3rd party library like Apache JCS.

Solution 2 - Java

[EDIT2] I found another good example of WeakReference. Processing Bitmaps Off the UI Thread page in Displaying Bitmaps Efficiently training guide, shows one usage of WeakReference in AsyncTask.

class BitmapWorkerTask extends AsyncTask<Integer, Void, Bitmap> {
    private final WeakReference<ImageView> imageViewReference;
    private int data = 0;

    public BitmapWorkerTask(ImageView imageView) {
        // Use a WeakReference to ensure the ImageView can be garbage collected
        imageViewReference = new WeakReference<ImageView>(imageView);
    }

    // Decode image in background.
    @Override
    protected Bitmap doInBackground(Integer... params) {
        data = params[0];
        return decodeSampledBitmapFromResource(getResources(), data, 100, 100));
    }

    // Once complete, see if ImageView is still around and set bitmap.
    @Override
    protected void onPostExecute(Bitmap bitmap) {
        if (imageViewReference != null && bitmap != null) {
            final ImageView imageView = imageViewReference.get();
            if (imageView != null) {
                imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmap);
            }
        }
    }
}

It says,

> The WeakReference to the ImageView ensures that the AsyncTask does not prevent the ImageView and anything it references from being garbage collected. There’s no guarantee the ImageView is still around when the task finishes, so you must also check the reference in onPostExecute(). The ImageView may no longer exist, if for example, the user navigates away from the activity or if a configuration change happens before the task finishes.

Happy coding!


[EDIT] I found a really good example of WeakReference from facebook-android-sdk. ToolTipPopup class is nothing but a simple widget class that shows tooltip above anchor view. I captured a screenshot.

scrumptious screenshot

The class is really simple(about 200 lines) and worthy to look at. In that class, WeakReference class is used to hold reference to anchor view, which makes perfect sense, because it makes possible for anchor view to be garbage collected even when a tooltip instance lives longer than its anchor view.

Happy coding! :)


Let me share one working example of WeakReference class. It's a little code snippet from Android framework widget called AutoCompleteTextView.

In short, WeakReference class is used to hold View object to prevent memory leak in this example.

I'll just copy-and-paste PopupDataSetObserver class, which is a nested class of AutoCompleteTextView. It's really simple and the comments explains the class well. Happy coding! :)

    /**
     * Static inner listener that keeps a WeakReference to the actual AutoCompleteTextView.
     * <p>
     * This way, if adapter has a longer life span than the View, we won't leak the View, instead
     * we will just leak a small Observer with 1 field.
     */
    private static class PopupDataSetObserver extends DataSetObserver {
    private final WeakReference<AutoCompleteTextView> mViewReference;
    private PopupDataSetObserver(AutoCompleteTextView view) {
        mViewReference = new WeakReference<AutoCompleteTextView>(view);
    }
    @Override
    public void onChanged() {
        final AutoCompleteTextView textView = mViewReference.get();
        if (textView != null && textView.mAdapter != null) {
            // If the popup is not showing already, showing it will cause
            // the list of data set observers attached to the adapter to
            // change. We can't do it from here, because we are in the middle
            // of iterating through the list of observers.
            textView.post(updateRunnable);
        }
    }

    private final Runnable updateRunnable = new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            final AutoCompleteTextView textView = mViewReference.get();
            if (textView == null) {
                return;
            }
            final ListAdapter adapter = textView.mAdapter;
            if (adapter == null) {
                return;
            }
            textView.updateDropDownForFilter(adapter.getCount());
        }
    };
}

And the PopupDataSetObserver is used in setting adapter.

    public <T extends ListAdapter & Filterable> void setAdapter(T adapter) {
    if (mObserver == null) {
        mObserver = new PopupDataSetObserver(this);
    } else if (mAdapter != null) {
        mAdapter.unregisterDataSetObserver(mObserver);
    }
    mAdapter = adapter;
    if (mAdapter != null) {
        //noinspection unchecked
        mFilter = ((Filterable) mAdapter).getFilter();
        adapter.registerDataSetObserver(mObserver);
    } else {
        mFilter = null;
    }
    mPopup.setAdapter(mAdapter);
}

One last thing. I also wanted to know working example of WeakReference in Android application, and I could find some samples in its official sample applications. But I really couldn't understand some of them's usage. For example, ThreadSample and DisplayingBitmaps applications use WeakReference in its code, but after running several tests, I found out that the get() method never returns null, because referenced view object is recycled in adapters, rather then garbage collected.

Solution 3 - Java

Some of the other answers seem incomplete or overly long. Here is a general answer.

How to use WeakReference in Java and Android

You can do the following steps:

  1. Create a WeakReference variable
  2. Set the weak reference
  3. Use the weak reference

Code

MyClass has a weak reference to AnotherClass.

public class MyClass {

    // 1. Create a WeakReference variable
    private WeakReference<AnotherClass> mAnotherClassReference;

    // 2. Set the weak reference (nothing special about the method name)
    void setWeakReference(AnotherClass anotherClass) {
        mAnotherClassReference = new WeakReference<>(anotherClass);
    }

    // 3. Use the weak reference
    void doSomething() {
        AnotherClass anotherClass = mAnotherClassReference.get();
        if (anotherClass == null) return;
        // do something with anotherClass
    }

}

AnotherClass has a strong reference to MyClass.

public class AnotherClass {
    
    // strong reference
    MyClass mMyClass;
    
    // allow MyClass to get a weak reference to this class
    void someMethod() {
        mMyClass = new MyClass();
        mMyClass.setWeakReference(this);
    }
}

Notes

  • The reason you need a weak reference is so that the Garbage Collector can dispose of the objects when they are no longer needed. If two objects retain a strong reference to each other, then they can't be garbage collected. This is a memory leak.
  • If two objects need to reference each other, object A (generally the shorter lived object) should have a weak reference to object B (generally the longer lived object), while B has a strong reference to A. In the example above, MyClass was A and AnotherClass was B.
  • An alternative to using a WeakReference is to have another class implement an interface. This is done in the Listener/Observer Pattern.

Practical example

Solution 4 - Java

A "canonicalized" mapping is where you keep one instance of the object in question in memory and all others look up that particular instance via pointers or somesuch mechanism. This is where weaks references can help. The short answer is that WeakReference objects can be used to create pointers to objects in your system while still allowing those objects to be reclaimed by the garbage-collector once they pass out of scope. For example if I had code like this:

class Registry {
     private Set registeredObjects = new HashSet();

     public void register(Object object) {
         registeredObjects.add( object );
     }
 }

Any object I register will never be reclaimed by the GC because there is a reference to it stored in the set of registeredObjects. On the other hand if I do this:

class Registry {
     private Set registeredObjects = new HashSet();

     public void register(Object object) {
         registeredObjects.add( new WeakReference(object) );
     }
 }

Then when the GC wants to reclaim the objects in the Set it will be able to do so. You can use this technique for caching, cataloguing, etc. See below for references to much more in-depth discussions of GC and caching.

Ref: Garbage collector and WeakReference

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