ThreadLocal
variables are supposed to be garbage collected once the holding thread is no longer alive. Memory leaks can occur when
holding threads are re-used which is the case on application servers using pool of threads.
To avoid such problems, it is recommended to always clean up ThreadLocal
variables using the remove()
method to remove
the current thread’s value for the ThreadLocal
variable.
In addition, calling set(null)
to remove the value might keep the reference to this
pointer in the map, which can cause
memory leak in some scenarios. Using remove
is safer to avoid this issue.
Noncompliant code example
public class ThreadLocalUserSession implements UserSession {
private static final ThreadLocal<UserSession> DELEGATE = new ThreadLocal<>();
public UserSession get() {
UserSession session = DELEGATE.get();
if (session != null) {
return session;
}
throw new UnauthorizedException("User is not authenticated");
}
public void set(UserSession session) {
DELEGATE.set(session);
}
public void incorrectCleanup() {
DELEGATE.set(null); // Noncompliant
}
// some other methods without a call to DELEGATE.remove()
}
Compliant solution
public class ThreadLocalUserSession implements UserSession {
private static final ThreadLocal<UserSession> DELEGATE = new ThreadLocal<>();
public UserSession get() {
UserSession session = DELEGATE.get();
if (session != null) {
return session;
}
throw new UnauthorizedException("User is not authenticated");
}
public void set(UserSession session) {
DELEGATE.set(session);
}
public void unload() {
DELEGATE.remove(); // Compliant
}
// ...
}
Exceptions
Rule will not detect non-private ThreadLocal
variables, because remove()
can be called from another class.