The readObject()
method must not call any overridable methods. Invoking overridable methods from the readObject()
method can provide the overriding method with access to the object's state before it is fully initialized. This premature access is possible because, in deserialization, readObject
plays the role of object constructor and therefore object initialization is not complete until readObject
exits (see also MET06-J. Do not invoke overridable methods in clone()).
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example invokes an overridable method from the readObject()
method:
private void readObject(final ObjectInputStream stream) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException { overridableMethod(); stream.defaultReadObject(); } public void overridableMethod() { // ... }
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution removes the call to the overridable method. When removing such calls is infeasible, declare the method private or final.
private void readObject(final ObjectInputStream stream) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException { stream.defaultReadObject(); }
Exceptions
SER09-J-EX0: The readObject()
method may invoke the overridable methods defaultReadObject()
and readFields()
in class java.io.ObjectInputStream
[SCG 2009].
Risk Assessment
Invoking overridable methods from the readObject()
method can lead to initialization errors.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SER09-J | Low | Probable | Medium | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Parasoft Jtest | 2024.1 | BD.PB.VREADOBJ | Do not invoke overridable methods from the readObject() method |
Related Guidelines
Guideline 7-4 / OBJECT-4: Prevent constructors from calling methods that can be overridden |