/******************************************************************************* * Copyright (c) 2011 Subgraph. * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html * * Contributors: * Subgraph - initial API and implementation ******************************************************************************/ package com.subgraph.vega.api.annotations; import java.lang.annotation.*; /* * Copyright (c) 2005 Brian Goetz and Tim Peierls * Released under the Creative Commons Attribution License * (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5) * Official home: http://www.jcip.net * * Any republication or derived work distributed in source code form * must include this copyright and license notice. */ /** * The class to which this annotation is applied is immutable. This means that * its state cannot be seen to change by callers, which implies that * <ul> * <li> all public fields are final, </li> * <li> all public final reference fields refer to other immutable objects, and </li> * <li> constructors and methods do not publish references to any internal state * which is potentially mutable by the implementation. </li> * </ul> * Immutable objects may still have internal mutable state for purposes of performance * optimization; some state variables may be lazily computed, so long as they are computed * from immutable state and that callers cannot tell the difference. * <p> * Immutable objects are inherently thread-safe; they may be passed between threads or * published without synchronization. */ @Documented @Target(ElementType.TYPE) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) public @interface Immutable { }