java.lang.Object
edu.internet2.middleware.grouperClientExt.org.apache.commons.lang3.builder.EqualsBuilder
All Implemented Interfaces:
Builder<Boolean>

public class EqualsBuilder extends Object implements Builder<Boolean>

Assists in implementing Object.equals(Object) methods.

This class provides methods to build a good equals method for any class. It follows rules laid out in Effective Java , by Joshua Bloch. In particular the rule for comparing doubles, floats, and arrays can be tricky. Also, making sure that equals() and hashCode() are consistent can be difficult.

Two Objects that compare as equals must generate the same hash code, but two Objects with the same hash code do not have to be equal.

All relevant fields should be included in the calculation of equals. Derived fields may be ignored. In particular, any field used in generating a hash code must be used in the equals method, and vice versa.

Typical use for the code is as follows:

 public boolean equals(Object obj) {
   if (obj == null) { return false; }
   if (obj == this) { return true; }
   if (obj.getClass() != getClass()) {
     return false;
   }
   MyClass rhs = (MyClass) obj;
   return new EqualsBuilder()
                 .appendSuper(super.equals(obj))
                 .append(field1, rhs.field1)
                 .append(field2, rhs.field2)
                 .append(field3, rhs.field3)
                 .isEquals();
  }
 

Alternatively, there is a method that uses reflection to determine the fields to test. Because these fields are usually private, the method, reflectionEquals, uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to change the visibility of the fields. This will fail under a security manager, unless the appropriate permissions are set up correctly. It is also slower than testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

A typical invocation for this method would look like:

 public boolean equals(Object obj) {
   return EqualsBuilder.reflectionEquals(this, obj);
 }
 

The EqualsExclude annotation can be used to exclude fields from being used by the reflectionEquals methods.

Since:
1.0
  • Constructor Details

    • EqualsBuilder

      public EqualsBuilder()

      Constructor for EqualsBuilder.

      Starts off assuming that equals is true.

      See Also:
  • Method Details

    • setTestTransients

      public EqualsBuilder setTestTransients(boolean testTransients)
      Set whether to include transient fields when reflectively comparing objects.
      Parameters:
      testTransients - whether to test transient fields
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      3.6
    • setTestRecursive

      public EqualsBuilder setTestRecursive(boolean testRecursive)
      Set whether to test fields recursively, instead of using their equals method, when reflectively comparing objects. String objects, which cache a hash value, are automatically excluded from recursive testing. You may specify other exceptions by calling setBypassReflectionClasses(List).
      Parameters:
      testRecursive - whether to do a recursive test
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      3.6
      See Also:
    • setBypassReflectionClasses

      public EqualsBuilder setBypassReflectionClasses(List<Class<?>> bypassReflectionClasses)

      Set Classes whose instances should be compared by calling their equals although being in recursive mode. So the fields of theses classes will not be compared recursively by reflection.

      Here you should name classes having non-transient fields which are cache fields being set lazily.
      Prominent example being String class with its hash code cache field. Due to the importance of the String class, it is included in the default bypasses classes. Usually, if you use your own set of classes here, remember to include String class, too.

      Parameters:
      bypassReflectionClasses - classes to bypass reflection test
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      3.8
      See Also:
    • setReflectUpToClass

      public EqualsBuilder setReflectUpToClass(Class<?> reflectUpToClass)
      Set the superclass to reflect up to at reflective tests.
      Parameters:
      reflectUpToClass - the super class to reflect up to
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      3.6
    • setExcludeFields

      public EqualsBuilder setExcludeFields(String... excludeFields)
      Set field names to be excluded by reflection tests.
      Parameters:
      excludeFields - the fields to exclude
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      3.6
    • reflectionEquals

      public static boolean reflectionEquals(Object lhs, Object rhs, Collection<String> excludeFields)

      This method uses reflection to determine if the two Objects are equal.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      Transient members will be not be tested, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included.

      Parameters:
      lhs - this object
      rhs - the other object
      excludeFields - Collection of String field names to exclude from testing
      Returns:
      true if the two Objects have tested equals.
      See Also:
    • reflectionEquals

      public static boolean reflectionEquals(Object lhs, Object rhs, String... excludeFields)

      This method uses reflection to determine if the two Objects are equal.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      Transient members will be not be tested, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included.

      Parameters:
      lhs - this object
      rhs - the other object
      excludeFields - array of field names to exclude from testing
      Returns:
      true if the two Objects have tested equals.
      See Also:
    • reflectionEquals

      public static boolean reflectionEquals(Object lhs, Object rhs, boolean testTransients)

      This method uses reflection to determine if the two Objects are equal.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      If the TestTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be tested. Superclass fields will be included.

      Parameters:
      lhs - this object
      rhs - the other object
      testTransients - whether to include transient fields
      Returns:
      true if the two Objects have tested equals.
      See Also:
    • reflectionEquals

      public static boolean reflectionEquals(Object lhs, Object rhs, boolean testTransients, Class<?> reflectUpToClass, String... excludeFields)

      This method uses reflection to determine if the two Objects are equal.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      If the testTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be included. Superclass fields will be appended up to and including the specified superclass. A null superclass is treated as java.lang.Object.

      Parameters:
      lhs - this object
      rhs - the other object
      testTransients - whether to include transient fields
      reflectUpToClass - the superclass to reflect up to (inclusive), may be null
      excludeFields - array of field names to exclude from testing
      Returns:
      true if the two Objects have tested equals.
      Since:
      2.0
      See Also:
    • reflectionEquals

      public static boolean reflectionEquals(Object lhs, Object rhs, boolean testTransients, Class<?> reflectUpToClass, boolean testRecursive, String... excludeFields)

      This method uses reflection to determine if the two Objects are equal.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      If the testTransients parameter is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be included. Superclass fields will be appended up to and including the specified superclass. A null superclass is treated as java.lang.Object.

      If the testRecursive parameter is set to true, non primitive (and non primitive wrapper) field types will be compared by EqualsBuilder recursively instead of invoking their equals() method. Leading to a deep reflection equals test.

      Parameters:
      lhs - this object
      rhs - the other object
      testTransients - whether to include transient fields
      reflectUpToClass - the superclass to reflect up to (inclusive), may be null
      testRecursive - whether to call reflection equals on non primitive fields recursively.
      excludeFields - array of field names to exclude from testing
      Returns:
      true if the two Objects have tested equals.
      Since:
      3.6
      See Also:
    • reflectionAppend

      public EqualsBuilder reflectionAppend(Object lhs, Object rhs)

      Tests if two objects by using reflection.

      It uses AccessibleObject.setAccessible to gain access to private fields. This means that it will throw a security exception if run under a security manager, if the permissions are not set up correctly. It is also not as efficient as testing explicitly. Non-primitive fields are compared using equals().

      If the testTransients field is set to true, transient members will be tested, otherwise they are ignored, as they are likely derived fields, and not part of the value of the Object.

      Static fields will not be included. Superclass fields will be appended up to and including the specified superclass in field reflectUpToClass. A null superclass is treated as java.lang.Object.

      Field names listed in field excludeFields will be ignored.

      If either class of the compared objects is contained in bypassReflectionClasses, both objects are compared by calling the equals method of the left hand object with the right hand object as an argument.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand object
      rhs - the left hand object
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • appendSuper

      public EqualsBuilder appendSuper(boolean superEquals)

      Adds the result of super.equals() to this builder.

      Parameters:
      superEquals - the result of calling super.equals()
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
      Since:
      2.0
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(Object lhs, Object rhs)

      Test if two Objects are equal using either #reflectionAppend(Object, Object), if object are non primitives (or wrapper of primitives) or if field testRecursive is set to false. Otherwise, using their equals method.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand object
      rhs - the right hand object
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(long lhs, long rhs)

      Test if two long s are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand long
      rhs - the right hand long
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(int lhs, int rhs)

      Test if two ints are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand int
      rhs - the right hand int
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(short lhs, short rhs)

      Test if two shorts are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand short
      rhs - the right hand short
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(char lhs, char rhs)

      Test if two chars are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand char
      rhs - the right hand char
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(byte lhs, byte rhs)

      Test if two bytes are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand byte
      rhs - the right hand byte
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(double lhs, double rhs)

      Test if two doubles are equal by testing that the pattern of bits returned by doubleToLong are equal.

      This handles NaNs, Infinities, and -0.0.

      It is compatible with the hash code generated by HashCodeBuilder.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand double
      rhs - the right hand double
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(float lhs, float rhs)

      Test if two floats are equal by testing that the pattern of bits returned by doubleToLong are equal.

      This handles NaNs, Infinities, and -0.0.

      It is compatible with the hash code generated by HashCodeBuilder.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand float
      rhs - the right hand float
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(boolean lhs, boolean rhs)

      Test if two booleanss are equal.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand boolean
      rhs - the right hand boolean
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(Object[] lhs, Object[] rhs)

      Performs a deep comparison of two Object arrays.

      This also will be called for the top level of multi-dimensional, ragged, and multi-typed arrays.

      Note that this method does not compare the type of the arrays; it only compares the contents.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand Object[]
      rhs - the right hand Object[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(long[] lhs, long[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of long. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(long, long) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand long[]
      rhs - the right hand long[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(int[] lhs, int[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of int. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(int, int) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand int[]
      rhs - the right hand int[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(short[] lhs, short[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of short. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(short, short) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand short[]
      rhs - the right hand short[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(char[] lhs, char[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of char. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(char, char) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand char[]
      rhs - the right hand char[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(byte[] lhs, byte[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of byte. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(byte, byte) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand byte[]
      rhs - the right hand byte[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(double[] lhs, double[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of double. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(double, double) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand double[]
      rhs - the right hand double[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(float[] lhs, float[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of float. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(float, float) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand float[]
      rhs - the right hand float[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • append

      public EqualsBuilder append(boolean[] lhs, boolean[] rhs)

      Deep comparison of array of boolean. Length and all values are compared.

      The method append(boolean, boolean) is used.

      Parameters:
      lhs - the left hand boolean[]
      rhs - the right hand boolean[]
      Returns:
      EqualsBuilder - used to chain calls.
    • isEquals

      public boolean isEquals()

      Returns true if the fields that have been checked are all equal.

      Returns:
      boolean
    • build

      public Boolean build()

      Returns true if the fields that have been checked are all equal.

      Specified by:
      build in interface Builder<Boolean>
      Returns:
      true if all of the fields that have been checked are equal, false otherwise.
      Since:
      3.0
    • setEquals

      protected void setEquals(boolean isEquals)
      Sets the isEquals value.
      Parameters:
      isEquals - The value to set.
      Since:
      2.1
    • reset

      public void reset()
      Reset the EqualsBuilder so you can use the same object again
      Since:
      2.5