I like lots of these suggestions, but for now I think I'll stick with LinkedHashMap
+ Collections.synchronizedMap
. If I do revisit this in the future, I'll probably work on extending ConcurrentHashMap
in the same way LinkedHashMap
extends HashMap
.
UPDATE:
By request, here's the gist of my current implementation.
private class LruCache<A, B> extends LinkedHashMap<A, B> {
private final int maxEntries;
public LruCache(final int maxEntries) {
super(maxEntries + 1, 1.0f, true);
this.maxEntries = maxEntries;
}
/**
* Returns <tt>true</tt> if this <code>LruCache</code> has more entries than the maximum specified when it was
* created.
*
* <p>
* This method <em>does not</em> modify the underlying <code>Map</code>; it relies on the implementation of
* <code>LinkedHashMap</code> to do that, but that behavior is documented in the JavaDoc for
* <code>LinkedHashMap</code>.
* </p>
*
* @param eldest
* the <code>Entry</code> in question; this implementation doesn't care what it is, since the
* implementation is only dependent on the size of the cache
* @return <tt>true</tt> if the oldest
* @see java.util.LinkedHashMap#removeEldestEntry(Map.Entry)
*/
@Override
protected boolean removeEldestEntry(final Map.Entry<A, B> eldest) {
return super.size() > maxEntries;
}
}
Map<String, String> example = Collections.synchronizedMap(new LruCache<String, String>(CACHE_SIZE));
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