Wed, 31 Dec 2014 06:09:35 +0100
Cloned upstream origin tor-browser at tor-browser-31.3.0esr-4.5-1-build1
revision ID fc1c9ff7c1b2defdbc039f12214767608f46423f for hacking purpose.
1 /*
2 * ====================================================================
3 *
4 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
5 * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
6 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
7 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
8 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
9 * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
10 *
11 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
12 *
13 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
14 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
15 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
16 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
17 * limitations under the License.
18 * ====================================================================
19 *
20 * This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many
21 * individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more
22 * information on the Apache Software Foundation, please see
23 * <http://www.apache.org/>.
24 *
25 */
26 package ch.boye.httpclientandroidlib.annotation;
28 import java.lang.annotation.Documented;
29 import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
30 import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
31 import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
32 import java.lang.annotation.Target;
34 /**
35 * The class to which this annotation is applied is immutable. This means that
36 * its state cannot be seen to change by callers, which implies that
37 * <ul>
38 * <li> all public fields are final, </li>
39 * <li> all public final reference fields refer to other immutable objects, and </li>
40 * <li> constructors and methods do not publish references to any internal state
41 * which is potentially mutable by the implementation. </li>
42 * </ul>
43 * Immutable objects may still have internal mutable state for purposes of performance
44 * optimization; some state variables may be lazily computed, so long as they are computed
45 * from immutable state and that callers cannot tell the difference.
46 * <p>
47 * Immutable objects are inherently thread-safe; they may be passed between threads or
48 * published without synchronization.
49 * <p>
50 * Based on code developed by Brian Goetz and Tim Peierls and concepts
51 * published in 'Java Concurrency in Practice' by Brian Goetz, Tim Peierls,
52 * Joshua Bloch, Joseph Bowbeer, David Holmes and Doug Lea.
53 */
54 @Documented
55 @Target(ElementType.TYPE)
56 @Retention(RetentionPolicy.CLASS) // The original version used RUNTIME
57 public @interface Immutable {
58 }