Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Singleton pattern

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Singleton pattern

In software engineering, the singleton pattern is a software design pattern that restricts the instantiation of a class to one object. This is useful when exactly one object is needed to coordinate actions across the system. The concept is sometimes generalized to systems that operate more efficiently when only one object exists, or that restrict the instantiation to a certain number of objects. The term comes from the mathematical concept of a singleton.

Contents

There are some who are critical of the singleton pattern and consider it to be an anti-pattern in that it is frequently used in scenarios where it is not beneficial, introduces unnecessary restrictions in situations where a sole instance of a class is not actually required, and introduces global state into an application.

Common uses

  • The abstract factory, builder, and prototype patterns can use Singletons in their implementation.
  • Facade objects are often singletons because only one Facade object is required.
  • State objects are often singletons.
  • Singletons are often preferred to global variables because:
  • They do not pollute the global namespace (or, in languages with namespaces, their containing namespace) with unnecessary variables.
  • They permit lazy allocation and initialization, whereas global variables in many languages will always consume resources.
  • Implementation

    An implementation of the singleton pattern must:

  • ensure that only one instance of the singleton class ever exists; and
  • provide global access to that instance.
  • Typically, this is done by:

  • declaring all constructors of the class to be private; and
  • providing a static method that returns a reference to the instance.
  • The instance is usually stored as a private static variable; the instance is created when the variable is initialized, at some point before the static method is first called. The following is a sample implementation written in Java.

    Lazy initialization

    A singleton implementation may use lazy initialization, where the instance is created when the static method is first invoked. If the static method might be called from multiple threads simultaneously, measures may need to be taken to prevent race conditions that could result in the creation of multiple instances of the class. The following is a thread-safe sample implementation, using lazy initialization with double-checked locking, written in Java.

    References

    Singleton pattern Wikipedia