See: Description
| Class | Description | 
|---|---|
| PhantomReference<T> | Phantom reference objects, which are enqueued after the collector
 determines that their referents may otherwise be reclaimed. | 
| Reference<T> | Abstract base class for reference objects. | 
| ReferenceQueue<T> | Reference queues, to which registered reference objects are appended by the
 garbage collector after the appropriate reachability changes are detected. | 
| SoftReference<T> | Soft reference objects, which are cleared at the discretion of the garbage
 collector in response to memory demand. | 
| WeakReference<T> | Weak reference objects, which do not prevent their referents from being
 made finalizable, finalized, and then reclaimed. | 
 Each reference-object type is implemented by a subclass of the abstract
base Referenceset operation is provided.  A
program may further subclass these subclasses, adding whatever fields and
methods are required for its purposes, or it may use these subclasses without
change.
ReferenceQueueThe relationship between a registered reference object and its queue is one-sided. That is, a queue does not keep track of the references that are registered with it. If a registered reference becomes unreachable itself, then it will never be enqueued. It is the responsibility of the program using reference objects to ensure that the objects remain reachable for as long as the program is interested in their referents.
 While some programs will choose to dedicate a thread to removing reference
objects from one or more queues and processing them, this is by no means
necessary.  A tactic that often works well is to examine a reference queue in
the course of performing some other fairly-frequent action.  For example, a
hashtable that uses weak references to implement weak keys could poll its
reference queue each time the table is accessed.  This is how the WeakHashMapReferenceQueue.poll
 Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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