Effective Java 69 Prefer concurrency utilities to wait and notify
Principle
Use the higher-level concurrency utilities instead of wait and notify for easiness.
Use ConcurrentHashMap in preference to Collections.synchronizedMap or Hashtable.
Use concurrent collections in preference to externally synchronized collections.
Three categories of higher-level utilities in java.util.concurrent
- Executor Framework (Item 68)
-
Concurrent collections - provide high- performance concurrent implementations of standard collection interfaces such as List, Queue, and Map.
Since all the implementation of Concurrent collections manage their own synchronization internally it‘s impossible to exclude concurrent activity from a concurrent collection; locking it will have no effect but slow the program.
// Method simulates the behavior of String.intern. Concurrent canonicalizing map atop ConcurrentMap - faster!
private static final ConcurrentMap<String, String> map = new ConcurrentHashMap<String, String>();
public static String intern(String s) {
String result = map.get(s);
if (result == null) {
result = map.putIfAbsent(s, s);
if (result == null)
result = s;
}
return result;
}
Note
String.intern must use some sort of weak reference to keep from leaking memory over time.
Blocking operation - wait until they can be successfully performed.
BlockingQueue (Used for work queues) extends Queue and adds several methods, including take, which removes and returns the head element from the queue, waiting if the queue is empty.
-
Synchronizers - Objects that enable threads to wait for one another.(eg. CountDownLatch, Semaphore, CyclicBarrier and Exchanger).
Countdown latches are single-use barriers that allow one or more threads to wait for one or more other threads to do something.
/**
* Concurrency timer demo for "69 Prefer concurrency utilities to wait and notify".
*/
package com.effectivejava.concurrency;
import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLatch;
import java.util.concurrent.Executor;
import java.util.concurrent.SynchronousQueue;
import java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
/**
* @author Kaibo Hao
*
*/
public class ExecutorManager {
// Simple framework for timing concurrent execution
public static long time(Executor executor, int concurrency,
final Runnable action) throws InterruptedException {
final CountDownLatch ready = new CountDownLatch(concurrency);
final CountDownLatch start = new CountDownLatch(1);
final CountDownLatch done = new CountDownLatch(concurrency);
for (int i = 0; i < concurrency; i++) {
executor.execute(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
ready.countDown(); // Tell timer we‘re ready
try {
start.await(); // Wait till peers are ready
action.run();
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
} finally {
done.countDown(); // Tell timer we‘re done
}
}
});
}
ready.await(); // Wait for all workers to be ready
long startNanos = System.nanoTime();
start.countDown(); // And they‘re off!
done.await(); // Wait for all workers to finish
return System.nanoTime() - startNanos;
}
/**
* @param args
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
Executor executor = new ThreadPoolExecutor(0, 2, 10,
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS, new SynchronousQueue<Runnable>());
long executedTime = time(executor, 2, new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
System.out.printf("Runing %s%n", Thread.currentThread());
}
});
System.out.printf("%sns %.3fms %.3fs", executedTime,
executedTime / 1000.0, executedTime / 1000000.0);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Note
If a worker thread catches an InterruptedException, it reasserts the interrupt using the idiom Thread.currentThread().interrupt() and returns from its run method.
Since System.nanoTime is both more accurate and more precise, and it is not affected by adjustments to the system‘s real-time clock. For interval timing, always use System.nanoTime in preference to System.currentTimeMillis.
Always use the wait loop idiom to invoke the wait method; never invoke it outside of a loop.
// The standard idiom for using the wait method
synchronized (obj) {
while (<condition does not hold>)
obj.wait(); // (Releases lock, and reacquires on wakeup)
... // Perform action appropriate to condition
}
Reasons a thread might wake up when the condition does not hold:
? Another thread could have obtained the lock and changed the guarded state between the time a thread invoked notify and the time the waiting thread woke.
? Another thread could have invoked notify accidentally or maliciously when the condition did not hold. Classes expose themselves to this sort of mischief by waiting on publicly accessible objects. Any wait contained in a synchronized method of a publicly accessible object is susceptible to this problem.
? The notifying thread could be overly "generous" in waking waiting threads. For example, the notifying thread might invoke notifyAll even if only some of the waiting threads have their condition satisfied.
? The waiting thread could (rarely) wake up in the absence of a notify. This is known as a spurious wakeup[Posix, 11.4.3.6.1; JavaSE6].
Summary
using wait and notify directly is like programming in "concurrency assembly language," as compared to the higher-level language provided by java.util.concurrent. There is seldom, if ever, a reason to use wait and notify in new code. If you maintain code that uses wait and notify, make sure that it always invokes wait from within a while loop using the standard idiom. The notifyAll method should generally be used in preference to notify. If notify is used, great care must be taken to ensure liveness.
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