Threads often have to coordinate their actions. The most common coordination idiom is the guarded block. Such a block begins by polling a condition that must be true before the block can proceed. There are a number of steps to follow in order to do this correctly.Suppose, for example
guardedJoy
is a method that must not proceed until a shared variablejoy
has been set by another thread. Such a method could, in theory, simply loop until the condition is satisfied, but that loop is wasteful, since it executes continuously while waiting.A more efficient guard invokespublic void guardedJoy() { //Simple loop guard. Wastes processor time. Don't do this! while(!joy) {} System.out.println("Joy has been achieved!"); }Object.wait
to suspend the current thread. The invocation ofwait
does not return until another thread has issued a notification that some special event may have occurred — though not necessarily the event this thread is waiting for:public synchronized guardedJoy() { //This guard only loops once for each special event, which may not //be the event we're waiting for. while(!joy) { try { wait(); } catch (InterruptedException e) {} } System.out.println("Joy and efficiency have been achieved!"); }Like many methods that suspend execution,
Note: Always invokewait
inside a loop that tests for the condition being waited for. Don't assume that the interrupt was for the particular condition you were waiting for, or that the condition is still true.wait
can throwInterruptedException
. In this example, we can just ignore that exception — we only care about the value ofjoy
.Why is this version of
guardedJoy
synchronized? Supposed
is the object we're using to invokewait
. When a thread invokesd.wait
, it must own the intrinsic lock ford
— otherwise an error is thrown. Invokingwait
inside a synchronized method is a simple way to acquire the intrinsic lock.When
wait
is invoked, the thread releases the lock and suspends execution. At some future time, another thread will acquire the same lock and invokeObject.notifyAll
, informing all threads waiting on that lock that something important has happened:Some time after the second thread has released the lock, the first thread reacquires the lock and resumes by returning from the invocation ofpublic synchronized notifyJoy() { joy = true; notifyAll(); }wait
.
Note: There is a second notification method,notify
, which wakes up a single thread. Becausenotify
doesn't allow you to specify the thread that is woken up, it is useful only in massively parallel applications — that is, programs with a large number of threads, all doing similar chores. In such an application, you don't care which thread gets woken up.Let's use guarded blocks to create a Producer-Consumer application. This kind of application shares data between two threads: the producer, that creates the data, and the consumer, that does something with it. The two threads communicate using a shared object. Coordination is essential: the consumer thread must not attempt to retrieve the data before the producer thread has delivered it, and the producer thread must not attempt to deliver new data if the consumer hasn't retrieved the old data.
In this example, the data is a series of text messages, which are shared through an object of type
:
Drop
The producer thread, defined inpublic class Drop { //Message sent from producer to consumer. private String message; //True if consumer should wait for producer to send message, false //if producer should wait for consumer to retrieve message. private boolean empty = true; public synchronized String take() { //Wait until message is available. while (empty) { try { wait(); } catch (InterruptedException e) {} } //Toggle status. empty = true; //Notify producer that status has changed. notifyAll(); return message; } public synchronized void put(String message) { //Wait until message has been retrieved. while (!empty) { try { wait(); } catch (InterruptedException e) {} } //Toggle status. empty = false; //Store message. this.message = message; //Notify consumer that status has changed. notifyAll(); } }, sends a series of familiar messages. The string "DONE" indicates that all messages have been sent. To simulate the unpredictable nature of real-world applications, the producer thread pauses for random intervals between messages.
Producer
The consumer thread, defined inimport java.util.Random; public class Producer implements Runnable { private Drop drop; public Producer(Drop drop) { this.drop = drop; } public void run() { String importantInfo[] = { "Mares eat oats", "Does eat oats", "Little lambs eat ivy", "A kid will eat ivy too" }; Random random = new Random(); for (int i = 0; i < importantInfo.length; i++) { drop.put(importantInfo[i]); try { Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(5000)); } catch (InterruptedException e) {} } drop.put("DONE"); } }, simply retrieves the messages and prints them out, until it retrieves the "DONE" string. This thread also pauses for random intervals.
Consumer
Finally, here is the main thread, defined inimport java.util.Random; public class Consumer implements Runnable { private Drop drop; public Consumer(Drop drop) { this.drop = drop; } public void run() { Random random = new Random(); for (String message = drop.take(); ! message.equals("DONE"); message = drop.take()) { System.out.format("MESSAGE RECEIVED: %s%n", message); try { Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(5000)); } catch (InterruptedException e) {} } } }, that launches the producer and consumer threads.
ProducerConsumerExample
public class ProducerConsumerExample { public static void main(String[] args) { Drop drop = new Drop(); (new Thread(new Producer(drop))).start(); (new Thread(new Consumer(drop))).start(); } }
Note: TheDrop
class was written in order to demonstrate guarded blocks. To avoid re-inventing the wheel, examine the existing data structures in the Java Collections Framework before trying to code your own data-sharing objects. For more information, refer to the Questions and Exercises section.