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ThreadPoolExecutor.java
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ThreadPoolExecutor.java
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/*
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
* by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
* or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
* questions.
*/
/*
* This file is available under and governed by the GNU General Public
* License version 2 only, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
* However, the following notice accompanied the original version of this
* file:
*
* Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166
* Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at
* http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
*/
package java.util.concurrent;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.ConcurrentModificationException;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Objects;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.AbstractQueuedSynchronizer;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock;
import jdk.internal.vm.SharedThreadContainer;
/**
* An {@link ExecutorService} that executes each submitted task using
* one of possibly several pooled threads, normally configured
* using {@link Executors} factory methods.
*
* <p>Thread pools address two different problems: they usually
* provide improved performance when executing large numbers of
* asynchronous tasks, due to reduced per-task invocation overhead,
* and they provide a means of bounding and managing the resources,
* including threads, consumed when executing a collection of tasks.
* Each {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} also maintains some basic
* statistics, such as the number of completed tasks.
*
* <p>To be useful across a wide range of contexts, this class
* provides many adjustable parameters and extensibility
* hooks. However, programmers are urged to use the more convenient
* {@link Executors} factory methods {@link
* Executors#newCachedThreadPool} (unbounded thread pool, with
* automatic thread reclamation), {@link Executors#newFixedThreadPool}
* (fixed size thread pool) and {@link
* Executors#newSingleThreadExecutor} (single background thread), that
* preconfigure settings for the most common usage
* scenarios. Otherwise, use the following guide when manually
* configuring and tuning this class:
*
* <dl>
*
* <dt>Core and maximum pool sizes</dt>
*
* <dd>A {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} will automatically adjust the
* pool size (see {@link #getPoolSize})
* according to the bounds set by
* corePoolSize (see {@link #getCorePoolSize}) and
* maximumPoolSize (see {@link #getMaximumPoolSize}).
*
* When a new task is submitted in method {@link #execute(Runnable)},
* if fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, a new thread is
* created to handle the request, even if other worker threads are
* idle. Else if fewer than maximumPoolSize threads are running, a
* new thread will be created to handle the request only if the queue
* is full. By setting corePoolSize and maximumPoolSize the same, you
* create a fixed-size thread pool. By setting maximumPoolSize to an
* essentially unbounded value such as {@code Integer.MAX_VALUE}, you
* allow the pool to accommodate an arbitrary number of concurrent
* tasks. Most typically, core and maximum pool sizes are set only
* upon construction, but they may also be changed dynamically using
* {@link #setCorePoolSize} and {@link #setMaximumPoolSize}. </dd>
*
* <dt>On-demand construction</dt>
*
* <dd>By default, even core threads are initially created and
* started only when new tasks arrive, but this can be overridden
* dynamically using method {@link #prestartCoreThread} or {@link
* #prestartAllCoreThreads}. You probably want to prestart threads if
* you construct the pool with a non-empty queue. </dd>
*
* <dt>Creating new threads</dt>
*
* <dd>New threads are created using a {@link ThreadFactory}. If not
* otherwise specified, a {@link Executors#defaultThreadFactory} is
* used, that creates threads to all be in the same {@link
* ThreadGroup} and with the same {@code NORM_PRIORITY} priority and
* non-daemon status. By supplying a different ThreadFactory, you can
* alter the thread's name, thread group, priority, daemon status,
* etc. If a {@code ThreadFactory} fails to create a thread when asked
* by returning null from {@code newThread}, the executor will
* continue, but might not be able to execute any tasks. Threads
* should possess the "modifyThread" {@code RuntimePermission}. If
* worker threads or other threads using the pool do not possess this
* permission, service may be degraded: configuration changes may not
* take effect in a timely manner, and a shutdown pool may remain in a
* state in which termination is possible but not completed.</dd>
*
* <dt>Keep-alive times</dt>
*
* <dd>If the pool currently has more than corePoolSize threads,
* excess threads will be terminated if they have been idle for more
* than the keepAliveTime (see {@link #getKeepAliveTime(TimeUnit)}).
* This provides a means of reducing resource consumption when the
* pool is not being actively used. If the pool becomes more active
* later, new threads will be constructed. This parameter can also be
* changed dynamically using method {@link #setKeepAliveTime(long,
* TimeUnit)}. Using a value of {@code Long.MAX_VALUE} {@link
* TimeUnit#NANOSECONDS} effectively disables idle threads from ever
* terminating prior to shut down. By default, the keep-alive policy
* applies only when there are more than corePoolSize threads, but
* method {@link #allowCoreThreadTimeOut(boolean)} can be used to
* apply this time-out policy to core threads as well, so long as the
* keepAliveTime value is non-zero. </dd>
*
* <dt>Queuing</dt>
*
* <dd>Any {@link BlockingQueue} may be used to transfer and hold
* submitted tasks. The use of this queue interacts with pool sizing:
*
* <ul>
*
* <li>If fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, the Executor
* always prefers adding a new thread
* rather than queuing.
*
* <li>If corePoolSize or more threads are running, the Executor
* always prefers queuing a request rather than adding a new
* thread.
*
* <li>If a request cannot be queued, a new thread is created unless
* this would exceed maximumPoolSize, in which case, the task will be
* rejected.
*
* </ul>
*
* There are three general strategies for queuing:
* <ol>
*
* <li><em> Direct handoffs.</em> A good default choice for a work
* queue is a {@link SynchronousQueue} that hands off tasks to threads
* without otherwise holding them. Here, an attempt to queue a task
* will fail if no threads are immediately available to run it, so a
* new thread will be constructed. This policy avoids lockups when
* handling sets of requests that might have internal dependencies.
* Direct handoffs generally require unbounded maximumPoolSizes to
* avoid rejection of new submitted tasks. This in turn admits the
* possibility of unbounded thread growth when commands continue to
* arrive on average faster than they can be processed.
*
* <li><em> Unbounded queues.</em> Using an unbounded queue (for
* example a {@link LinkedBlockingQueue} without a predefined
* capacity) will cause new tasks to wait in the queue when all
* corePoolSize threads are busy. Thus, no more than corePoolSize
* threads will ever be created. (And the value of the maximumPoolSize
* therefore doesn't have any effect.) This may be appropriate when
* each task is completely independent of others, so tasks cannot
* affect each others execution; for example, in a web page server.
* While this style of queuing can be useful in smoothing out
* transient bursts of requests, it admits the possibility of
* unbounded work queue growth when commands continue to arrive on
* average faster than they can be processed.
*
* <li><em>Bounded queues.</em> A bounded queue (for example, an
* {@link ArrayBlockingQueue}) helps prevent resource exhaustion when
* used with finite maximumPoolSizes, but can be more difficult to
* tune and control. Queue sizes and maximum pool sizes may be traded
* off for each other: Using large queues and small pools minimizes
* CPU usage, OS resources, and context-switching overhead, but can
* lead to artificially low throughput. If tasks frequently block (for
* example if they are I/O bound), a system may be able to schedule
* time for more threads than you otherwise allow. Use of small queues
* generally requires larger pool sizes, which keeps CPUs busier but
* may encounter unacceptable scheduling overhead, which also
* decreases throughput.
*
* </ol>
*
* </dd>
*
* <dt>Rejected tasks</dt>
*
* <dd>New tasks submitted in method {@link #execute(Runnable)} will be
* <em>rejected</em> when the Executor has been shut down, and also when
* the Executor uses finite bounds for both maximum threads and work queue
* capacity, and is saturated. In either case, the {@code execute} method
* invokes the {@link
* RejectedExecutionHandler#rejectedExecution(Runnable, ThreadPoolExecutor)}
* method of its {@link RejectedExecutionHandler}. Four predefined handler
* policies are provided:
*
* <ol>
*
* <li>In the default {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.AbortPolicy}, the handler
* throws a runtime {@link RejectedExecutionException} upon rejection.
*
* <li>In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.CallerRunsPolicy}, the thread
* that invokes {@code execute} itself runs the task. This provides a
* simple feedback control mechanism that will slow down the rate that
* new tasks are submitted.
*
* <li>In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardPolicy}, a task that cannot
* be executed is simply dropped. This policy is designed only for
* those rare cases in which task completion is never relied upon.
*
* <li>In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardOldestPolicy}, if the
* executor is not shut down, the task at the head of the work queue
* is dropped, and then execution is retried (which can fail again,
* causing this to be repeated.) This policy is rarely acceptable. In
* nearly all cases, you should also cancel the task to cause an
* exception in any component waiting for its completion, and/or log
* the failure, as illustrated in {@link
* ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardOldestPolicy} documentation.
*
* </ol>
*
* It is possible to define and use other kinds of {@link
* RejectedExecutionHandler} classes. Doing so requires some care
* especially when policies are designed to work only under particular
* capacity or queuing policies. </dd>
*
* <dt>Hook methods</dt>
*
* <dd>This class provides {@code protected} overridable
* {@link #beforeExecute(Thread, Runnable)} and
* {@link #afterExecute(Runnable, Throwable)} methods that are called
* before and after execution of each task. These can be used to
* manipulate the execution environment; for example, reinitializing
* ThreadLocals, gathering statistics, or adding log entries.
* Additionally, method {@link #terminated} can be overridden to perform
* any special processing that needs to be done once the Executor has
* fully terminated.
*
* <p>If hook, callback, or BlockingQueue methods throw exceptions,
* internal worker threads may in turn fail, abruptly terminate, and
* possibly be replaced.</dd>
*
* <dt>Queue maintenance</dt>
*
* <dd>Method {@link #getQueue()} allows access to the work queue
* for purposes of monitoring and debugging. Use of this method for
* any other purpose is strongly discouraged. Two supplied methods,
* {@link #remove(Runnable)} and {@link #purge} are available to
* assist in storage reclamation when large numbers of queued tasks
* become cancelled.</dd>
*
* <dt>Reclamation</dt>
*
* <dd>A pool that is no longer referenced in a program <em>AND</em>
* has no remaining threads may be reclaimed (garbage collected)
* without being explicitly shutdown. You can configure a pool to
* allow all unused threads to eventually die by setting appropriate
* keep-alive times, using a lower bound of zero core threads and/or
* setting {@link #allowCoreThreadTimeOut(boolean)}. </dd>
*
* </dl>
*
* <p><b>Extension example.</b> Most extensions of this class
* override one or more of the protected hook methods. For example,
* here is a subclass that adds a simple pause/resume feature:
*
* <pre> {@code
* class PausableThreadPoolExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor {
* private boolean isPaused;
* private ReentrantLock pauseLock = new ReentrantLock();
* private Condition unpaused = pauseLock.newCondition();
*
* public PausableThreadPoolExecutor(...) { super(...); }
*
* protected void beforeExecute(Thread t, Runnable r) {
* super.beforeExecute(t, r);
* pauseLock.lock();
* try {
* while (isPaused) unpaused.await();
* } catch (InterruptedException ie) {
* t.interrupt();
* } finally {
* pauseLock.unlock();
* }
* }
*
* public void pause() {
* pauseLock.lock();
* try {
* isPaused = true;
* } finally {
* pauseLock.unlock();
* }
* }
*
* public void resume() {
* pauseLock.lock();
* try {
* isPaused = false;
* unpaused.signalAll();
* } finally {
* pauseLock.unlock();
* }
* }
* }}</pre>
*
* @since 1.5
* @author Doug Lea
*/
public class ThreadPoolExecutor extends AbstractExecutorService {
/**
* The main pool control state, ctl, is an atomic integer packing
* two conceptual fields
* workerCount, indicating the effective number of threads
* runState, indicating whether running, shutting down etc
*
* In order to pack them into one int, we limit workerCount to
* (2^29)-1 (about 500 million) threads rather than (2^31)-1 (2
* billion) otherwise representable. If this is ever an issue in
* the future, the variable can be changed to be an AtomicLong,
* and the shift/mask constants below adjusted. But until the need
* arises, this code is a bit faster and simpler using an int.
*
* The workerCount is the number of workers that have been
* permitted to start and not permitted to stop. The value may be
* transiently different from the actual number of live threads,
* for example when a ThreadFactory fails to create a thread when
* asked, and when exiting threads are still performing
* bookkeeping before terminating. The user-visible pool size is
* reported as the current size of the workers set.
*
* The runState provides the main lifecycle control, taking on values:
*
* RUNNING: Accept new tasks and process queued tasks
* SHUTDOWN: Don't accept new tasks, but process queued tasks
* STOP: Don't accept new tasks, don't process queued tasks,
* and interrupt in-progress tasks
* TIDYING: All tasks have terminated, workerCount is zero,
* the thread transitioning to state TIDYING
* will run the terminated() hook method
* TERMINATED: terminated() has completed
*
* The numerical order among these values matters, to allow
* ordered comparisons. The runState monotonically increases over
* time, but need not hit each state. The transitions are:
*
* RUNNING -> SHUTDOWN
* On invocation of shutdown()
* (RUNNING or SHUTDOWN) -> STOP
* On invocation of shutdownNow()
* SHUTDOWN -> TIDYING
* When both queue and pool are empty
* STOP -> TIDYING
* When pool is empty
* TIDYING -> TERMINATED
* When the terminated() hook method has completed
*
* Threads waiting in awaitTermination() will return when the
* state reaches TERMINATED.
*
* Detecting the transition from SHUTDOWN to TIDYING is less
* straightforward than you'd like because the queue may become
* empty after non-empty and vice versa during SHUTDOWN state, but
* we can only terminate if, after seeing that it is empty, we see
* that workerCount is 0 (which sometimes entails a recheck -- see
* below).
*/
private final AtomicInteger ctl = new AtomicInteger(ctlOf(RUNNING, 0));
private static final int COUNT_BITS = Integer.SIZE - 3;
private static final int COUNT_MASK = (1 << COUNT_BITS) - 1;
// runState is stored in the high-order bits
private static final int RUNNING = -1 << COUNT_BITS;
private static final int SHUTDOWN = 0 << COUNT_BITS;
private static final int STOP = 1 << COUNT_BITS;
private static final int TIDYING = 2 << COUNT_BITS;
private static final int TERMINATED = 3 << COUNT_BITS;
// Packing and unpacking ctl
private static int runStateOf(int c) { return c & ~COUNT_MASK; }
private static int workerCountOf(int c) { return c & COUNT_MASK; }
private static int ctlOf(int rs, int wc) { return rs | wc; }
/*
* Bit field accessors that don't require unpacking ctl.
* These depend on the bit layout and on workerCount being never negative.
*/
private static boolean runStateLessThan(int c, int s) {
return c < s;
}
private static boolean runStateAtLeast(int c, int s) {
return c >= s;
}
private static boolean isRunning(int c) {
return c < SHUTDOWN;
}
/**
* Attempts to CAS-increment the workerCount field of ctl.
*/
private boolean compareAndIncrementWorkerCount(int expect) {
return ctl.compareAndSet(expect, expect + 1);
}
/**
* Attempts to CAS-decrement the workerCount field of ctl.
*/
private boolean compareAndDecrementWorkerCount(int expect) {
return ctl.compareAndSet(expect, expect - 1);
}
/**
* Decrements the workerCount field of ctl. This is called only on
* abrupt termination of a thread (see processWorkerExit). Other
* decrements are performed within getTask.
*/
private void decrementWorkerCount() {
ctl.addAndGet(-1);
}
/**
* The queue used for holding tasks and handing off to worker
* threads. We do not require that workQueue.poll() returning
* null necessarily means that workQueue.isEmpty(), so rely
* solely on isEmpty to see if the queue is empty (which we must
* do for example when deciding whether to transition from
* SHUTDOWN to TIDYING). This accommodates special-purpose
* queues such as DelayQueues for which poll() is allowed to
* return null even if it may later return non-null when delays
* expire.
*/
private final BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue;
/**
* Lock held on access to workers set and related bookkeeping.
* While we could use a concurrent set of some sort, it turns out
* to be generally preferable to use a lock. Among the reasons is
* that this serializes interruptIdleWorkers, which avoids
* unnecessary interrupt storms, especially during shutdown.
* Otherwise exiting threads would concurrently interrupt those
* that have not yet interrupted. It also simplifies some of the
* associated statistics bookkeeping of largestPoolSize etc. We
* also hold mainLock on shutdown and shutdownNow, for the sake of
* ensuring workers set is stable while separately checking
* permission to interrupt and actually interrupting.
*/
private final ReentrantLock mainLock = new ReentrantLock();
/**
* Set containing all worker threads in pool. Accessed only when
* holding mainLock.
*/
private final HashSet<Worker> workers = new HashSet<>();
/**
* Wait condition to support awaitTermination.
*/
private final Condition termination = mainLock.newCondition();
/**
* The thread container for the worker threads.
*/
private final SharedThreadContainer container;
/**
* Tracks largest attained pool size. Accessed only under
* mainLock.
*/
private int largestPoolSize;
/**
* Counter for completed tasks. Updated only on termination of
* worker threads. Accessed only under mainLock.
*/
private long completedTaskCount;
/*
* All user control parameters are declared as volatiles so that
* ongoing actions are based on freshest values, but without need
* for locking, since no internal invariants depend on them
* changing synchronously with respect to other actions.
*/
/**
* Factory for new threads. All threads are created using this
* factory (via method addWorker). All callers must be prepared
* for addWorker to fail, which may reflect a system or user's
* policy limiting the number of threads. Even though it is not
* treated as an error, failure to create threads may result in
* new tasks being rejected or existing ones remaining stuck in
* the queue.
*
* We go further and preserve pool invariants even in the face of
* errors such as OutOfMemoryError, that might be thrown while
* trying to create threads. Such errors are rather common due to
* the need to allocate a native stack in Thread.start, and users
* will want to perform clean pool shutdown to clean up. There
* will likely be enough memory available for the cleanup code to
* complete without encountering yet another OutOfMemoryError.
*/
private volatile ThreadFactory threadFactory;
/**
* Handler called when saturated or shutdown in execute.
*/
private volatile RejectedExecutionHandler handler;
/**
* Timeout in nanoseconds for idle threads waiting for work.
* Threads use this timeout when there are more than corePoolSize
* present or if allowCoreThreadTimeOut. Otherwise they wait
* forever for new work.
*/
private volatile long keepAliveTime;
/**
* If false (default), core threads stay alive even when idle.
* If true, core threads use keepAliveTime to time out waiting
* for work.
*/
private volatile boolean allowCoreThreadTimeOut;
/**
* Core pool size is the minimum number of workers to keep alive
* (and not allow to time out etc) unless allowCoreThreadTimeOut
* is set, in which case the minimum is zero.
*
* Since the worker count is actually stored in COUNT_BITS bits,
* the effective limit is {@code corePoolSize & COUNT_MASK}.
*/
private volatile int corePoolSize;
/**
* Maximum pool size.
*
* Since the worker count is actually stored in COUNT_BITS bits,
* the effective limit is {@code maximumPoolSize & COUNT_MASK}.
*/
private volatile int maximumPoolSize;
/**
* The default rejected execution handler.
*/
private static final RejectedExecutionHandler defaultHandler =
new AbortPolicy();
/**
* Permission required for callers of shutdown and shutdownNow.
* We additionally require (see checkShutdownAccess) that callers
* have permission to actually interrupt threads in the worker set
* (as governed by Thread.interrupt, which relies on
* ThreadGroup.checkAccess, which in turn relies on
* SecurityManager.checkAccess). Shutdowns are attempted only if
* these checks pass.
*
* All actual invocations of Thread.interrupt (see
* interruptIdleWorkers and interruptWorkers) ignore
* SecurityExceptions, meaning that the attempted interrupts
* silently fail. In the case of shutdown, they should not fail
* unless the SecurityManager has inconsistent policies, sometimes
* allowing access to a thread and sometimes not. In such cases,
* failure to actually interrupt threads may disable or delay full
* termination. Other uses of interruptIdleWorkers are advisory,
* and failure to actually interrupt will merely delay response to
* configuration changes so is not handled exceptionally.
*/
private static final RuntimePermission shutdownPerm =
new RuntimePermission("modifyThread");
/**
* Class Worker mainly maintains interrupt control state for
* threads running tasks, along with other minor bookkeeping.
* This class opportunistically extends AbstractQueuedSynchronizer
* to simplify acquiring and releasing a lock surrounding each
* task execution. This protects against interrupts that are
* intended to wake up a worker thread waiting for a task from
* instead interrupting a task being run. We implement a simple
* non-reentrant mutual exclusion lock rather than use
* ReentrantLock because we do not want worker tasks to be able to
* reacquire the lock when they invoke pool control methods like
* setCorePoolSize. Additionally, to suppress interrupts until
* the thread actually starts running tasks, we initialize lock
* state to a negative value, and clear it upon start (in
* runWorker).
*/
private final class Worker
extends AbstractQueuedSynchronizer
implements Runnable
{
/**
* This class will never be serialized, but we provide a
* serialVersionUID to suppress a javac warning.
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = 6138294804551838833L;
/** Thread this worker is running in. Null if factory fails. */
@SuppressWarnings("serial") // Unlikely to be serializable
final Thread thread;
/** Initial task to run. Possibly null. */
@SuppressWarnings("serial") // Not statically typed as Serializable
Runnable firstTask;
/** Per-thread task counter */
volatile long completedTasks;
// TODO: switch to AbstractQueuedLongSynchronizer and move
// completedTasks into the lock word.
/**
* Creates with given first task and thread from ThreadFactory.
* @param firstTask the first task (null if none)
*/
Worker(Runnable firstTask) {
setState(-1); // inhibit interrupts until runWorker
this.firstTask = firstTask;
this.thread = getThreadFactory().newThread(this);
}
/** Delegates main run loop to outer runWorker. */
public void run() {
runWorker(this);
}
// Lock methods
//
// The value 0 represents the unlocked state.
// The value 1 represents the locked state.
protected boolean isHeldExclusively() {
return getState() != 0;
}
protected boolean tryAcquire(int unused) {
if (compareAndSetState(0, 1)) {
setExclusiveOwnerThread(Thread.currentThread());
return true;
}
return false;
}
protected boolean tryRelease(int unused) {
setExclusiveOwnerThread(null);
setState(0);
return true;
}
public void lock() { acquire(1); }
public boolean tryLock() { return tryAcquire(1); }
public void unlock() { release(1); }
public boolean isLocked() { return isHeldExclusively(); }
void interruptIfStarted() {
Thread t;
if (getState() >= 0 && (t = thread) != null && !t.isInterrupted()) {
try {
t.interrupt();
} catch (SecurityException ignore) {
}
}
}
}
/*
* Methods for setting control state
*/
/**
* Transitions runState to given target, or leaves it alone if
* already at least the given target.
*
* @param targetState the desired state, either SHUTDOWN or STOP
* (but not TIDYING or TERMINATED -- use tryTerminate for that)
*/
private void advanceRunState(int targetState) {
// assert targetState == SHUTDOWN || targetState == STOP;
for (;;) {
int c = ctl.get();
if (runStateAtLeast(c, targetState) ||
ctl.compareAndSet(c, ctlOf(targetState, workerCountOf(c))))
break;
}
}
/**
* Transitions to TERMINATED state if either (SHUTDOWN and pool
* and queue empty) or (STOP and pool empty). If otherwise
* eligible to terminate but workerCount is nonzero, interrupts an
* idle worker to ensure that shutdown signals propagate. This
* method must be called following any action that might make
* termination possible -- reducing worker count or removing tasks
* from the queue during shutdown. The method is non-private to
* allow access from ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.
*/
final void tryTerminate() {
for (;;) {
int c = ctl.get();
if (isRunning(c) ||
runStateAtLeast(c, TIDYING) ||
(runStateLessThan(c, STOP) && ! workQueue.isEmpty()))
return;
if (workerCountOf(c) != 0) { // Eligible to terminate
interruptIdleWorkers(ONLY_ONE);
return;
}
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
if (ctl.compareAndSet(c, ctlOf(TIDYING, 0))) {
try {
terminated();
} finally {
ctl.set(ctlOf(TERMINATED, 0));
termination.signalAll();
container.close();
}
return;
}
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
// else retry on failed CAS
}
}
/*
* Methods for controlling interrupts to worker threads.
*/
/**
* If there is a security manager, makes sure caller has
* permission to shut down threads in general (see shutdownPerm).
* If this passes, additionally makes sure the caller is allowed
* to interrupt each worker thread. This might not be true even if
* first check passed, if the SecurityManager treats some threads
* specially.
*/
private void checkShutdownAccess() {
// assert mainLock.isHeldByCurrentThread();
@SuppressWarnings("removal")
SecurityManager security = System.getSecurityManager();
if (security != null) {
security.checkPermission(shutdownPerm);
for (Worker w : workers)
security.checkAccess(w.thread);
}
}
/**
* Interrupts all threads, even if active. Ignores SecurityExceptions
* (in which case some threads may remain uninterrupted).
*/
private void interruptWorkers() {
// assert mainLock.isHeldByCurrentThread();
for (Worker w : workers)
w.interruptIfStarted();
}
/**
* Interrupts threads that might be waiting for tasks (as
* indicated by not being locked) so they can check for
* termination or configuration changes. Ignores
* SecurityExceptions (in which case some threads may remain
* uninterrupted).
*
* @param onlyOne If true, interrupt at most one worker. This is
* called only from tryTerminate when termination is otherwise
* enabled but there are still other workers. In this case, at
* most one waiting worker is interrupted to propagate shutdown
* signals in case all threads are currently waiting.
* Interrupting any arbitrary thread ensures that newly arriving
* workers since shutdown began will also eventually exit.
* To guarantee eventual termination, it suffices to always
* interrupt only one idle worker, but shutdown() interrupts all
* idle workers so that redundant workers exit promptly, not
* waiting for a straggler task to finish.
*/
private void interruptIdleWorkers(boolean onlyOne) {
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
for (Worker w : workers) {
Thread t = w.thread;
if (!t.isInterrupted() && w.tryLock()) {
try {
t.interrupt();
} catch (SecurityException ignore) {
} finally {
w.unlock();
}
}
if (onlyOne)
break;
}
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
}
/**
* Common form of interruptIdleWorkers, to avoid having to
* remember what the boolean argument means.
*/
private void interruptIdleWorkers() {
interruptIdleWorkers(false);
}
private static final boolean ONLY_ONE = true;
/*
* Misc utilities, most of which are also exported to
* ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
*/
/**
* Invokes the rejected execution handler for the given command.
* Package-protected for use by ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.
*/
final void reject(Runnable command) {
handler.rejectedExecution(command, this);
}
/**
* Performs any further cleanup following run state transition on
* invocation of shutdown. A no-op here, but used by
* ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor to cancel delayed tasks.
*/
void onShutdown() {
}
/**
* Drains the task queue into a new list, normally using
* drainTo. But if the queue is a DelayQueue or any other kind of
* queue for which poll or drainTo may fail to remove some
* elements, it deletes them one by one.
*/
private List<Runnable> drainQueue() {
BlockingQueue<Runnable> q = workQueue;
ArrayList<Runnable> taskList = new ArrayList<>();
q.drainTo(taskList);
if (!q.isEmpty()) {
for (Runnable r : q.toArray(new Runnable[0])) {
if (q.remove(r))
taskList.add(r);
}
}
return taskList;
}
/*
* Methods for creating, running and cleaning up after workers
*/
/**
* Checks if a new worker can be added with respect to current
* pool state and the given bound (either core or maximum). If so,
* the worker count is adjusted accordingly, and, if possible, a
* new worker is created and started, running firstTask as its
* first task. This method returns false if the pool is stopped or
* eligible to shut down. It also returns false if the thread
* factory fails to create a thread when asked. If the thread
* creation fails, either due to the thread factory returning
* null, or due to an exception (typically OutOfMemoryError in
* Thread.start()), we roll back cleanly.
*
* @param firstTask the task the new thread should run first (or
* null if none). Workers are created with an initial first task
* (in method execute()) to bypass queuing when there are fewer
* than corePoolSize threads (in which case we always start one),
* or when the queue is full (in which case we must bypass queue).
* Initially idle threads are usually created via
* prestartCoreThread or to replace other dying workers.
*
* @param core if true use corePoolSize as bound, else
* maximumPoolSize. (A boolean indicator is used here rather than a
* value to ensure reads of fresh values after checking other pool
* state).
* @return true if successful
*/
private boolean addWorker(Runnable firstTask, boolean core) {
retry:
for (int c = ctl.get();;) {
// Check if queue empty only if necessary.
if (runStateAtLeast(c, SHUTDOWN)
&& (runStateAtLeast(c, STOP)
|| firstTask != null
|| workQueue.isEmpty()))
return false;
for (;;) {
if (workerCountOf(c)
>= ((core ? corePoolSize : maximumPoolSize) & COUNT_MASK))
return false;
if (compareAndIncrementWorkerCount(c))
break retry;
c = ctl.get(); // Re-read ctl
if (runStateAtLeast(c, SHUTDOWN))
continue retry;
// else CAS failed due to workerCount change; retry inner loop
}
}
boolean workerStarted = false;
boolean workerAdded = false;
Worker w = null;
try {
w = new Worker(firstTask);
final Thread t = w.thread;
if (t != null) {
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
// Recheck while holding lock.
// Back out on ThreadFactory failure or if
// shut down before lock acquired.
int c = ctl.get();
if (isRunning(c) ||
(runStateLessThan(c, STOP) && firstTask == null)) {
if (t.getState() != Thread.State.NEW)
throw new IllegalThreadStateException();
workers.add(w);
workerAdded = true;
int s = workers.size();
if (s > largestPoolSize)
largestPoolSize = s;
}
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
if (workerAdded) {
container.start(t);
workerStarted = true;
}
}
} finally {
if (! workerStarted)
addWorkerFailed(w);
}
return workerStarted;
}
/**
* Rolls back the worker thread creation.
* - removes worker from workers, if present
* - decrements worker count
* - rechecks for termination, in case the existence of this
* worker was holding up termination
*/
private void addWorkerFailed(Worker w) {
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
if (w != null)
workers.remove(w);
decrementWorkerCount();
tryTerminate();
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
}
/**
* Performs cleanup and bookkeeping for a dying worker. Called
* only from worker threads. Unless completedAbruptly is set,
* assumes that workerCount has already been adjusted to account
* for exit. This method removes thread from worker set, and
* possibly terminates the pool or replaces the worker if either
* it exited due to user task exception or if fewer than
* corePoolSize workers are running or queue is non-empty but
* there are no workers.
*
* @param w the worker
* @param completedAbruptly if the worker died due to user exception
*/
private void processWorkerExit(Worker w, boolean completedAbruptly) {
if (completedAbruptly) // If abrupt, then workerCount wasn't adjusted
decrementWorkerCount();