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Comparing jsr166/src/jsr166y/ForkJoinPool.java (file contents):
Revision 1.57 by dl, Wed Jul 7 19:52:31 2010 UTC vs.
Revision 1.94 by dl, Tue Mar 1 10:59:04 2011 UTC

# Line 6 | Line 6
6  
7   package jsr166y;
8  
9 import java.util.concurrent.*;
10
9   import java.util.ArrayList;
10   import java.util.Arrays;
11   import java.util.Collection;
12   import java.util.Collections;
13   import java.util.List;
14 + import java.util.Random;
15 + import java.util.concurrent.AbstractExecutorService;
16 + import java.util.concurrent.Callable;
17 + import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
18 + import java.util.concurrent.Future;
19 + import java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionException;
20 + import java.util.concurrent.RunnableFuture;
21 + import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
22 + import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException;
23 + import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
24   import java.util.concurrent.locks.LockSupport;
25   import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock;
26 < import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
19 < import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLatch;
26 > import java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition;
27  
28   /**
29   * An {@link ExecutorService} for running {@link ForkJoinTask}s.
# Line 52 | Line 59 | import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLat
59   * convenient form for informal monitoring.
60   *
61   * <p> As is the case with other ExecutorServices, there are three
62 < * main task execution methods summarized in the follwoing
62 > * main task execution methods summarized in the following
63   * table. These are designed to be used by clients not already engaged
64   * in fork/join computations in the current pool.  The main forms of
65   * these methods accept instances of {@code ForkJoinTask}, but
# Line 60 | Line 67 | import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLat
67   * Runnable}- or {@code Callable}- based activities as well.  However,
68   * tasks that are already executing in a pool should normally
69   * <em>NOT</em> use these pool execution methods, but instead use the
70 < * within-computation forms listed in the table. To avoid inadvertant
64 < * cyclic task dependencies and to improve performance, task
65 < * submissions to the current pool by an ongoing fork/join
66 < * computations may be implicitly translated to the corresponding
67 < * ForkJoinTask forms.
70 > * within-computation forms listed in the table.
71   *
72   * <table BORDER CELLPADDING=3 CELLSPACING=1>
73   *  <tr>
# Line 73 | Line 76 | import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLat
76   *    <td ALIGN=CENTER> <b>Call from within fork/join computations</b></td>
77   *  </tr>
78   *  <tr>
79 < *    <td> <b>Arange async execution</td>
79 > *    <td> <b>Arrange async execution</td>
80   *    <td> {@link #execute(ForkJoinTask)}</td>
81   *    <td> {@link ForkJoinTask#fork}</td>
82   *  </tr>
# Line 88 | Line 91 | import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLat
91   *    <td> {@link ForkJoinTask#fork} (ForkJoinTasks <em>are</em> Futures)</td>
92   *  </tr>
93   * </table>
94 < *
94 > *
95   * <p><b>Sample Usage.</b> Normally a single {@code ForkJoinPool} is
96   * used for all parallel task execution in a program or subsystem.
97   * Otherwise, use would not usually outweigh the construction and
# Line 113 | Line 116 | import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLat
116   * {@code IllegalArgumentException}.
117   *
118   * <p>This implementation rejects submitted tasks (that is, by throwing
119 < * {@link RejectedExecutionException}) only when the pool is shut down.
119 > * {@link RejectedExecutionException}) only when the pool is shut down
120 > * or internal resources have been exhausted.
121   *
122   * @since 1.7
123   * @author Doug Lea
# Line 127 | Line 131 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
131       * set of worker threads: Submissions from non-FJ threads enter
132       * into a submission queue. Workers take these tasks and typically
133       * split them into subtasks that may be stolen by other workers.
134 <     * The main work-stealing mechanics implemented in class
135 <     * ForkJoinWorkerThread give first priority to processing tasks
136 <     * from their own queues (LIFO or FIFO, depending on mode), then
137 <     * to randomized FIFO steals of tasks in other worker queues, and
134 <     * lastly to new submissions. These mechanics do not consider
135 <     * affinities, loads, cache localities, etc, so rarely provide the
136 <     * best possible performance on a given machine, but portably
137 <     * provide good throughput by averaging over these factors.
138 <     * (Further, even if we did try to use such information, we do not
139 <     * usually have a basis for exploiting it. For example, some sets
140 <     * of tasks profit from cache affinities, but others are harmed by
141 <     * cache pollution effects.)
134 >     * Preference rules give first priority to processing tasks from
135 >     * their own queues (LIFO or FIFO, depending on mode), then to
136 >     * randomized FIFO steals of tasks in other worker queues, and
137 >     * lastly to new submissions.
138       *
139       * The main throughput advantages of work-stealing stem from
140 <     * decentralized control -- workers mostly steal tasks from each
141 <     * other. We do not want to negate this by creating bottlenecks
142 <     * implementing the management responsibilities of this class. So
143 <     * we use a collection of techniques that avoid, reduce, or cope
144 <     * well with contention. These entail several instances of
145 <     * bit-packing into CASable fields to maintain only the minimally
146 <     * required atomicity. To enable such packing, we restrict maximum
147 <     * parallelism to (1<<15)-1 (enabling twice this to fit into a 16
148 <     * bit field), which is far in excess of normal operating range.
149 <     * Even though updates to some of these bookkeeping fields do
150 <     * sometimes contend with each other, they don't normally
151 <     * cache-contend with updates to others enough to warrant memory
152 <     * padding or isolation. So they are all held as fields of
153 <     * ForkJoinPool objects.  The main capabilities are as follows:
154 <     *
155 <     * 1. Creating and removing workers. Workers are recorded in the
156 <     * "workers" array. This is an array as opposed to some other data
140 >     * decentralized control -- workers mostly take tasks from
141 >     * themselves or each other. We cannot negate this in the
142 >     * implementation of other management responsibilities. The main
143 >     * tactic for avoiding bottlenecks is packing nearly all
144 >     * essentially atomic control state into a single 64bit volatile
145 >     * variable ("ctl"). This variable is read on the order of 10-100
146 >     * times as often as it is modified (always via CAS). (There is
147 >     * some additional control state, for example variable "shutdown"
148 >     * for which we can cope with uncoordinated updates.)  This
149 >     * streamlines synchronization and control at the expense of messy
150 >     * constructions needed to repack status bits upon updates.
151 >     * Updates tend not to contend with each other except during
152 >     * bursts while submitted tasks begin or end.  In some cases when
153 >     * they do contend, threads can instead do something else
154 >     * (usually, scan for tesks) until contention subsides.
155 >     *
156 >     * To enable packing, we restrict maximum parallelism to (1<<15)-1
157 >     * (which is far in excess of normal operating range) to allow
158 >     * ids, counts, and their negations (used for thresholding) to fit
159 >     * into 16bit fields.
160 >     *
161 >     * Recording Workers.  Workers are recorded in the "workers" array
162 >     * that is created upon pool construction and expanded if (rarely)
163 >     * necessary.  This is an array as opposed to some other data
164       * structure to support index-based random steals by workers.
165       * Updates to the array recording new workers and unrecording
166 <     * terminated ones are protected from each other by a lock
167 <     * (workerLock) but the array is otherwise concurrently readable,
166 >     * terminated ones are protected from each other by a seqLock
167 >     * (scanGuard) but the array is otherwise concurrently readable,
168       * and accessed directly by workers. To simplify index-based
169       * operations, the array size is always a power of two, and all
170 <     * readers must tolerate null slots. Currently, all worker thread
171 <     * creation is on-demand, triggered by task submissions,
172 <     * replacement of terminated workers, and/or compensation for
173 <     * blocked workers. However, all other support code is set up to
174 <     * work with other policies.
175 <     *
176 <     * 2. Bookkeeping for dynamically adding and removing workers. We
177 <     * aim to approximately maintain the given level of parallelism.
178 <     * When some workers are known to be blocked (on joins or via
179 <     * ManagedBlocker), we may create or resume others to take their
180 <     * place until they unblock (see below). Implementing this
181 <     * requires counts of the number of "running" threads (i.e., those
182 <     * that are neither blocked nor artifically suspended) as well as
183 <     * the total number.  These two values are packed into one field,
184 <     * "workerCounts" because we need accurate snapshots when deciding
185 <     * to create, resume or suspend.  To support these decisions,
186 <     * updates to spare counts must be prospective (not
187 <     * retrospective).  For example, the running count is decremented
188 <     * before blocking by a thread about to block as a spare, but
189 <     * incremented by the thread about to unblock it. Updates upon
190 <     * resumption ofr threads blocking in awaitJoin or awaitBlocker
191 <     * cannot usually be prospective, so the running count is in
192 <     * general an upper bound of the number of productively running
193 <     * threads Updates to the workerCounts field sometimes transiently
194 <     * encounter a fair amount of contention when join dependencies
195 <     * are such that many threads block or unblock at about the same
196 <     * time. We alleviate this by sometimes performing an alternative
197 <     * action on contention like releasing waiters or locating spares.
198 <     *
199 <     * 3. Maintaining global run state. The run state of the pool
200 <     * consists of a runLevel (SHUTDOWN, TERMINATING, etc) similar to
201 <     * those in other Executor implementations, as well as a count of
202 <     * "active" workers -- those that are, or soon will be, or
203 <     * recently were executing tasks. The runLevel and active count
204 <     * are packed together in order to correctly trigger shutdown and
205 <     * termination. Without care, active counts can be subject to very
206 <     * high contention.  We substantially reduce this contention by
207 <     * relaxing update rules.  A worker must claim active status
208 <     * prospectively, by activating if it sees that a submitted or
209 <     * stealable task exists (it may find after activating that the
210 <     * task no longer exists). It stays active while processing this
211 <     * task (if it exists) and any other local subtasks it produces,
212 <     * until it cannot find any other tasks. It then tries
213 <     * inactivating (see method preStep), but upon update contention
214 <     * instead scans for more tasks, later retrying inactivation if it
215 <     * doesn't find any.
216 <     *
217 <     * 4. Managing idle workers waiting for tasks. We cannot let
218 <     * workers spin indefinitely scanning for tasks when none are
219 <     * available. On the other hand, we must quickly prod them into
220 <     * action when new tasks are submitted or generated.  We
221 <     * park/unpark these idle workers using an event-count scheme.
222 <     * Field eventCount is incremented upon events that may enable
223 <     * workers that previously could not find a task to now find one:
224 <     * Submission of a new task to the pool, or another worker pushing
225 <     * a task onto a previously empty queue.  (We also use this
226 <     * mechanism for termination and reconfiguration actions that
227 <     * require wakeups of idle workers).  Each worker maintains its
228 <     * last known event count, and blocks when a scan for work did not
229 <     * find a task AND its lastEventCount matches the current
230 <     * eventCount. Waiting idle workers are recorded in a variant of
231 <     * Treiber stack headed by field eventWaiters which, when nonzero,
232 <     * encodes the thread index and count awaited for by the worker
233 <     * thread most recently calling eventSync. This thread in turn has
234 <     * a record (field nextEventWaiter) for the next waiting worker.
235 <     * In addition to allowing simpler decisions about need for
236 <     * wakeup, the event count bits in eventWaiters serve the role of
237 <     * tags to avoid ABA errors in Treiber stacks.  To reduce delays
238 <     * in task diffusion, workers not otherwise occupied may invoke
239 <     * method releaseWaiters, that removes and signals (unparks)
240 <     * workers not waiting on current count. To minimize task
241 <     * production stalls associate with signalling, any worker pushing
242 <     * a task on an empty queue invokes the weaker method signalWork,
243 <     * that only releases idle workers until it detects interference
244 <     * by other threads trying to release, and lets them take
245 <     * over. The net effect is a tree-like diffusion of signals, where
246 <     * released threads (and possibly others) help with unparks.  To
247 <     * further reduce contention effects a bit, failed CASes to
248 <     * increment field eventCount are tolerated without retries.
249 <     * Conceptually they are merged into the same event, which is OK
250 <     * when their only purpose is to enable workers to scan for work.
251 <     *
252 <     * 5. Managing suspension of extra workers. When a worker is about
253 <     * to block waiting for a join (or via ManagedBlockers), we may
254 <     * create a new thread to maintain parallelism level, or at least
255 <     * avoid starvation (see below). Usually, extra threads are needed
256 <     * for only very short periods, yet join dependencies are such
257 <     * that we sometimes need them in bursts. Rather than create new
258 <     * threads each time this happens, we suspend no-longer-needed
259 <     * extra ones as "spares". For most purposes, we don't distinguish
260 <     * "extra" spare threads from normal "core" threads: On each call
261 <     * to preStep (the only point at which we can do this) a worker
262 <     * checks to see if there are now too many running workers, and if
263 <     * so, suspends itself.  Methods awaitJoin and awaitBlocker look
264 <     * for suspended threads to resume before considering creating a
265 <     * new replacement. We don't need a special data structure to
266 <     * maintain spares; simply scanning the workers array looking for
267 <     * worker.isSuspended() is fine because the calling thread is
268 <     * otherwise not doing anything useful anyway; we are at least as
269 <     * happy if after locating a spare, the caller doesn't actually
270 <     * block because the join is ready before we try to adjust and
271 <     * compensate.  Note that this is intrinsically racy.  One thread
272 <     * may become a spare at about the same time as another is
273 <     * needlessly being created. We counteract this and related slop
274 <     * in part by requiring resumed spares to immediately recheck (in
275 <     * preStep) to see whether they they should re-suspend. The only
276 <     * effective difference between "extra" and "core" threads is that
277 <     * we allow the "extra" ones to time out and die if they are not
278 <     * resumed within a keep-alive interval of a few seconds. This is
279 <     * implemented mainly within ForkJoinWorkerThread, but requires
280 <     * some coordination (isTrimmed() -- meaning killed while
281 <     * suspended) to correctly maintain pool counts.
282 <     *
283 <     * 6. Deciding when to create new workers. The main dynamic
284 <     * control in this class is deciding when to create extra threads,
285 <     * in methods awaitJoin and awaitBlocker. We always need to create
286 <     * one when the number of running threads becomes zero. But
287 <     * because blocked joins are typically dependent, we don't
288 <     * necessarily need or want one-to-one replacement. Instead, we
289 <     * use a combination of heuristics that adds threads only when the
290 <     * pool appears to be approaching starvation.  These effectively
291 <     * reduce churn at the price of systematically undershooting
292 <     * target parallelism when many threads are blocked.  However,
293 <     * biasing toward undeshooting partially compensates for the above
294 <     * mechanics to suspend extra threads, that normally lead to
292 <     * overshoot because we can only suspend workers in-between
293 <     * top-level actions. It also better copes with the fact that some
294 <     * of the methods in this class tend to never become compiled (but
295 <     * are interpreted), so some components of the entire set of
296 <     * controls might execute many times faster than others. And
297 <     * similarly for cases where the apparent lack of work is just due
298 <     * to GC stalls and other transient system activity.
170 >     * readers must tolerate null slots. To avoid flailing during
171 >     * start-up, the array is presized to hold twice #parallelism
172 >     * workers (which is unlikely to need further resizing during
173 >     * execution). But to avoid dealing with so many null slots,
174 >     * variable scanGuard includes a mask for the nearest power of two
175 >     * that contains all current workers.  All worker thread creation
176 >     * is on-demand, triggered by task submissions, replacement of
177 >     * terminated workers, and/or compensation for blocked
178 >     * workers. However, all other support code is set up to work with
179 >     * other policies.  To ensure that we do not hold on to worker
180 >     * references that would prevent GC, ALL accesses to workers are
181 >     * via indices into the workers array (which is one source of some
182 >     * of the messy code constructions here). In essence, the workers
183 >     * array serves as a weak reference mechanism. Thus for example
184 >     * the wait queue field of ctl stores worker indices, not worker
185 >     * references.  Access to the workers in associated methods (for
186 >     * example signalWork) must both index-check and null-check the
187 >     * IDs. All such accesses ignore bad IDs by returning out early
188 >     * from what they are doing, since this can only be associated
189 >     * with termination, in which case it is OK to give up.
190 >     *
191 >     * All uses of the workers array, as well as queue arrays, check
192 >     * that the array is non-null (even if previously non-null). This
193 >     * allows nulling during termination, which is currently not
194 >     * necessary, but remains an option for resource-revocation-based
195 >     * shutdown schemes.
196 >     *
197 >     * Wait Queuing. Unlike HPC work-stealing frameworks, we cannot
198 >     * let workers spin indefinitely scanning for tasks when none are
199 >     * can be immediately found, and we cannot start/resume workers
200 >     * unless there appear to be tasks available.  On the other hand,
201 >     * we must quickly prod them into action when new tasks are
202 >     * submitted or generated.  We park/unpark workers after placing
203 >     * in an event wait queue when they cannot find work. This "queue"
204 >     * is actually a simple Treiber stack, headed by the "id" field of
205 >     * ctl, plus a 15bit counter value to both wake up waiters (by
206 >     * advancing their count) and avoid ABA effects. Successors are
207 >     * held in worker field "nextWait".  Queuing deals with several
208 >     * intrinsic races, mainly that a task-producing thread can miss
209 >     * seeing (and signalling) another thread that gave up looking for
210 >     * work but has not yet entered the wait queue. We solve this by
211 >     * requiring a full sweep of all workers both before (in scan())
212 >     * and after (in awaitWork()) a newly waiting worker is added to
213 >     * the wait queue. During a rescan, the worker might release some
214 >     * other queued worker rather than itself, which has the same net
215 >     * effect.
216 >     *
217 >     * Signalling.  We create or wake up workers only when there
218 >     * appears to be at least one task they might be able to find and
219 >     * execute.  When a submission is added or another worker adds a
220 >     * task to a queue that previously had two or fewer tasks, they
221 >     * signal waiting workers (or trigger creation of new ones if
222 >     * fewer than the given parallelism level -- see signalWork).
223 >     * These primary signals are buttressed by signals during rescans
224 >     * as well as those performed when a worker steals a task and
225 >     * notices that there are more tasks too; together these cover the
226 >     * signals needed in cases when more than two tasks are pushed
227 >     * but untaken.
228 >     *
229 >     * Trimming workers. To release resources after periods of lack of
230 >     * use, a worker starting to wait when the pool is quiescent will
231 >     * time out and terminate if the pool has remained quiescent for
232 >     * SHRINK_RATE nanosecs.
233 >     *
234 >     * Submissions. External submissions are maintained in an
235 >     * array-based queue that is structured identically to
236 >     * ForkJoinWorkerThread queues (which see) except for the use of
237 >     * submissionLock in method addSubmission. Unlike worker queues,
238 >     * multiple external threads can add new submissions.
239 >     *
240 >     * Compensation. Beyond work-stealing support and lifecycle
241 >     * control, the main responsibility of this framework is to take
242 >     * actions when one worker is waiting to join a task stolen (or
243 >     * always held by) another.  Because we are multiplexing many
244 >     * tasks on to a pool of workers, we can't just let them block (as
245 >     * in Thread.join).  We also cannot just reassign the joiner's
246 >     * run-time stack with another and replace it later, which would
247 >     * be a form of "continuation", that even if possible is not
248 >     * necessarily a good idea since we sometimes need both an
249 >     * unblocked task and its continuation to progress. Instead we
250 >     * combine two tactics:
251 >     *
252 >     *   Helping: Arranging for the joiner to execute some task that it
253 >     *      would be running if the steal had not occurred.  Method
254 >     *      ForkJoinWorkerThread.joinTask tracks joining->stealing
255 >     *      links to try to find such a task.
256 >     *
257 >     *   Compensating: Unless there are already enough live threads,
258 >     *      method tryPreBlock() may create or re-activate a spare
259 >     *      thread to compensate for blocked joiners until they
260 >     *      unblock.
261 >     *
262 >     * The ManagedBlocker extension API can't use helping so relies
263 >     * only on compensation in method awaitBlocker.
264 >     *
265 >     * It is impossible to keep exactly the target parallelism number
266 >     * of threads running at any given time.  Determining the
267 >     * existence of conservatively safe helping targets, the
268 >     * availability of already-created spares, and the apparent need
269 >     * to create new spares are all racy and require heuristic
270 >     * guidance, so we rely on multiple retries of each.  Currently,
271 >     * in keeping with on-demand signalling policy, we compensate only
272 >     * if blocking would leave less than one active (non-waiting,
273 >     * non-blocked) worker. Additionally, to avoid some false alarms
274 >     * due to GC, lagging counters, system activity, etc, compensated
275 >     * blocking for joins is only attempted after a number of rechecks
276 >     * proportional to the current apparent deficit (where retries are
277 >     * interspersed with Thread.yield, for good citizenship).  The
278 >     * variable blockedCount, incremented before blocking and
279 >     * decremented after, is sometimes needed to distinguish cases of
280 >     * waiting for work vs blocking on joins or other managed sync,
281 >     * but both the cases are equivalent for most pool control, so we
282 >     * can update non-atomically. (Additionally, contention on
283 >     * blockedCount alleviates some contention on ctl).
284 >     *
285 >     * Shutdown and Termination. A call to shutdownNow atomically sets
286 >     * the ctl stop bit and then (non-atomically) sets each workers
287 >     * "terminate" status, cancels all unprocessed tasks, and wakes up
288 >     * all waiting workers.  Detecting whether termination should
289 >     * commence after a non-abrupt shutdown() call requires more work
290 >     * and bookkeeping. We need consensus about quiesence (i.e., that
291 >     * there is no more work) which is reflected in active counts so
292 >     * long as there are no current blockers, as well as possible
293 >     * re-evaluations during independent changes in blocking or
294 >     * quiescing workers.
295       *
296 <     * Beware that there is a lot of representation-level coupling
296 >     * Style notes: There is a lot of representation-level coupling
297       * among classes ForkJoinPool, ForkJoinWorkerThread, and
298 <     * ForkJoinTask.  For example, direct access to "workers" array by
298 >     * ForkJoinTask.  Most fields of ForkJoinWorkerThread maintain
299 >     * data structures managed by ForkJoinPool, so are directly
300 >     * accessed.  Conversely we allow access to "workers" array by
301       * workers, and direct access to ForkJoinTask.status by both
302       * ForkJoinPool and ForkJoinWorkerThread.  There is little point
303       * trying to reduce this, since any associated future changes in
304       * representations will need to be accompanied by algorithmic
305 <     * changes anyway.
306 <     *
307 <     * Style notes: There are lots of inline assignments (of form
308 <     * "while ((local = field) != 0)") which are usually the simplest
309 <     * way to ensure read orderings. Also several occurrences of the
310 <     * unusual "do {} while(!cas...)" which is the simplest way to
311 <     * force an update of a CAS'ed variable. There are also a few
312 <     * other coding oddities that help some methods perform reasonably
313 <     * even when interpreted (not compiled).
314 <     *
315 <     * The order of declarations in this file is: (1) statics (2)
316 <     * fields (along with constants used when unpacking some of them)
317 <     * (3) internal control methods (4) callbacks and other support
318 <     * for ForkJoinTask and ForkJoinWorkerThread classes, (5) exported
319 <     * methods (plus a few little helpers).
305 >     * changes anyway. All together, these low-level implementation
306 >     * choices produce as much as a factor of 4 performance
307 >     * improvement compared to naive implementations, and enable the
308 >     * processing of billions of tasks per second, at the expense of
309 >     * some ugliness.
310 >     *
311 >     * Methods signalWork() and scan() are the main bottlenecks so are
312 >     * especially heavily micro-optimized/mangled.  There are lots of
313 >     * inline assignments (of form "while ((local = field) != 0)")
314 >     * which are usually the simplest way to ensure the required read
315 >     * orderings (which are sometimes critical). This leads to a
316 >     * "C"-like style of listing declarations of these locals at the
317 >     * heads of methods or blocks.  There are several occurrences of
318 >     * the unusual "do {} while (!cas...)"  which is the simplest way
319 >     * to force an update of a CAS'ed variable. There are also other
320 >     * coding oddities that help some methods perform reasonably even
321 >     * when interpreted (not compiled).
322 >     *
323 >     * The order of declarations in this file is: (1) declarations of
324 >     * statics (2) fields (along with constants used when unpacking
325 >     * some of them), listed in an order that tends to reduce
326 >     * contention among them a bit under most JVMs.  (3) internal
327 >     * control methods (4) callbacks and other support for
328 >     * ForkJoinTask and ForkJoinWorkerThread classes, (5) exported
329 >     * methods (plus a few little helpers). (6) static block
330 >     * initializing all statics in a minimally dependent order.
331       */
332  
333      /**
# Line 353 | Line 362 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
362       * overridden in ForkJoinPool constructors.
363       */
364      public static final ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory
365 <        defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory =
357 <        new DefaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory();
365 >        defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory;
366  
367      /**
368       * Permission required for callers of methods that may start or
369       * kill threads.
370       */
371 <    private static final RuntimePermission modifyThreadPermission =
364 <        new RuntimePermission("modifyThread");
371 >    private static final RuntimePermission modifyThreadPermission;
372  
373      /**
374       * If there is a security manager, makes sure caller has
# Line 376 | Line 383 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
383      /**
384       * Generator for assigning sequence numbers as pool names.
385       */
386 <    private static final AtomicInteger poolNumberGenerator =
387 <        new AtomicInteger();
386 >    private static final AtomicInteger poolNumberGenerator;
387 >
388 >    /**
389 >     * Generator for initial random seeds for worker victim
390 >     * selection. This is used only to create initial seeds. Random
391 >     * steals use a cheaper xorshift generator per steal attempt. We
392 >     * don't expect much contention on seedGenerator, so just use a
393 >     * plain Random.
394 >     */
395 >    static final Random workerSeedGenerator;
396  
397      /**
398 <     * Absolute bound for parallelism level. Twice this number must
399 <     * fit into a 16bit field to enable word-packing for some counts.
398 >     * Array holding all worker threads in the pool.  Initialized upon
399 >     * construction. Array size must be a power of two.  Updates and
400 >     * replacements are protected by scanGuard, but the array is
401 >     * always kept in a consistent enough state to be randomly
402 >     * accessed without locking by workers performing work-stealing,
403 >     * as well as other traversal-based methods in this class, so long
404 >     * as reads memory-acquire by first reading ctl. All readers must
405 >     * tolerate that some array slots may be null.
406       */
407 <    private static final int MAX_THREADS = 0x7fff;
407 >    ForkJoinWorkerThread[] workers;
408  
409      /**
410 <     * Array holding all worker threads in the pool.  Array size must
411 <     * be a power of two.  Updates and replacements are protected by
412 <     * workerLock, but the array is always kept in a consistent enough
392 <     * state to be randomly accessed without locking by workers
393 <     * performing work-stealing, as well as other traversal-based
394 <     * methods in this class. All readers must tolerate that some
395 <     * array slots may be null.
410 >     * Initial size for submission queue array. Must be a power of
411 >     * two.  In many applications, these always stay small so we use a
412 >     * small initial cap.
413       */
414 <    volatile ForkJoinWorkerThread[] workers;
414 >    private static final int INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 8;
415  
416      /**
417 <     * Queue for external submissions.
417 >     * Maximum size for submission queue array. Must be a power of two
418 >     * less than or equal to 1 << (31 - width of array entry) to
419 >     * ensure lack of index wraparound, but is capped at a lower
420 >     * value to help users trap runaway computations.
421       */
422 <    private final LinkedTransferQueue<ForkJoinTask<?>> submissionQueue;
422 >    private static final int MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 1 << 24; // 16M
423  
424      /**
425 <     * Lock protecting updates to workers array.
425 >     * Array serving as submission queue. Initialized upon construction.
426       */
427 <    private final ReentrantLock workerLock;
427 >    private ForkJoinTask<?>[] submissionQueue;
428  
429      /**
430 <     * Latch released upon termination.
430 >     * Lock protecting submissions array for addSubmission
431       */
432 <    private final Phaser termination;
432 >    private final ReentrantLock submissionLock;
433 >
434 >    /**
435 >     * Condition for awaitTermination, using submissionLock for
436 >     * convenience.
437 >     */
438 >    private final Condition termination;
439  
440      /**
441       * Creation factory for worker threads.
# Line 417 | Line 443 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
443      private final ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory factory;
444  
445      /**
446 +     * The uncaught exception handler used when any worker abruptly
447 +     * terminates.
448 +     */
449 +    final Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler ueh;
450 +
451 +    /**
452 +     * Prefix for assigning names to worker threads
453 +     */
454 +    private final String workerNamePrefix;
455 +
456 +    /**
457       * Sum of per-thread steal counts, updated only when threads are
458       * idle or terminating.
459       */
460      private volatile long stealCount;
461  
462      /**
463 <     * Encoded record of top of treiber stack of threads waiting for
464 <     * events. The top 32 bits contain the count being waited for. The
465 <     * bottom word contains one plus the pool index of waiting worker
466 <     * thread.
467 <     */
468 <    private volatile long eventWaiters;
469 <
470 <    private static final int  EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT = 32;
471 <    private static final long WAITER_INDEX_MASK = (1L << EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT)-1L;
472 <
473 <    /**
474 <     * A counter for events that may wake up worker threads:
475 <     *   - Submission of a new task to the pool
476 <     *   - A worker pushing a task on an empty queue
477 <     *   - termination and reconfiguration
478 <     */
479 <    private volatile int eventCount;
480 <
481 <    /**
482 <     * Lifecycle control. The low word contains the number of workers
483 <     * that are (probably) executing tasks. This value is atomically
484 <     * incremented before a worker gets a task to run, and decremented
485 <     * when worker has no tasks and cannot find any.  Bits 16-18
486 <     * contain runLevel value. When all are zero, the pool is
487 <     * running. Level transitions are monotonic (running -> shutdown
488 <     * -> terminating -> terminated) so each transition adds a bit.
489 <     * These are bundled together to ensure consistent read for
490 <     * termination checks (i.e., that runLevel is at least SHUTDOWN
491 <     * and active threads is zero).
492 <     */
493 <    private volatile int runState;
494 <
495 <    // Note: The order among run level values matters.
496 <    private static final int RUNLEVEL_SHIFT     = 16;
497 <    private static final int SHUTDOWN           = 1 << RUNLEVEL_SHIFT;
498 <    private static final int TERMINATING        = 1 << (RUNLEVEL_SHIFT + 1);
499 <    private static final int TERMINATED         = 1 << (RUNLEVEL_SHIFT + 2);
500 <    private static final int ACTIVE_COUNT_MASK  = (1 << RUNLEVEL_SHIFT) - 1;
501 <    private static final int ONE_ACTIVE         = 1; // active update delta
502 <
503 <    /**
504 <     * Holds number of total (i.e., created and not yet terminated)
505 <     * and running (i.e., not blocked on joins or other managed sync)
506 <     * threads, packed together to ensure consistent snapshot when
507 <     * making decisions about creating and suspending spare
508 <     * threads. Updated only by CAS. Note that adding a new worker
509 <     * requires incrementing both counts, since workers start off in
510 <     * running state.  This field is also used for memory-fencing
511 <     * configuration parameters.
512 <     */
513 <    private volatile int workerCounts;
514 <
515 <    private static final int TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT  = 16;
516 <    private static final int RUNNING_COUNT_MASK = (1 << TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) - 1;
480 <    private static final int ONE_RUNNING        = 1;
481 <    private static final int ONE_TOTAL          = 1 << TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT;
463 >     * Main pool control -- a long packed with:
464 >     * AC: Number of active running workers minus target parallelism (16 bits)
465 >     * TC: Number of total workers minus target parallelism (16bits)
466 >     * ST: true if pool is terminating (1 bit)
467 >     * EC: the wait count of top waiting thread (15 bits)
468 >     * ID: ~poolIndex of top of Treiber stack of waiting threads (16 bits)
469 >     *
470 >     * When convenient, we can extract the upper 32 bits of counts and
471 >     * the lower 32 bits of queue state, u = (int)(ctl >>> 32) and e =
472 >     * (int)ctl.  The ec field is never accessed alone, but always
473 >     * together with id and st. The offsets of counts by the target
474 >     * parallelism and the positionings of fields makes it possible to
475 >     * perform the most common checks via sign tests of fields: When
476 >     * ac is negative, there are not enough active workers, when tc is
477 >     * negative, there are not enough total workers, when id is
478 >     * negative, there is at least one waiting worker, and when e is
479 >     * negative, the pool is terminating.  To deal with these possibly
480 >     * negative fields, we use casts in and out of "short" and/or
481 >     * signed shifts to maintain signedness.
482 >     */
483 >    volatile long ctl;
484 >
485 >    // bit positions/shifts for fields
486 >    private static final int  AC_SHIFT   = 48;
487 >    private static final int  TC_SHIFT   = 32;
488 >    private static final int  ST_SHIFT   = 31;
489 >    private static final int  EC_SHIFT   = 16;
490 >
491 >    // bounds
492 >    private static final int  MAX_ID     = 0x7fff;  // max poolIndex
493 >    private static final int  SMASK      = 0xffff;  // mask short bits
494 >    private static final int  SHORT_SIGN = 1 << 15;
495 >    private static final int  INT_SIGN   = 1 << 31;
496 >
497 >    // masks
498 >    private static final long STOP_BIT   = 0x0001L << ST_SHIFT;
499 >    private static final long AC_MASK    = ((long)SMASK) << AC_SHIFT;
500 >    private static final long TC_MASK    = ((long)SMASK) << TC_SHIFT;
501 >
502 >    // units for incrementing and decrementing
503 >    private static final long TC_UNIT    = 1L << TC_SHIFT;
504 >    private static final long AC_UNIT    = 1L << AC_SHIFT;
505 >
506 >    // masks and units for dealing with u = (int)(ctl >>> 32)
507 >    private static final int  UAC_SHIFT  = AC_SHIFT - 32;
508 >    private static final int  UTC_SHIFT  = TC_SHIFT - 32;
509 >    private static final int  UAC_MASK   = SMASK << UAC_SHIFT;
510 >    private static final int  UTC_MASK   = SMASK << UTC_SHIFT;
511 >    private static final int  UAC_UNIT   = 1 << UAC_SHIFT;
512 >    private static final int  UTC_UNIT   = 1 << UTC_SHIFT;
513 >
514 >    // masks and units for dealing with e = (int)ctl
515 >    private static final int  E_MASK     = 0x7fffffff; // no STOP_BIT
516 >    private static final int  EC_UNIT    = 1 << EC_SHIFT;
517  
518      /**
519       * The target parallelism level.
485     * Accessed directly by ForkJoinWorkerThreads.
520       */
521      final int parallelism;
522  
523      /**
524 +     * Index (mod submission queue length) of next element to take
525 +     * from submission queue.
526 +     */
527 +    volatile int queueBase;
528 +
529 +    /**
530 +     * Index (mod submission queue length) of next element to add
531 +     * in submission queue.
532 +     */
533 +    int queueTop;
534 +
535 +    /**
536 +     * True when shutdown() has been called.
537 +     */
538 +    volatile boolean shutdown;
539 +
540 +    /**
541       * True if use local fifo, not default lifo, for local polling
542       * Read by, and replicated by ForkJoinWorkerThreads
543       */
544      final boolean locallyFifo;
545  
546      /**
547 <     * The uncaught exception handler used when any worker abruptly
548 <     * terminates.
547 >     * The number of threads in ForkJoinWorkerThreads.helpQuiescePool.
548 >     * When non-zero, suppresses automatic shutdown when active
549 >     * counts become zero.
550       */
551 <    private final Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler ueh;
551 >    volatile int quiescerCount;
552  
553      /**
554 <     * Pool number, just for assigning useful names to worker threads
554 >     * The number of threads blocked in join.
555       */
556 <    private final int poolNumber;
556 >    volatile int blockedCount;
557  
558 <    // utilities for updating fields
558 >    /**
559 >     * Counter for worker Thread names (unrelated to their poolIndex)
560 >     */
561 >    private volatile int nextWorkerNumber;
562  
563      /**
564 <     * Increments running count.  Also used by ForkJoinTask.
564 >     * The index for the next created worker. Accessed under scanGuard.
565       */
566 <    final void incrementRunningCount() {
567 <        int c;
513 <        do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
514 <                                               c = workerCounts,
515 <                                               c + ONE_RUNNING));
516 <    }
517 <    
566 >    private int nextWorkerIndex;
567 >
568      /**
569 <     * Tries to decrement running count unless already zero
569 >     * SeqLock and index masking for for updates to workers array.
570 >     * Locked when SG_UNIT is set. Unlocking clears bit by adding
571 >     * SG_UNIT. Staleness of read-only operations can be checked by
572 >     * comparing scanGuard to value before the reads. The low 16 bits
573 >     * (i.e, anding with SMASK) hold (the smallest power of two
574 >     * covering all worker indices, minus one, and is used to avoid
575 >     * dealing with large numbers of null slots when the workers array
576 >     * is overallocated.
577       */
578 <    final boolean tryDecrementRunningCount() {
579 <        int wc = workerCounts;
580 <        if ((wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) == 0)
524 <            return false;
525 <        return UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
526 <                                        wc, wc - ONE_RUNNING);
527 <    }
578 >    volatile int scanGuard;
579 >
580 >    private static final int SG_UNIT = 1 << 16;
581  
582      /**
583 <     * Tries incrementing active count; fails on contention.
584 <     * Called by workers before executing tasks.
583 >     * The wakeup interval (in nanoseconds) for a worker waiting for a
584 >     * task when the pool is quiescent to instead try to shrink the
585 >     * number of workers.  The exact value does not matter too
586 >     * much. It must be short enough to release resources during
587 >     * sustained periods of idleness, but not so short that threads
588 >     * are continually re-created.
589 >     */
590 >    private static final long SHRINK_RATE =
591 >        4L * 1000L * 1000L * 1000L; // 4 seconds
592 >
593 >    /**
594 >     * Top-level loop for worker threads: On each step: if the
595 >     * previous step swept through all queues and found no tasks, or
596 >     * there are excess threads, then possibly blocks. Otherwise,
597 >     * scans for and, if found, executes a task. Returns when pool
598 >     * and/or worker terminate.
599       *
600 <     * @return true on success
600 >     * @param w the worker
601       */
602 <    final boolean tryIncrementActiveCount() {
603 <        int c;
604 <        return UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset,
605 <                                        c = runState, c + ONE_ACTIVE);
602 >    final void work(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
603 >        boolean swept = false;                // true on empty scans
604 >        long c;
605 >        while (!w.terminate && (int)(c = ctl) >= 0) {
606 >            int a;                            // active count
607 >            if (!swept && (a = (int)(c >> AC_SHIFT)) <= 0)
608 >                swept = scan(w, a);
609 >            else if (tryAwaitWork(w, c))
610 >                swept = false;
611 >        }
612      }
613  
614 +    // Signalling
615 +
616      /**
617 <     * Tries decrementing active count; fails on contention.
543 <     * Called when workers cannot find tasks to run.
617 >     * Wakes up or creates a worker.
618       */
619 <    final boolean tryDecrementActiveCount() {
620 <        int c;
621 <        return UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset,
622 <                                        c = runState, c - ONE_ACTIVE);
619 >    final void signalWork() {
620 >        /*
621 >         * The while condition is true if: (there is are too few total
622 >         * workers OR there is at least one waiter) AND (there are too
623 >         * few active workers OR the pool is terminating).  The value
624 >         * of e distinguishes the remaining cases: zero (no waiters)
625 >         * for create, negative if terminating (in which case do
626 >         * nothing), else release a waiter. The secondary checks for
627 >         * release (non-null array etc) can fail if the pool begins
628 >         * terminating after the test, and don't impose any added cost
629 >         * because JVMs must perform null and bounds checks anyway.
630 >         */
631 >        long c; int e, u;
632 >        while ((((e = (int)(c = ctl)) | (u = (int)(c >>> 32))) &
633 >                (INT_SIGN|SHORT_SIGN)) == (INT_SIGN|SHORT_SIGN) && e >= 0) {
634 >            if (e > 0) {                         // release a waiting worker
635 >                int i; ForkJoinWorkerThread w; ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
636 >                if ((ws = workers) == null ||
637 >                    (i = ~e & SMASK) >= ws.length ||
638 >                    (w = ws[i]) == null)
639 >                    break;
640 >                long nc = (((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK)) |
641 >                           ((long)(u + UAC_UNIT) << 32));
642 >                if (w.eventCount == e &&
643 >                    UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc)) {
644 >                    w.eventCount = (e + EC_UNIT) & E_MASK;
645 >                    if (w.parked)
646 >                        UNSAFE.unpark(w);
647 >                    break;
648 >                }
649 >            }
650 >            else if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong
651 >                     (this, ctlOffset, c,
652 >                      (long)(((u + UTC_UNIT) & UTC_MASK) |
653 >                             ((u + UAC_UNIT) & UAC_MASK)) << 32)) {
654 >                addWorker();
655 >                break;
656 >            }
657 >        }
658      }
659  
660      /**
661 <     * Advances to at least the given level. Returns true if not
662 <     * already in at least the given level.
661 >     * Variant of signalWork to help release waiters on rescans.
662 >     * Tries once to release a waiter if active count < 0.
663 >     *
664 >     * @return false if failed due to contention, else true
665       */
666 <    private boolean advanceRunLevel(int level) {
667 <        for (;;) {
668 <            int s = runState;
669 <            if ((s & level) != 0)
666 >    private boolean tryReleaseWaiter() {
667 >        long c; int e, i; ForkJoinWorkerThread w; ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
668 >        if ((e = (int)(c = ctl)) > 0 &&
669 >            (int)(c >> AC_SHIFT) < 0 &&
670 >            (ws = workers) != null &&
671 >            (i = ~e & SMASK) < ws.length &&
672 >            (w = ws[i]) != null) {
673 >            long nc = ((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK) |
674 >                       ((c + AC_UNIT) & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK)));
675 >            if (w.eventCount != e ||
676 >                !UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc))
677                  return false;
678 <            if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s, s | level))
679 <                return true;
678 >            w.eventCount = (e + EC_UNIT) & E_MASK;
679 >            if (w.parked)
680 >                UNSAFE.unpark(w);
681          }
682 +        return true;
683      }
684  
685 <    // workers array maintenance
685 >    // Scanning for tasks
686  
687      /**
688 <     * Records and returns a workers array index for new worker.
688 >     * Scans for and, if found, executes one task. Scans start at a
689 >     * random index of workers array, and randomly select the first
690 >     * (2*#workers)-1 probes, and then, if all empty, resort to 2
691 >     * circular sweeps, which is necessary to check quiescence. and
692 >     * taking a submission only if no stealable tasks were found.  The
693 >     * steal code inside the loop is a specialized form of
694 >     * ForkJoinWorkerThread.deqTask, followed bookkeeping to support
695 >     * helpJoinTask and signal propagation. The code for submission
696 >     * queues is almost identical. On each steal, the worker completes
697 >     * not only the task, but also all local tasks that this task may
698 >     * have generated. On detecting staleness or contention when
699 >     * trying to take a task, this method returns without finishing
700 >     * sweep, which allows global state rechecks before retry.
701 >     *
702 >     * @param w the worker
703 >     * @param a the number of active workers
704 >     * @return true if swept all queues without finding a task
705       */
706 <    private int recordWorker(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
707 <        // Try using slot totalCount-1. If not available, scan and/or resize
708 <        int k = (workerCounts >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) - 1;
709 <        final ReentrantLock lock = this.workerLock;
710 <        lock.lock();
711 <        try {
712 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
713 <            int nws = ws.length;
714 <            if (k < 0 || k >= nws || ws[k] != null) {
715 <                for (k = 0; k < nws && ws[k] != null; ++k)
716 <                    ;
717 <                if (k == nws)
718 <                    ws = Arrays.copyOf(ws, nws << 1);
706 >    private boolean scan(ForkJoinWorkerThread w, int a) {
707 >        int g = scanGuard; // mask 0 avoids useless scans if only one active
708 >        int m = parallelism == 1 - a? 0 : g & SMASK;
709 >        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
710 >        if (ws == null || ws.length <= m)         // staleness check
711 >            return false;
712 >        for (int r = w.seed, k = r, j = -(m + m); j <= m + m; ++j) {
713 >            ForkJoinTask<?> t; ForkJoinTask<?>[] q; int b, i;
714 >            ForkJoinWorkerThread v = ws[k & m];
715 >            if (v != null && (b = v.queueBase) != v.queueTop &&
716 >                (q = v.queue) != null && (i = (q.length - 1) & b) >= 0) {
717 >                long u = (i << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
718 >                if ((t = q[i]) != null && v.queueBase == b &&
719 >                    UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, u, t, null)) {
720 >                    int d = (v.queueBase = b + 1) - v.queueTop;
721 >                    v.stealHint = w.poolIndex;
722 >                    if (d != 0)
723 >                        signalWork();             // propagate if nonempty
724 >                    w.execTask(t);
725 >                }
726 >                r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; w.seed = r ^ (r << 5);
727 >                return false;                     // store next seed
728 >            }
729 >            else if (j < 0) {                     // xorshift
730 >                r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; k = r ^= r << 5;
731 >            }
732 >            else
733 >                ++k;
734 >        }
735 >        if (scanGuard != g)                       // staleness check
736 >            return false;
737 >        else {                                    // try to take submission
738 >            ForkJoinTask<?> t; ForkJoinTask<?>[] q; int b, i;
739 >            if ((b = queueBase) != queueTop &&
740 >                (q = submissionQueue) != null &&
741 >                (i = (q.length - 1) & b) >= 0) {
742 >                long u = (i << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
743 >                if ((t = q[i]) != null && queueBase == b &&
744 >                    UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, u, t, null)) {
745 >                    queueBase = b + 1;
746 >                    w.execTask(t);
747 >                }
748 >                return false;
749 >            }
750 >            return true;                         // all queues empty
751 >        }
752 >    }
753 >
754 >    /**
755 >     * Tries to enqueue worker w in wait queue and await change in
756 >     * worker's eventCount.  If the pool is quiescent, possibly
757 >     * terminates worker upon exit.  Otherwise, before blocking,
758 >     * rescans queues to avoid missed signals.  Upon finding work,
759 >     * releases at least one worker (which may be the current
760 >     * worker). Rescans restart upon detected staleness or failure to
761 >     * release due to contention.
762 >     *
763 >     * @param w the calling worker
764 >     * @param c the ctl value on entry
765 >     * @return true if waited or another thread was released upon enq
766 >     */
767 >    private boolean tryAwaitWork(ForkJoinWorkerThread w, long c) {
768 >        int v = w.eventCount;
769 >        w.nextWait = (int)c;                      // w's successor record
770 >        long nc = (long)(v & E_MASK) | ((c - AC_UNIT) & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK));
771 >        if (ctl != c || !UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc)) {
772 >            long d = ctl; // return true if lost to a deq, to force scan
773 >            return (int)d != (int)c && ((d - c) & AC_MASK) >= 0L;
774 >        }
775 >        for (int sc = w.stealCount; sc != 0;) {   // accumulate stealCount
776 >            long s = stealCount;
777 >            if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, stealCountOffset, s, s + sc))
778 >                sc = w.stealCount = 0;
779 >            else if (w.eventCount != v)
780 >                return true;                      // update next time
781 >        }
782 >        if (parallelism + (int)(nc >> AC_SHIFT) == 0 &&
783 >            blockedCount == 0 && quiescerCount == 0)
784 >            idleAwaitWork(w, nc, c, v);           // quiescent
785 >        for (boolean rescanned = false;;) {
786 >            if (w.eventCount != v)
787 >                return true;
788 >            if (!rescanned) {
789 >                int g = scanGuard, m = g & SMASK;
790 >                ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
791 >                if (ws != null && m < ws.length) {
792 >                    rescanned = true;
793 >                    for (int i = 0; i <= m; ++i) {
794 >                        ForkJoinWorkerThread u = ws[i];
795 >                        if (u != null) {
796 >                            if (u.queueBase != u.queueTop &&
797 >                                !tryReleaseWaiter())
798 >                                rescanned = false; // contended
799 >                            if (w.eventCount != v)
800 >                                return true;
801 >                        }
802 >                    }
803 >                }
804 >                if (scanGuard != g ||              // stale
805 >                    (queueBase != queueTop && !tryReleaseWaiter()))
806 >                    rescanned = false;
807 >                if (!rescanned)
808 >                    Thread.yield();                // reduce contention
809 >                else
810 >                    Thread.interrupted();          // clear before park
811 >            }
812 >            else {
813 >                w.parked = true;                   // must recheck
814 >                if (w.eventCount != v) {
815 >                    w.parked = false;
816 >                    return true;
817 >                }
818 >                LockSupport.park(this);
819 >                rescanned = w.parked = false;
820 >            }
821 >        }
822 >    }
823 >
824 >    /**
825 >     * If inactivating worker w has caused pool to become
826 >     * quiescent, check for pool termination, and wait for event
827 >     * for up to SHRINK_RATE nanosecs (rescans are unnecessary in
828 >     * this case because quiescence reflects consensus about lack
829 >     * of work). On timeout, if ctl has not changed, terminate the
830 >     * worker. Upon its termination (see deregisterWorker), it may
831 >     * wake up another worker to possibly repeat this process.
832 >     *
833 >     * @param w the calling worker
834 >     * @param currentCtl the ctl value after enqueuing w
835 >     * @param prevCtl the ctl value if w terminated
836 >     * @param v the eventCount w awaits change
837 >     */
838 >    private void idleAwaitWork(ForkJoinWorkerThread w, long currentCtl,
839 >                               long prevCtl, int v) {
840 >        if (w.eventCount == v) {
841 >            if (shutdown)
842 >                tryTerminate(false);
843 >            ForkJoinTask.helpExpungeStaleExceptions(); // help clean weak refs
844 >            while (ctl == currentCtl) {
845 >                long startTime = System.nanoTime();
846 >                w.parked = true;
847 >                if (w.eventCount == v)             // must recheck
848 >                    LockSupport.parkNanos(this, SHRINK_RATE);
849 >                w.parked = false;
850 >                if (w.eventCount != v)
851 >                    break;
852 >                else if (System.nanoTime() - startTime < SHRINK_RATE)
853 >                    Thread.interrupted();          // spurious wakeup
854 >                else if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset,
855 >                                                   currentCtl, prevCtl)) {
856 >                    w.terminate = true;            // restore previous
857 >                    w.eventCount = ((int)currentCtl + EC_UNIT) & E_MASK;
858 >                    break;
859 >                }
860              }
584            ws[k] = w;
585            workers = ws; // volatile array write ensures slot visibility
586        } finally {
587            lock.unlock();
861          }
589        return k;
862      }
863  
864 +    // Submissions
865 +
866      /**
867 <     * Nulls out record of worker in workers array
867 >     * Enqueues the given task in the submissionQueue.  Same idea as
868 >     * ForkJoinWorkerThread.pushTask except for use of submissionLock.
869 >     *
870 >     * @param t the task
871       */
872 <    private void forgetWorker(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
873 <        int idx = w.poolIndex;
597 <        // Locking helps method recordWorker avoid unecessary expansion
598 <        final ReentrantLock lock = this.workerLock;
872 >    private void addSubmission(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
873 >        final ReentrantLock lock = this.submissionLock;
874          lock.lock();
875          try {
876 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
877 <            if (idx >= 0 && idx < ws.length && ws[idx] == w) // verify
878 <                ws[idx] = null;
876 >            ForkJoinTask<?>[] q; int s, m;
877 >            if ((q = submissionQueue) != null) {    // ignore if queue removed
878 >                long u = (((s = queueTop) & (m = q.length-1)) << ASHIFT)+ABASE;
879 >                UNSAFE.putOrderedObject(q, u, t);
880 >                queueTop = s + 1;
881 >                if (s - queueBase == m)
882 >                    growSubmissionQueue();
883 >            }
884          } finally {
885              lock.unlock();
886          }
887 +        signalWork();
888      }
889  
890 <    // adding and removing workers
890 >    //  (pollSubmission is defined below with exported methods)
891  
892      /**
893 <     * Tries to create and add new worker. Assumes that worker counts
894 <     * are already updated to accommodate the worker, so adjusts on
614 <     * failure.
615 <     *
616 <     * @return new worker or null if creation failed
893 >     * Creates or doubles submissionQueue array.
894 >     * Basically identical to ForkJoinWorkerThread version
895       */
896 <    private ForkJoinWorkerThread addWorker() {
897 <        ForkJoinWorkerThread w = null;
898 <        try {
899 <            w = factory.newThread(this);
900 <        } finally { // Adjust on either null or exceptional factory return
901 <            if (w == null) {
902 <                onWorkerCreationFailure();
903 <                return null;
896 >    private void growSubmissionQueue() {
897 >        ForkJoinTask<?>[] oldQ = submissionQueue;
898 >        int size = oldQ != null ? oldQ.length << 1 : INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY;
899 >        if (size > MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY)
900 >            throw new RejectedExecutionException("Queue capacity exceeded");
901 >        if (size < INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY)
902 >            size = INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY;
903 >        ForkJoinTask<?>[] q = submissionQueue = new ForkJoinTask<?>[size];
904 >        int mask = size - 1;
905 >        int top = queueTop;
906 >        int oldMask;
907 >        if (oldQ != null && (oldMask = oldQ.length - 1) >= 0) {
908 >            for (int b = queueBase; b != top; ++b) {
909 >                long u = ((b & oldMask) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
910 >                Object x = UNSAFE.getObjectVolatile(oldQ, u);
911 >                if (x != null && UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(oldQ, u, x, null))
912 >                    UNSAFE.putObjectVolatile
913 >                        (q, ((b & mask) << ASHIFT) + ABASE, x);
914              }
915          }
628        w.start(recordWorker(w), ueh);
629        return w;
916      }
917  
918 +    // Blocking support
919 +
920      /**
921 <     * Adjusts counts upon failure to create worker
921 >     * Tries to increment blockedCount, decrement active count
922 >     * (sometimes implicitly) and possibly release or create a
923 >     * compensating worker in preparation for blocking. Fails
924 >     * on contention or termination.
925 >     *
926 >     * @return true if the caller can block, else should recheck and retry
927       */
928 <    private void onWorkerCreationFailure() {
929 <        for (;;) {
930 <            int wc = workerCounts;
931 <            if ((wc >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) > 0 &&
932 <                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
933 <                                         wc, wc - (ONE_RUNNING|ONE_TOTAL)))
934 <                break;
928 >    private boolean tryPreBlock() {
929 >        int b = blockedCount;
930 >        if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, blockedCountOffset, b, b + 1)) {
931 >            int pc = parallelism;
932 >            do {
933 >                ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws; ForkJoinWorkerThread w;
934 >                int e, ac, tc, rc, i;
935 >                long c = ctl;
936 >                int u = (int)(c >>> 32);
937 >                if ((e = (int)c) < 0) {
938 >                                                 // skip -- terminating
939 >                }
940 >                else if ((ac = (u >> UAC_SHIFT)) <= 0 && e != 0 &&
941 >                         (ws = workers) != null &&
942 >                         (i = ~e & SMASK) < ws.length &&
943 >                         (w = ws[i]) != null) {
944 >                    long nc = ((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK) |
945 >                               (c & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK)));
946 >                    if (w.eventCount == e &&
947 >                        UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc)) {
948 >                        w.eventCount = (e + EC_UNIT) & E_MASK;
949 >                        if (w.parked)
950 >                            UNSAFE.unpark(w);
951 >                        return true;             // release an idle worker
952 >                    }
953 >                }
954 >                else if ((tc = (short)(u >>> UTC_SHIFT)) >= 0 && ac + pc > 1) {
955 >                    long nc = ((c - AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) | (c & ~AC_MASK);
956 >                    if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc))
957 >                        return true;             // no compensation needed
958 >                }
959 >                else if (tc + pc < MAX_ID) {
960 >                    long nc = ((c + TC_UNIT) & TC_MASK) | (c & ~TC_MASK);
961 >                    if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, nc)) {
962 >                        addWorker();
963 >                        return true;            // create a replacement
964 >                    }
965 >                }
966 >                // try to back out on any failure and let caller retry
967 >            } while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, blockedCountOffset,
968 >                                               b = blockedCount, b - 1));
969          }
970 <        tryTerminate(false); // in case of failure during shutdown
970 >        return false;
971      }
972  
973      /**
974 <     * Create enough total workers to establish target parallelism,
648 <     * giving up if terminating or addWorker fails
974 >     * Decrements blockedCount and increments active count
975       */
976 <    private void ensureEnoughTotalWorkers() {
977 <        int wc;
978 <        while (((wc = workerCounts) >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) < parallelism &&
979 <               runState < TERMINATING) {
980 <            if ((UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
981 <                                          wc, wc + (ONE_RUNNING|ONE_TOTAL)) &&
982 <                 addWorker() == null))
657 <                break;
658 <        }
976 >    private void postBlock() {
977 >        long c;
978 >        do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset,  // no mask
979 >                                                c = ctl, c + AC_UNIT));
980 >        int b;
981 >        do {} while(!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, blockedCountOffset,
982 >                                              b = blockedCount, b - 1));
983      }
984  
985      /**
986 <     * Final callback from terminating worker.  Removes record of
987 <     * worker from array, and adjusts counts. If pool is shutting
664 <     * down, tries to complete terminatation, else possibly replaces
665 <     * the worker.
986 >     * Possibly blocks waiting for the given task to complete, or
987 >     * cancels the task if terminating.  Fails to wait if contended.
988       *
989 <     * @param w the worker
989 >     * @param joinMe the task
990       */
991 <    final void workerTerminated(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
992 <        if (w.active) { // force inactive
993 <            w.active = false;
994 <            do {} while (!tryDecrementActiveCount());
995 <        }
996 <        forgetWorker(w);
997 <
998 <        // Decrement total count, and if was running, running count
999 <        // Spin (waiting for other updates) if either would be negative
1000 <        int nr = w.isTrimmed() ? 0 : ONE_RUNNING;
679 <        int unit = ONE_TOTAL + nr;
680 <        for (;;) {
681 <            int wc = workerCounts;
682 <            int rc = wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK;
683 <            if (rc - nr < 0 || (wc >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) == 0)
684 <                Thread.yield(); // back off if waiting for other updates
685 <            else if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
686 <                                              wc, wc - unit))
687 <                break;
991 >    final void tryAwaitJoin(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe) {
992 >        int s;
993 >        Thread.interrupted(); // clear interrupts before checking termination
994 >        if (joinMe.status >= 0) {
995 >            if (tryPreBlock()) {
996 >                joinMe.tryAwaitDone(0L);
997 >                postBlock();
998 >            }
999 >            if ((ctl & STOP_BIT) != 0L)
1000 >                joinMe.cancelIgnoringExceptions();
1001          }
689
690        accumulateStealCount(w); // collect final count
691        if (!tryTerminate(false))
692            ensureEnoughTotalWorkers();
1002      }
1003  
695    // Waiting for and signalling events
696
1004      /**
1005 <     * Releases workers blocked on a count not equal to current count.
1005 >     * Possibly blocks the given worker waiting for joinMe to
1006 >     * complete or timeout
1007 >     *
1008 >     * @param joinMe the task
1009 >     * @param millis the wait time for underlying Object.wait
1010       */
1011 <    private void releaseWaiters() {
1012 <        long top;
1013 <        int id;
1014 <        while ((id = (int)((top = eventWaiters) & WAITER_INDEX_MASK)) > 0 &&
1015 <               (int)(top >>> EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT) != eventCount) {
1016 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1017 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w;
1018 <            if (ws.length >= id && (w = ws[id - 1]) != null &&
1019 <                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, eventWaitersOffset,
1020 <                                          top, w.nextWaiter))
1021 <                LockSupport.unpark(w);
1011 >    final void timedAwaitJoin(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe, long nanos) {
1012 >        while (joinMe.status >= 0) {
1013 >            Thread.interrupted();
1014 >            if ((ctl & STOP_BIT) != 0L) {
1015 >                joinMe.cancelIgnoringExceptions();
1016 >                break;
1017 >            }
1018 >            if (tryPreBlock()) {
1019 >                long last = System.nanoTime();
1020 >                while (joinMe.status >= 0) {
1021 >                    long millis = TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS.toMillis(nanos);
1022 >                    if (millis <= 0)
1023 >                        break;
1024 >                    joinMe.tryAwaitDone(millis);
1025 >                    if (joinMe.status < 0)
1026 >                        break;
1027 >                    if ((ctl & STOP_BIT) != 0L) {
1028 >                        joinMe.cancelIgnoringExceptions();
1029 >                        break;
1030 >                    }
1031 >                    long now = System.nanoTime();
1032 >                    nanos -= now - last;
1033 >                    last = now;
1034 >                }
1035 >                postBlock();
1036 >                break;
1037 >            }
1038          }
1039      }
1040  
1041      /**
1042 <     * Ensures eventCount on exit is different (mod 2^32) than on
716 <     * entry and wakes up all waiters
1042 >     * If necessary, compensates for blocker, and blocks
1043       */
1044 <    private void signalEvent() {
1045 <        int c;
1046 <        do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, eventCountOffset,
1047 <                                               c = eventCount, c+1));
1048 <        releaseWaiters();
1044 >    private void awaitBlocker(ManagedBlocker blocker)
1045 >        throws InterruptedException {
1046 >        while (!blocker.isReleasable()) {
1047 >            if (tryPreBlock()) {
1048 >                try {
1049 >                    do {} while (!blocker.isReleasable() && !blocker.block());
1050 >                } finally {
1051 >                    postBlock();
1052 >                }
1053 >                break;
1054 >            }
1055 >        }
1056      }
1057  
1058 +    // Creating, registering and deregistring workers
1059 +
1060      /**
1061 <     * Advances eventCount and releases waiters until interference by
1062 <     * other releasing threads is detected.
1061 >     * Tries to create and start a worker; minimally rolls back counts
1062 >     * on failure.
1063       */
1064 <    final void signalWork() {
1065 <        // EventCount CAS failures are OK -- any change in count suffices.
1066 <        int ec;
1067 <        UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, eventCountOffset, ec=eventCount, ec+1);
1068 <        outer:for (;;) {
1069 <            long top = eventWaiters;
1070 <            ec = eventCount;
1071 <            for (;;) {
1072 <                ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws; ForkJoinWorkerThread w;
1073 <                int id = (int)(top & WAITER_INDEX_MASK);
1074 <                if (id <= 0 || (int)(top >>> EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT) == ec)
1075 <                    return;
1076 <                if ((ws = workers).length < id || (w = ws[id - 1]) == null ||
1077 <                    !UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, eventWaitersOffset,
1078 <                                               top, top = w.nextWaiter))
1079 <                    continue outer;      // possibly stale; reread
1080 <                LockSupport.unpark(w);
1081 <                if (top != eventWaiters) // let someone else take over
1082 <                    return;
748 <            }
1064 >    private void addWorker() {
1065 >        Throwable ex = null;
1066 >        ForkJoinWorkerThread t = null;
1067 >        try {
1068 >            t = factory.newThread(this);
1069 >        } catch (Throwable e) {
1070 >            ex = e;
1071 >        }
1072 >        if (t == null) {  // null or exceptional factory return
1073 >            long c;       // adjust counts
1074 >            do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong
1075 >                         (this, ctlOffset, c = ctl,
1076 >                          (((c - AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) |
1077 >                           ((c - TC_UNIT) & TC_MASK) |
1078 >                           (c & ~(AC_MASK|TC_MASK)))));
1079 >            // Propagate exception if originating from an external caller
1080 >            if (!tryTerminate(false) && ex != null &&
1081 >                !(Thread.currentThread() instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread))
1082 >                UNSAFE.throwException(ex);
1083          }
1084 +        else
1085 +            t.start();
1086      }
1087  
1088      /**
1089 <     * If worker is inactive, blocks until terminating or event count
1090 <     * advances from last value held by worker; in any case helps
1091 <     * release others.
1092 <     *
1093 <     * @param w the calling worker thread
1094 <     */
1095 <    private void eventSync(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
1096 <        if (!w.active) {
761 <            int prev = w.lastEventCount;
762 <            long nextTop = (((long)prev << EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT) |
763 <                            ((long)(w.poolIndex + 1)));
764 <            long top;
765 <            while ((runState < SHUTDOWN || !tryTerminate(false)) &&
766 <                   (((int)(top = eventWaiters) & WAITER_INDEX_MASK) == 0 ||
767 <                    (int)(top >>> EVENT_COUNT_SHIFT) == prev) &&
768 <                   eventCount == prev) {
769 <                if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, eventWaitersOffset,
770 <                                              w.nextWaiter = top, nextTop)) {
771 <                    accumulateStealCount(w); // transfer steals while idle
772 <                    Thread.interrupted();    // clear/ignore interrupt
773 <                    while (eventCount == prev)
774 <                        w.doPark();
775 <                    break;
776 <                }
777 <            }
778 <            w.lastEventCount = eventCount;
1089 >     * Callback from ForkJoinWorkerThread constructor to assign a
1090 >     * public name
1091 >     */
1092 >    final String nextWorkerName() {
1093 >        for (int n;;) {
1094 >            if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, nextWorkerNumberOffset,
1095 >                                         n = nextWorkerNumber, ++n))
1096 >                return workerNamePrefix + n;
1097          }
780        releaseWaiters();
1098      }
1099  
1100      /**
1101 <     * Callback from workers invoked upon each top-level action (i.e.,
1102 <     * stealing a task or taking a submission and running
786 <     * it). Performs one or both of the following:
787 <     *
788 <     * * If the worker cannot find work, updates its active status to
789 <     * inactive and updates activeCount unless there is contention, in
790 <     * which case it may try again (either in this or a subsequent
791 <     * call).  Additionally, awaits the next task event and/or helps
792 <     * wake up other releasable waiters.
793 <     *
794 <     * * If there are too many running threads, suspends this worker
795 <     * (first forcing inactivation if necessary).  If it is not
796 <     * resumed before a keepAlive elapses, the worker may be "trimmed"
797 <     * -- killed while suspended within suspendAsSpare. Otherwise,
798 <     * upon resume it rechecks to make sure that it is still needed.
1101 >     * Callback from ForkJoinWorkerThread constructor to
1102 >     * determine its poolIndex and record in workers array.
1103       *
1104       * @param w the worker
1105 <     * @param worked false if the worker scanned for work but didn't
802 <     * find any (in which case it may block waiting for work).
1105 >     * @return the worker's pool index
1106       */
1107 <    final void preStep(ForkJoinWorkerThread w, boolean worked) {
1108 <        boolean active = w.active;
1109 <        boolean inactivate = !worked & active;
1110 <        for (;;) {
1111 <            if (inactivate) {
1112 <                int rs = runState;
1113 <                if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset,
1114 <                                             rs, rs - ONE_ACTIVE))
1115 <                    inactivate = active = w.active = false;
1116 <            }
1117 <            int wc = workerCounts;
1118 <            if ((wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) <= parallelism) {
1119 <                if (!worked)
1120 <                    eventSync(w);
1121 <                return;
1122 <            }
1123 <            if (!(inactivate |= active) &&  // must inactivate to suspend
1124 <                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
1125 <                                         wc, wc - ONE_RUNNING) &&
1126 <                !w.suspendAsSpare())        // false if trimmed
1127 <                return;
1128 <        }
1129 <    }
1130 <
1131 <    /**
1132 <     * Tries to decrement running count, and if so, possibly creates
1133 <     * or resumes compensating threads before blocking on task joinMe.
1134 <     * This code is sprawled out with manual inlining to evade some
832 <     * JIT oddities.
833 <     *
834 <     * @param joinMe the task to join
835 <     * @return task status on exit
836 <     */
837 <    final int tryAwaitJoin(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe) {
838 <        int cw = workerCounts; // read now to spoil CAS if counts change as ...
839 <        releaseWaiters();      // ... a byproduct of releaseWaiters
840 <        int stat = joinMe.status;
841 <        if (stat >= 0 && // inline variant of tryDecrementRunningCount
842 <            (cw & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) > 0 &&
843 <            UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
844 <                                     cw, cw - ONE_RUNNING)) {
845 <            int pc = parallelism;
846 <            int scans = 0;  // to require confirming passes to add threads
847 <            outer: while ((workerCounts & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) < pc) {
848 <                if ((stat = joinMe.status) < 0)
849 <                    break;
850 <                ForkJoinWorkerThread spare = null;
851 <                ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
852 <                int nws = ws.length;
853 <                for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
854 <                    ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
855 <                    if (w != null && w.isSuspended()) {
856 <                        spare = w;
857 <                        break;
858 <                    }
859 <                }
860 <                if ((stat = joinMe.status) < 0) // recheck to narrow race
861 <                    break;
862 <                int wc = workerCounts;
863 <                int rc = wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK;
864 <                if (rc >= pc)
865 <                    break;
866 <                if (spare != null) {
867 <                    if (spare.tryUnsuspend()) {
868 <                        int c; // inline incrementRunningCount
869 <                        do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt
870 <                                     (this, workerCountsOffset,
871 <                                      c = workerCounts, c + ONE_RUNNING));
872 <                        LockSupport.unpark(spare);
873 <                        break;
1107 >    final int registerWorker(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
1108 >        /*
1109 >         * In the typical case, a new worker acquires the lock, uses
1110 >         * next available index and returns quickly.  Since we should
1111 >         * not block callers (ultimately from signalWork or
1112 >         * tryPreBlock) waiting for the lock needed to do this, we
1113 >         * instead help release other workers while waiting for the
1114 >         * lock.
1115 >         */
1116 >        for (int g;;) {
1117 >            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
1118 >            if (((g = scanGuard) & SG_UNIT) == 0 &&
1119 >                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, scanGuardOffset,
1120 >                                         g, g | SG_UNIT)) {
1121 >                int k = nextWorkerIndex;
1122 >                try {
1123 >                    if ((ws = workers) != null) { // ignore on shutdown
1124 >                        int n = ws.length;
1125 >                        if (k < 0 || k >= n || ws[k] != null) {
1126 >                            for (k = 0; k < n && ws[k] != null; ++k)
1127 >                                ;
1128 >                            if (k == n)
1129 >                                ws = workers = Arrays.copyOf(ws, n << 1);
1130 >                        }
1131 >                        ws[k] = w;
1132 >                        nextWorkerIndex = k + 1;
1133 >                        int m = g & SMASK;
1134 >                        g = k >= m? ((m << 1) + 1) & SMASK : g + (SG_UNIT<<1);
1135                      }
1136 <                    continue;
1136 >                } finally {
1137 >                    scanGuard = g;
1138                  }
1139 <                int tc = wc >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT;
1140 <                int sc = tc - pc;
1141 <                if (rc > 0) {
1142 <                    int p = pc;
1143 <                    int s = sc;
1144 <                    while (s-- >= 0) { // try keeping 3/4 live
1145 <                        if (rc > (p -= (p >>> 2) + 1))
884 <                            break outer;
1139 >                return k;
1140 >            }
1141 >            else if ((ws = workers) != null) { // help release others
1142 >                for (ForkJoinWorkerThread u : ws) {
1143 >                    if (u != null && u.queueBase != u.queueTop) {
1144 >                        if (tryReleaseWaiter())
1145 >                            break;
1146                      }
1147                  }
887                if (scans++ > sc && tc < MAX_THREADS &&
888                    UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset, wc,
889                                             wc + (ONE_RUNNING|ONE_TOTAL))) {
890                    addWorker();
891                    break;
892                }
1148              }
894            if (stat >= 0)
895                stat = joinMe.internalAwaitDone();
896            int c; // inline incrementRunningCount
897            do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt
898                         (this, workerCountsOffset,
899                          c = workerCounts, c + ONE_RUNNING));
1149          }
901        return stat;
1150      }
1151  
1152      /**
1153 <     * Same idea as (and mostly pasted from) tryAwaitJoin, but
1154 <     * self-contained
1153 >     * Final callback from terminating worker.  Removes record of
1154 >     * worker from array, and adjusts counts. If pool is shutting
1155 >     * down, tries to complete termination.
1156 >     *
1157 >     * @param w the worker
1158       */
1159 <    final void awaitBlocker(ManagedBlocker blocker)
1160 <        throws InterruptedException {
1161 <        for (;;) {
1162 <            if (blocker.isReleasable())
1163 <                return;
1164 <            int cw = workerCounts;
1165 <            releaseWaiters();
1166 <            if ((cw & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) > 0 &&
1167 <                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset,
1168 <                                         cw, cw - ONE_RUNNING))
1169 <                break;
1170 <        }
1171 <        boolean done = false;
1172 <        int pc = parallelism;
1173 <        int scans = 0;
1174 <        outer: while ((workerCounts & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK) < pc) {
1175 <            if (done = blocker.isReleasable())
1176 <                break;
1177 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread spare = null;
927 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
928 <            int nws = ws.length;
929 <            for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
930 <                ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
931 <                if (w != null && w.isSuspended()) {
932 <                    spare = w;
933 <                    break;
934 <                }
935 <            }
936 <            if (done = blocker.isReleasable())
937 <                break;
938 <            int wc = workerCounts;
939 <            int rc = wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK;
940 <            if (rc >= pc)
941 <                break;
942 <            if (spare != null) {
943 <                if (spare.tryUnsuspend()) {
944 <                    int c;
945 <                    do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt
946 <                                 (this, workerCountsOffset,
947 <                                  c = workerCounts, c + ONE_RUNNING));
948 <                    LockSupport.unpark(spare);
949 <                    break;
950 <                }
951 <                continue;
952 <            }
953 <            int tc = wc >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT;
954 <            int sc = tc - pc;
955 <            if (rc > 0) {
956 <                int p = pc;
957 <                int s = sc;
958 <                while (s-- >= 0) {
959 <                    if (rc > (p -= (p >>> 2) + 1))
960 <                        break outer;
961 <                }
962 <            }
963 <            if (scans++ > sc && tc < MAX_THREADS &&
964 <                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, workerCountsOffset, wc,
965 <                                         wc + (ONE_RUNNING|ONE_TOTAL))) {
966 <                addWorker();
967 <                break;
1159 >    final void deregisterWorker(ForkJoinWorkerThread w, Throwable ex) {
1160 >        int idx = w.poolIndex;
1161 >        int sc = w.stealCount;
1162 >        int steps = 0;
1163 >        // Remove from array, adjust worker counts and collect steal count.
1164 >        // We can intermix failed removes or adjusts with steal updates
1165 >        do {
1166 >            long s, c;
1167 >            int g;
1168 >            if (steps == 0 && ((g = scanGuard) & SG_UNIT) == 0 &&
1169 >                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, scanGuardOffset,
1170 >                                         g, g |= SG_UNIT)) {
1171 >                ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1172 >                if (ws != null && idx >= 0 &&
1173 >                    idx < ws.length && ws[idx] == w)
1174 >                    ws[idx] = null;    // verify
1175 >                nextWorkerIndex = idx;
1176 >                scanGuard = g + SG_UNIT;
1177 >                steps = 1;
1178              }
1179 +            if (steps == 1 &&
1180 +                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c = ctl,
1181 +                                          (((c - AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) |
1182 +                                           ((c - TC_UNIT) & TC_MASK) |
1183 +                                           (c & ~(AC_MASK|TC_MASK)))))
1184 +                steps = 2;
1185 +            if (sc != 0 &&
1186 +                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, stealCountOffset,
1187 +                                          s = stealCount, s + sc))
1188 +                sc = 0;
1189 +        } while (steps != 2 || sc != 0);
1190 +        if (!tryTerminate(false)) {
1191 +            if (ex != null)   // possibly replace if died abnormally
1192 +                signalWork();
1193 +            else
1194 +                tryReleaseWaiter();
1195          }
1196 <        try {
1197 <            if (!done)
1198 <                do {} while (!blocker.isReleasable() &&
973 <                             !blocker.block());
974 <        } finally {
975 <            int c;
976 <            do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt
977 <                         (this, workerCountsOffset,
978 <                          c = workerCounts, c + ONE_RUNNING));
979 <        }
980 <    }  
1196 >    }
1197 >
1198 >    // Shutdown and termination
1199  
1200      /**
1201       * Possibly initiates and/or completes termination.
# Line 987 | Line 1205 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1205       * @return true if now terminating or terminated
1206       */
1207      private boolean tryTerminate(boolean now) {
1208 <        if (now)
1209 <            advanceRunLevel(SHUTDOWN); // ensure at least SHUTDOWN
1210 <        else if (runState < SHUTDOWN ||
1211 <                 !submissionQueue.isEmpty() ||
1212 <                 (runState & ACTIVE_COUNT_MASK) != 0)
1213 <            return false;
1214 <
1215 <        if (advanceRunLevel(TERMINATING))
1216 <            startTerminating();
1217 <
1218 <        // Finish now if all threads terminated; else in some subsequent call
1219 <        if ((workerCounts >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT) == 0) {
1220 <            advanceRunLevel(TERMINATED);
1221 <            termination.arrive();
1208 >        long c;
1209 >        while (((c = ctl) & STOP_BIT) == 0) {
1210 >            if (!now) {
1211 >                if ((int)(c >> AC_SHIFT) != -parallelism)
1212 >                    return false;
1213 >                if (!shutdown || blockedCount != 0 || quiescerCount != 0 ||
1214 >                    queueTop - queueBase > 0) {
1215 >                    if (ctl == c) // staleness check
1216 >                        return false;
1217 >                    continue;
1218 >                }
1219 >            }
1220 >            if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c, c | STOP_BIT))
1221 >                startTerminating();
1222 >        }
1223 >        if ((short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) == -parallelism) {
1224 >            submissionLock.lock();
1225 >            termination.signalAll();
1226 >            submissionLock.unlock();
1227          }
1228          return true;
1229      }
1230  
1231      /**
1232 <     * Actions on transition to TERMINATING
1232 >     * Runs up to three passes through workers: (0) Setting
1233 >     * termination status for each worker, followed by wakeups up
1234 >     * queued workers (1) helping cancel tasks (2) interrupting
1235 >     * lagging threads (likely in external tasks, but possibly also
1236 >     * blocked in joins).  Each pass repeats previous steps because of
1237 >     * potential lagging thread creation.
1238       */
1239      private void startTerminating() {
1240 <        for (int i = 0; i < 2; ++i) { // twice to mop up newly created workers
1241 <            cancelSubmissions();
1242 <            shutdownWorkers();
1243 <            cancelWorkerTasks();
1244 <            signalEvent();
1245 <            interruptWorkers();
1240 >        cancelSubmissions();
1241 >        for (int pass = 0; pass < 3; ++pass) {
1242 >            ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1243 >            if (ws != null) {
1244 >                for (ForkJoinWorkerThread w : ws) {
1245 >                    if (w != null) {
1246 >                        w.terminate = true;
1247 >                        if (pass > 0) {
1248 >                            w.cancelTasks();
1249 >                            if (pass > 1 && !w.isInterrupted()) {
1250 >                                try {
1251 >                                    w.interrupt();
1252 >                                } catch (SecurityException ignore) {
1253 >                                }
1254 >                            }
1255 >                        }
1256 >                    }
1257 >                }
1258 >                terminateWaiters();
1259 >            }
1260          }
1261      }
1262  
1263      /**
1264 <     * Clear out and cancel submissions, ignoring exceptions
1264 >     * Polls and cancels all submissions. Called only during termination.
1265       */
1266      private void cancelSubmissions() {
1267 <        ForkJoinTask<?> task;
1268 <        while ((task = submissionQueue.poll()) != null) {
1269 <            try {
1270 <                task.cancel(false);
1271 <            } catch (Throwable ignore) {
1267 >        while (queueBase != queueTop) {
1268 >            ForkJoinTask<?> task = pollSubmission();
1269 >            if (task != null) {
1270 >                try {
1271 >                    task.cancel(false);
1272 >                } catch (Throwable ignore) {
1273 >                }
1274              }
1275          }
1276      }
1277  
1278      /**
1279 <     * Sets all worker run states to at least shutdown,
1280 <     * also resuming suspended workers
1279 >     * Tries to set the termination status of waiting workers, and
1280 >     * then wake them up (after which they will terminate).
1281       */
1282 <    private void shutdownWorkers() {
1282 >    private void terminateWaiters() {
1283          ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1284 <        int nws = ws.length;
1285 <        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1286 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1287 <            if (w != null)
1288 <                w.shutdown();
1289 <        }
1290 <    }
1291 <
1292 <    /**
1293 <     * Clears out and cancels all locally queued tasks
1294 <     */
1295 <    private void cancelWorkerTasks() {
1296 <        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1053 <        int nws = ws.length;
1054 <        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1055 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1056 <            if (w != null)
1057 <                w.cancelTasks();
1058 <        }
1059 <    }
1060 <
1061 <    /**
1062 <     * Unsticks all workers blocked on joins etc
1063 <     */
1064 <    private void interruptWorkers() {
1065 <        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1066 <        int nws = ws.length;
1067 <        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1068 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1069 <            if (w != null && !w.isTerminated()) {
1070 <                try {
1071 <                    w.interrupt();
1072 <                } catch (SecurityException ignore) {
1284 >        if (ws != null) {
1285 >            ForkJoinWorkerThread w; long c; int i, e;
1286 >            int n = ws.length;
1287 >            while ((i = ~(e = (int)(c = ctl)) & SMASK) < n &&
1288 >                   (w = ws[i]) != null && w.eventCount == (e & E_MASK)) {
1289 >                if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c,
1290 >                                              (long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK) |
1291 >                                              ((c + AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) |
1292 >                                              (c & (TC_MASK|STOP_BIT)))) {
1293 >                    w.terminate = true;
1294 >                    w.eventCount = e + EC_UNIT;
1295 >                    if (w.parked)
1296 >                        UNSAFE.unpark(w);
1297                  }
1298              }
1299          }
1300      }
1301  
1302 <    // misc support for ForkJoinWorkerThread
1302 >    // misc ForkJoinWorkerThread support
1303  
1304      /**
1305 <     * Returns pool number
1305 >     * Increment or decrement quiescerCount. Needed only to prevent
1306 >     * triggering shutdown if a worker is transiently inactive while
1307 >     * checking quiescence.
1308 >     *
1309 >     * @param delta 1 for increment, -1 for decrement
1310       */
1311 <    final int getPoolNumber() {
1312 <        return poolNumber;
1311 >    final void addQuiescerCount(int delta) {
1312 >        int c;
1313 >        do {} while(!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, quiescerCountOffset,
1314 >                                              c = quiescerCount, c + delta));
1315      }
1316  
1317      /**
1318 <     * Accumulates steal count from a worker, clearing
1319 <     * the worker's value
1318 >     * Directly increment or decrement active count without
1319 >     * queuing. This method is used to transiently assert inactivation
1320 >     * while checking quiescence.
1321 >     *
1322 >     * @param delta 1 for increment, -1 for decrement
1323       */
1324 <    final void accumulateStealCount(ForkJoinWorkerThread w) {
1325 <        int sc = w.stealCount;
1326 <        if (sc != 0) {
1327 <            long c;
1328 <            w.stealCount = 0;
1329 <            do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, stealCountOffset,
1097 <                                                    c = stealCount, c + sc));
1098 <        }
1324 >    final void addActiveCount(int delta) {
1325 >        long d = delta < 0 ? -AC_UNIT : AC_UNIT;
1326 >        long c;
1327 >        do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapLong(this, ctlOffset, c = ctl,
1328 >                                                ((c + d) & AC_MASK) |
1329 >                                                (c & ~AC_MASK)));
1330      }
1331  
1332      /**
# Line 1103 | Line 1334 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1334       * active thread.
1335       */
1336      final int idlePerActive() {
1337 <        int pc = parallelism; // use targeted parallelism, not rc
1338 <        int ac = runState;    // no mask -- artifically boosts during shutdown
1339 <        // Use exact results for small values, saturate past 4
1340 <        return pc <= ac? 0 : pc >>> 1 <= ac? 1 : pc >>> 2 <= ac? 3 : pc >>> 3;
1337 >        // Approximate at powers of two for small values, saturate past 4
1338 >        int p = parallelism;
1339 >        int a = p + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT);
1340 >        return (a > (p >>>= 1) ? 0 :
1341 >                a > (p >>>= 1) ? 1 :
1342 >                a > (p >>>= 1) ? 2 :
1343 >                a > (p >>>= 1) ? 4 :
1344 >                8);
1345      }
1346  
1347 <    // Public and protected methods
1347 >    // Exported methods
1348  
1349      // Constructors
1350  
# Line 1154 | Line 1389 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1389       * use {@link java.lang.Runtime#availableProcessors}.
1390       * @param factory the factory for creating new threads. For default value,
1391       * use {@link #defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory}.
1392 <     * @param handler the handler for internal worker threads that
1393 <     * terminate due to unrecoverable errors encountered while executing
1394 <     * tasks. For default value, use <code>null</code>.
1395 <     * @param asyncMode if true,
1392 >     * @param handler the handler for internal worker threads that
1393 >     * terminate due to unrecoverable errors encountered while executing
1394 >     * tasks. For default value, use {@code null}.
1395 >     * @param asyncMode if true,
1396       * establishes local first-in-first-out scheduling mode for forked
1397       * tasks that are never joined. This mode may be more appropriate
1398       * than default locally stack-based mode in applications in which
1399       * worker threads only process event-style asynchronous tasks.
1400 <     * For default value, use <code>false</code>.
1400 >     * For default value, use {@code false}.
1401       * @throws IllegalArgumentException if parallelism less than or
1402       *         equal to zero, or greater than implementation limit
1403       * @throws NullPointerException if the factory is null
# Line 1171 | Line 1406 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1406       *         because it does not hold {@link
1407       *         java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
1408       */
1409 <    public ForkJoinPool(int parallelism,
1409 >    public ForkJoinPool(int parallelism,
1410                          ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory factory,
1411                          Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler handler,
1412                          boolean asyncMode) {
1413          checkPermission();
1414          if (factory == null)
1415              throw new NullPointerException();
1416 <        if (parallelism <= 0 || parallelism > MAX_THREADS)
1416 >        if (parallelism <= 0 || parallelism > MAX_ID)
1417              throw new IllegalArgumentException();
1418          this.parallelism = parallelism;
1419          this.factory = factory;
1420          this.ueh = handler;
1421          this.locallyFifo = asyncMode;
1422 <        int arraySize = initialArraySizeFor(parallelism);
1423 <        this.workers = new ForkJoinWorkerThread[arraySize];
1424 <        this.submissionQueue = new LinkedTransferQueue<ForkJoinTask<?>>();
1425 <        this.workerLock = new ReentrantLock();
1426 <        this.termination = new Phaser(1);
1427 <        this.poolNumber = poolNumberGenerator.incrementAndGet();
1428 <    }
1429 <
1430 <    /**
1431 <     * Returns initial power of two size for workers array.
1432 <     * @param pc the initial parallelism level
1433 <     */
1434 <    private static int initialArraySizeFor(int pc) {
1435 <        // See Hackers Delight, sec 3.2. We know MAX_THREADS < (1 >>> 16)
1436 <        int size = pc < MAX_THREADS ? pc + 1 : MAX_THREADS;
1437 <        size |= size >>> 1;
1438 <        size |= size >>> 2;
1204 <        size |= size >>> 4;
1205 <        size |= size >>> 8;
1206 <        return size + 1;
1422 >        long np = (long)(-parallelism); // offset ctl counts
1423 >        this.ctl = ((np << AC_SHIFT) & AC_MASK) | ((np << TC_SHIFT) & TC_MASK);
1424 >        this.submissionQueue = new ForkJoinTask<?>[INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY];
1425 >        // initialize workers array with room for 2*parallelism if possible
1426 >        int n = parallelism << 1;
1427 >        if (n >= MAX_ID)
1428 >            n = MAX_ID;
1429 >        else { // See Hackers Delight, sec 3.2, where n < (1 << 16)
1430 >            n |= n >>> 1; n |= n >>> 2; n |= n >>> 4; n |= n >>> 8;
1431 >        }
1432 >        workers = new ForkJoinWorkerThread[n + 1];
1433 >        this.submissionLock = new ReentrantLock();
1434 >        this.termination = submissionLock.newCondition();
1435 >        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder("ForkJoinPool-");
1436 >        sb.append(poolNumberGenerator.incrementAndGet());
1437 >        sb.append("-worker-");
1438 >        this.workerNamePrefix = sb.toString();
1439      }
1440  
1441      // Execution methods
1442  
1443      /**
1444 <     * Common code for execute, invoke and submit
1444 >     * Performs the given task, returning its result upon completion.
1445 >     * If the computation encounters an unchecked Exception or Error,
1446 >     * it is rethrown as the outcome of this invocation.  Rethrown
1447 >     * exceptions behave in the same way as regular exceptions, but,
1448 >     * when possible, contain stack traces (as displayed for example
1449 >     * using {@code ex.printStackTrace()}) of both the current thread
1450 >     * as well as the thread actually encountering the exception;
1451 >     * minimally only the latter.
1452 >     *
1453 >     * @param task the task
1454 >     * @return the task's result
1455 >     * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
1456 >     * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
1457 >     *         scheduled for execution
1458       */
1459 <    private <T> void doSubmit(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
1459 >    public <T> T invoke(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
1460 >        Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
1461          if (task == null)
1462              throw new NullPointerException();
1463 <        if (runState >= SHUTDOWN)
1463 >        if (shutdown)
1464              throw new RejectedExecutionException();
1219        // Convert submissions to current pool into forks
1220        Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
1221        ForkJoinWorkerThread w;
1465          if ((t instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread) &&
1466 <            (w = (ForkJoinWorkerThread) t).pool == this)
1467 <            w.pushTask(task);
1466 >            ((ForkJoinWorkerThread)t).pool == this)
1467 >            return task.invoke();  // bypass submit if in same pool
1468          else {
1469 <            submissionQueue.offer(task);
1470 <            signalEvent();
1228 <            ensureEnoughTotalWorkers();
1469 >            addSubmission(task);
1470 >            return task.join();
1471          }
1472      }
1473  
1474      /**
1475 <     * Performs the given task, returning its result upon completion.
1476 <     * If the caller is already engaged in a fork/join computation in
1235 <     * the current pool, this method is equivalent in effect to
1236 <     * {@link ForkJoinTask#invoke}.
1237 <     *
1238 <     * @param task the task
1239 <     * @return the task's result
1240 <     * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
1241 <     * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
1242 <     *         scheduled for execution
1475 >     * Unless terminating, forks task if within an ongoing FJ
1476 >     * computation in the current pool, else submits as external task.
1477       */
1478 <    public <T> T invoke(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
1479 <        doSubmit(task);
1480 <        return task.join();
1478 >    private <T> void forkOrSubmit(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
1479 >        ForkJoinWorkerThread w;
1480 >        Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
1481 >        if (shutdown)
1482 >            throw new RejectedExecutionException();
1483 >        if ((t instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread) &&
1484 >            (w = (ForkJoinWorkerThread)t).pool == this)
1485 >            w.pushTask(task);
1486 >        else
1487 >            addSubmission(task);
1488      }
1489  
1490      /**
1491       * Arranges for (asynchronous) execution of the given task.
1251     * If the caller is already engaged in a fork/join computation in
1252     * the current pool, this method is equivalent in effect to
1253     * {@link ForkJoinTask#fork}.
1492       *
1493       * @param task the task
1494       * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
# Line 1258 | Line 1496 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1496       *         scheduled for execution
1497       */
1498      public void execute(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1499 <        doSubmit(task);
1499 >        if (task == null)
1500 >            throw new NullPointerException();
1501 >        forkOrSubmit(task);
1502      }
1503  
1504      // AbstractExecutorService methods
# Line 1269 | Line 1509 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1509       *         scheduled for execution
1510       */
1511      public void execute(Runnable task) {
1512 +        if (task == null)
1513 +            throw new NullPointerException();
1514          ForkJoinTask<?> job;
1515          if (task instanceof ForkJoinTask<?>) // avoid re-wrap
1516              job = (ForkJoinTask<?>) task;
1517          else
1518              job = ForkJoinTask.adapt(task, null);
1519 <        doSubmit(job);
1519 >        forkOrSubmit(job);
1520      }
1521  
1522      /**
1523       * Submits a ForkJoinTask for execution.
1282     * If the caller is already engaged in a fork/join computation in
1283     * the current pool, this method is equivalent in effect to
1284     * {@link ForkJoinTask#fork}.
1524       *
1525       * @param task the task to submit
1526       * @return the task
# Line 1290 | Line 1529 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1529       *         scheduled for execution
1530       */
1531      public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
1532 <        doSubmit(task);
1532 >        if (task == null)
1533 >            throw new NullPointerException();
1534 >        forkOrSubmit(task);
1535          return task;
1536      }
1537  
# Line 1300 | Line 1541 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1541       *         scheduled for execution
1542       */
1543      public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(Callable<T> task) {
1544 +        if (task == null)
1545 +            throw new NullPointerException();
1546          ForkJoinTask<T> job = ForkJoinTask.adapt(task);
1547 <        doSubmit(job);
1547 >        forkOrSubmit(job);
1548          return job;
1549      }
1550  
# Line 1311 | Line 1554 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1554       *         scheduled for execution
1555       */
1556      public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(Runnable task, T result) {
1557 +        if (task == null)
1558 +            throw new NullPointerException();
1559          ForkJoinTask<T> job = ForkJoinTask.adapt(task, result);
1560 <        doSubmit(job);
1560 >        forkOrSubmit(job);
1561          return job;
1562      }
1563  
# Line 1322 | Line 1567 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1567       *         scheduled for execution
1568       */
1569      public ForkJoinTask<?> submit(Runnable task) {
1570 +        if (task == null)
1571 +            throw new NullPointerException();
1572          ForkJoinTask<?> job;
1573          if (task instanceof ForkJoinTask<?>) // avoid re-wrap
1574              job = (ForkJoinTask<?>) task;
1575          else
1576              job = ForkJoinTask.adapt(task, null);
1577 <        doSubmit(job);
1577 >        forkOrSubmit(job);
1578          return job;
1579      }
1580  
# Line 1387 | Line 1634 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1634  
1635      /**
1636       * Returns the number of worker threads that have started but not
1637 <     * yet terminated.  This result returned by this method may differ
1637 >     * yet terminated.  The result returned by this method may differ
1638       * from {@link #getParallelism} when threads are created to
1639       * maintain parallelism when others are cooperatively blocked.
1640       *
1641       * @return the number of worker threads
1642       */
1643      public int getPoolSize() {
1644 <        return workerCounts >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT;
1644 >        return parallelism + (short)(ctl >>> TC_SHIFT);
1645      }
1646  
1647      /**
# Line 1416 | Line 1663 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1663       * @return the number of worker threads
1664       */
1665      public int getRunningThreadCount() {
1666 <        return workerCounts & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK;
1666 >        int r = parallelism + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT);
1667 >        return r <= 0? 0 : r; // suppress momentarily negative values
1668      }
1669  
1670      /**
# Line 1427 | Line 1675 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1675       * @return the number of active threads
1676       */
1677      public int getActiveThreadCount() {
1678 <        return runState & ACTIVE_COUNT_MASK;
1678 >        int r = parallelism + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT) + blockedCount;
1679 >        return r <= 0? 0 : r; // suppress momentarily negative values
1680      }
1681  
1682      /**
# Line 1442 | Line 1691 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1691       * @return {@code true} if all threads are currently idle
1692       */
1693      public boolean isQuiescent() {
1694 <        return (runState & ACTIVE_COUNT_MASK) == 0;
1694 >        return parallelism + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT) + blockedCount == 0;
1695      }
1696  
1697      /**
# Line 1472 | Line 1721 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1721       */
1722      public long getQueuedTaskCount() {
1723          long count = 0;
1724 <        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1725 <        int nws = ws.length;
1726 <        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1727 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1728 <            if (w != null)
1729 <                count += w.getQueueSize();
1724 >        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
1725 >        if ((short)(ctl >>> TC_SHIFT) > -parallelism &&
1726 >            (ws = workers) != null) {
1727 >            for (ForkJoinWorkerThread w : ws)
1728 >                if (w != null)
1729 >                    count -= w.queueBase - w.queueTop; // must read base first
1730          }
1731          return count;
1732      }
1733  
1734      /**
1735       * Returns an estimate of the number of tasks submitted to this
1736 <     * pool that have not yet begun executing.  This method takes time
1737 <     * proportional to the number of submissions.
1736 >     * pool that have not yet begun executing.  This method may take
1737 >     * time proportional to the number of submissions.
1738       *
1739       * @return the number of queued submissions
1740       */
1741      public int getQueuedSubmissionCount() {
1742 <        return submissionQueue.size();
1742 >        return -queueBase + queueTop;
1743      }
1744  
1745      /**
# Line 1500 | Line 1749 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1749       * @return {@code true} if there are any queued submissions
1750       */
1751      public boolean hasQueuedSubmissions() {
1752 <        return !submissionQueue.isEmpty();
1752 >        return queueBase != queueTop;
1753      }
1754  
1755      /**
# Line 1511 | Line 1760 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1760       * @return the next submission, or {@code null} if none
1761       */
1762      protected ForkJoinTask<?> pollSubmission() {
1763 <        return submissionQueue.poll();
1763 >        ForkJoinTask<?> t; ForkJoinTask<?>[] q; int b, i;
1764 >        while ((b = queueBase) != queueTop &&
1765 >               (q = submissionQueue) != null &&
1766 >               (i = (q.length - 1) & b) >= 0) {
1767 >            long u = (i << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
1768 >            if ((t = q[i]) != null &&
1769 >                queueBase == b &&
1770 >                UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, u, t, null)) {
1771 >                queueBase = b + 1;
1772 >                return t;
1773 >            }
1774 >        }
1775 >        return null;
1776      }
1777  
1778      /**
# Line 1532 | Line 1793 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1793       * @return the number of elements transferred
1794       */
1795      protected int drainTasksTo(Collection<? super ForkJoinTask<?>> c) {
1535        int n = submissionQueue.drainTo(c);
1536        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1537        int nws = ws.length;
1538        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1539            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1540            if (w != null)
1541                n += w.drainTasksTo(c);
1542        }
1543        return n;
1544    }
1545
1546    /**
1547     * Returns count of total parks by existing workers.
1548     * Used during development only since not meaningful to users.
1549     */
1550    private int collectParkCount() {
1796          int count = 0;
1797 <        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws = workers;
1798 <        int nws = ws.length;
1799 <        for (int i = 0; i < nws; ++i) {
1800 <            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = ws[i];
1801 <            if (w != null)
1802 <                count += w.parkCount;
1797 >        while (queueBase != queueTop) {
1798 >            ForkJoinTask<?> t = pollSubmission();
1799 >            if (t != null) {
1800 >                c.add(t);
1801 >                ++count;
1802 >            }
1803 >        }
1804 >        ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
1805 >        if ((short)(ctl >>> TC_SHIFT) > -parallelism &&
1806 >            (ws = workers) != null) {
1807 >            for (ForkJoinWorkerThread w : ws)
1808 >                if (w != null)
1809 >                    count += w.drainTasksTo(c);
1810          }
1811          return count;
1812      }
# Line 1570 | Line 1822 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1822          long st = getStealCount();
1823          long qt = getQueuedTaskCount();
1824          long qs = getQueuedSubmissionCount();
1573        int wc = workerCounts;
1574        int tc = wc >>> TOTAL_COUNT_SHIFT;
1575        int rc = wc & RUNNING_COUNT_MASK;
1825          int pc = parallelism;
1826 <        int rs = runState;
1827 <        int ac = rs & ACTIVE_COUNT_MASK;
1828 <        //        int pk = collectParkCount();
1826 >        long c = ctl;
1827 >        int tc = pc + (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT);
1828 >        int rc = pc + (int)(c >> AC_SHIFT);
1829 >        if (rc < 0) // ignore transient negative
1830 >            rc = 0;
1831 >        int ac = rc + blockedCount;
1832 >        String level;
1833 >        if ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0)
1834 >            level = (tc == 0)? "Terminated" : "Terminating";
1835 >        else
1836 >            level = shutdown? "Shutting down" : "Running";
1837          return super.toString() +
1838 <            "[" + runLevelToString(rs) +
1838 >            "[" + level +
1839              ", parallelism = " + pc +
1840              ", size = " + tc +
1841              ", active = " + ac +
# Line 1586 | Line 1843 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1843              ", steals = " + st +
1844              ", tasks = " + qt +
1845              ", submissions = " + qs +
1589            //            ", parks = " + pk +
1846              "]";
1847      }
1848  
1593    private static String runLevelToString(int s) {
1594        return ((s & TERMINATED) != 0 ? "Terminated" :
1595                ((s & TERMINATING) != 0 ? "Terminating" :
1596                 ((s & SHUTDOWN) != 0 ? "Shutting down" :
1597                  "Running")));
1598    }
1599
1849      /**
1850       * Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted
1851       * tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted.
# Line 1611 | Line 1860 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1860       */
1861      public void shutdown() {
1862          checkPermission();
1863 <        advanceRunLevel(SHUTDOWN);
1863 >        shutdown = true;
1864          tryTerminate(false);
1865      }
1866  
# Line 1633 | Line 1882 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1882       */
1883      public List<Runnable> shutdownNow() {
1884          checkPermission();
1885 +        shutdown = true;
1886          tryTerminate(true);
1887          return Collections.emptyList();
1888      }
# Line 1643 | Line 1893 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1893       * @return {@code true} if all tasks have completed following shut down
1894       */
1895      public boolean isTerminated() {
1896 <        return runState >= TERMINATED;
1896 >        long c = ctl;
1897 >        return ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0L &&
1898 >                (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) == -parallelism);
1899      }
1900  
1901      /**
# Line 1651 | Line 1903 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1903       * commenced but not yet completed.  This method may be useful for
1904       * debugging. A return of {@code true} reported a sufficient
1905       * period after shutdown may indicate that submitted tasks have
1906 <     * ignored or suppressed interruption, causing this executor not
1907 <     * to properly terminate.
1906 >     * ignored or suppressed interruption, or are waiting for IO,
1907 >     * causing this executor not to properly terminate. (See the
1908 >     * advisory notes for class {@link ForkJoinTask} stating that
1909 >     * tasks should not normally entail blocking operations.  But if
1910 >     * they do, they must abort them on interrupt.)
1911       *
1912       * @return {@code true} if terminating but not yet terminated
1913       */
1914      public boolean isTerminating() {
1915 <        return (runState & (TERMINATING|TERMINATED)) == TERMINATING;
1915 >        long c = ctl;
1916 >        return ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0L &&
1917 >                (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) != -parallelism);
1918 >    }
1919 >
1920 >    /**
1921 >     * Returns true if terminating or terminated. Used by ForkJoinWorkerThread.
1922 >     */
1923 >    final boolean isAtLeastTerminating() {
1924 >        return (ctl & STOP_BIT) != 0L;
1925      }
1926  
1927      /**
# Line 1666 | Line 1930 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1930       * @return {@code true} if this pool has been shut down
1931       */
1932      public boolean isShutdown() {
1933 <        return runState >= SHUTDOWN;
1933 >        return shutdown;
1934      }
1935  
1936      /**
# Line 1682 | Line 1946 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1946       */
1947      public boolean awaitTermination(long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
1948          throws InterruptedException {
1949 +        long nanos = unit.toNanos(timeout);
1950 +        final ReentrantLock lock = this.submissionLock;
1951 +        lock.lock();
1952          try {
1953 <            return termination.awaitAdvanceInterruptibly(0, timeout, unit) > 0;
1954 <        } catch(TimeoutException ex) {
1955 <            return false;
1953 >            for (;;) {
1954 >                if (isTerminated())
1955 >                    return true;
1956 >                if (nanos <= 0)
1957 >                    return false;
1958 >                nanos = termination.awaitNanos(nanos);
1959 >            }
1960 >        } finally {
1961 >            lock.unlock();
1962          }
1963      }
1964  
# Line 1693 | Line 1966 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1966       * Interface for extending managed parallelism for tasks running
1967       * in {@link ForkJoinPool}s.
1968       *
1969 <     * <p>A {@code ManagedBlocker} provides two methods.
1970 <     * Method {@code isReleasable} must return {@code true} if
1971 <     * blocking is not necessary. Method {@code block} blocks the
1972 <     * current thread if necessary (perhaps internally invoking
1973 <     * {@code isReleasable} before actually blocking).
1969 >     * <p>A {@code ManagedBlocker} provides two methods.  Method
1970 >     * {@code isReleasable} must return {@code true} if blocking is
1971 >     * not necessary. Method {@code block} blocks the current thread
1972 >     * if necessary (perhaps internally invoking {@code isReleasable}
1973 >     * before actually blocking). These actions are performed by any
1974 >     * thread invoking {@link ForkJoinPool#managedBlock}.  The
1975 >     * unusual methods in this API accommodate synchronizers that may,
1976 >     * but don't usually, block for long periods. Similarly, they
1977 >     * allow more efficient internal handling of cases in which
1978 >     * additional workers may be, but usually are not, needed to
1979 >     * ensure sufficient parallelism.  Toward this end,
1980 >     * implementations of method {@code isReleasable} must be amenable
1981 >     * to repeated invocation.
1982       *
1983       * <p>For example, here is a ManagedBlocker based on a
1984       * ReentrantLock:
# Line 1715 | Line 1996 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
1996       *     return hasLock || (hasLock = lock.tryLock());
1997       *   }
1998       * }}</pre>
1999 +     *
2000 +     * <p>Here is a class that possibly blocks waiting for an
2001 +     * item on a given queue:
2002 +     *  <pre> {@code
2003 +     * class QueueTaker<E> implements ManagedBlocker {
2004 +     *   final BlockingQueue<E> queue;
2005 +     *   volatile E item = null;
2006 +     *   QueueTaker(BlockingQueue<E> q) { this.queue = q; }
2007 +     *   public boolean block() throws InterruptedException {
2008 +     *     if (item == null)
2009 +     *       item = queue.take();
2010 +     *     return true;
2011 +     *   }
2012 +     *   public boolean isReleasable() {
2013 +     *     return item != null || (item = queue.poll()) != null;
2014 +     *   }
2015 +     *   public E getItem() { // call after pool.managedBlock completes
2016 +     *     return item;
2017 +     *   }
2018 +     * }}</pre>
2019       */
2020      public static interface ManagedBlocker {
2021          /**
# Line 1757 | Line 2058 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
2058      public static void managedBlock(ManagedBlocker blocker)
2059          throws InterruptedException {
2060          Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
2061 <        if (t instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread)
2062 <            ((ForkJoinWorkerThread) t).pool.awaitBlocker(blocker);
2061 >        if (t instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread) {
2062 >            ForkJoinWorkerThread w = (ForkJoinWorkerThread) t;
2063 >            w.pool.awaitBlocker(blocker);
2064 >        }
2065          else {
2066              do {} while (!blocker.isReleasable() && !blocker.block());
2067          }
# Line 1777 | Line 2080 | public class ForkJoinPool extends Abstra
2080      }
2081  
2082      // Unsafe mechanics
2083 <
2084 <    private static final sun.misc.Unsafe UNSAFE = getUnsafe();
2085 <    private static final long workerCountsOffset =
2086 <        objectFieldOffset("workerCounts", ForkJoinPool.class);
2087 <    private static final long runStateOffset =
2088 <        objectFieldOffset("runState", ForkJoinPool.class);
2089 <    private static final long eventCountOffset =
2090 <        objectFieldOffset("eventCount", ForkJoinPool.class);
2091 <    private static final long eventWaitersOffset =
2092 <        objectFieldOffset("eventWaiters",ForkJoinPool.class);
2093 <    private static final long stealCountOffset =
2094 <        objectFieldOffset("stealCount",ForkJoinPool.class);
2095 <
2096 <    private static long objectFieldOffset(String field, Class<?> klazz) {
2083 >    private static final sun.misc.Unsafe UNSAFE;
2084 >    private static final long ctlOffset;
2085 >    private static final long stealCountOffset;
2086 >    private static final long blockedCountOffset;
2087 >    private static final long quiescerCountOffset;
2088 >    private static final long scanGuardOffset;
2089 >    private static final long nextWorkerNumberOffset;
2090 >    private static final long ABASE;
2091 >    private static final int ASHIFT;
2092 >
2093 >    static {
2094 >        poolNumberGenerator = new AtomicInteger();
2095 >        workerSeedGenerator = new Random();
2096 >        modifyThreadPermission = new RuntimePermission("modifyThread");
2097 >        defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory =
2098 >            new DefaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory();
2099 >        int s;
2100          try {
2101 <            return UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset(klazz.getDeclaredField(field));
2102 <        } catch (NoSuchFieldException e) {
2103 <            // Convert Exception to corresponding Error
2104 <            NoSuchFieldError error = new NoSuchFieldError(field);
2105 <            error.initCause(e);
2106 <            throw error;
2107 <        }
2101 >            UNSAFE = getUnsafe();
2102 >            Class k = ForkJoinPool.class;
2103 >            ctlOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2104 >                (k.getDeclaredField("ctl"));
2105 >            stealCountOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2106 >                (k.getDeclaredField("stealCount"));
2107 >            blockedCountOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2108 >                (k.getDeclaredField("blockedCount"));
2109 >            quiescerCountOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2110 >                (k.getDeclaredField("quiescerCount"));
2111 >            scanGuardOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2112 >                (k.getDeclaredField("scanGuard"));
2113 >            nextWorkerNumberOffset = UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset
2114 >                (k.getDeclaredField("nextWorkerNumber"));
2115 >            Class a = ForkJoinTask[].class;
2116 >            ABASE = UNSAFE.arrayBaseOffset(a);
2117 >            s = UNSAFE.arrayIndexScale(a);
2118 >        } catch (Exception e) {
2119 >            throw new Error(e);
2120 >        }
2121 >        if ((s & (s-1)) != 0)
2122 >            throw new Error("data type scale not a power of two");
2123 >        ASHIFT = 31 - Integer.numberOfLeadingZeros(s);
2124      }
2125  
2126      /**

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