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root/jsr166/jsr166/src/jsr166y/ForkJoinPool.java
Revision: 1.127
Committed: Sun Mar 4 15:52:45 2012 UTC (12 years, 2 months ago) by dl
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.126: +129 -141 lines
Log Message:
marking -> taging; registerWorker fix

File Contents

# Content
1 /*
2 * Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166
3 * Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at
4 * http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
5 */
6
7 package jsr166y;
8 import java.util.ArrayList;
9 import java.util.Arrays;
10 import java.util.Collection;
11 import java.util.Collections;
12 import java.util.List;
13 import java.util.Random;
14 import java.util.concurrent.AbstractExecutorService;
15 import java.util.concurrent.Callable;
16 import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
17 import java.util.concurrent.Future;
18 import java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionException;
19 import java.util.concurrent.RunnableFuture;
20 import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
21 import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
22 import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicLong;
23 import java.util.concurrent.locks.AbstractQueuedSynchronizer;
24 import java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition;
25
26 /**
27 * An {@link ExecutorService} for running {@link ForkJoinTask}s.
28 * A {@code ForkJoinPool} provides the entry point for submissions
29 * from non-{@code ForkJoinTask} clients, as well as management and
30 * monitoring operations.
31 *
32 * <p>A {@code ForkJoinPool} differs from other kinds of {@link
33 * ExecutorService} mainly by virtue of employing
34 * <em>work-stealing</em>: all threads in the pool attempt to find and
35 * execute tasks submitted to the pool and/or created by other active
36 * tasks (eventually blocking waiting for work if none exist). This
37 * enables efficient processing when most tasks spawn other subtasks
38 * (as do most {@code ForkJoinTask}s), as well as when many small
39 * tasks are submitted to the pool from external clients. Especially
40 * when setting <em>asyncMode</em> to true in constructors, {@code
41 * ForkJoinPool}s may also be appropriate for use with event-style
42 * tasks that are never joined.
43 *
44 * <p>A {@code ForkJoinPool} is constructed with a given target
45 * parallelism level; by default, equal to the number of available
46 * processors. The pool attempts to maintain enough active (or
47 * available) threads by dynamically adding, suspending, or resuming
48 * internal worker threads, even if some tasks are stalled waiting to
49 * join others. However, no such adjustments are guaranteed in the
50 * face of blocked IO or other unmanaged synchronization. The nested
51 * {@link ManagedBlocker} interface enables extension of the kinds of
52 * synchronization accommodated.
53 *
54 * <p>In addition to execution and lifecycle control methods, this
55 * class provides status check methods (for example
56 * {@link #getStealCount}) that are intended to aid in developing,
57 * tuning, and monitoring fork/join applications. Also, method
58 * {@link #toString} returns indications of pool state in a
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 following table.
63 * These are designed to be used primarily by clients not already
64 * engaged in fork/join computations in the current pool. The main
65 * forms of these methods accept instances of {@code ForkJoinTask},
66 * but overloaded forms also allow mixed execution of plain {@code
67 * Runnable}- or {@code Callable}- based activities as well. However,
68 * tasks that are already executing in a pool should normally instead
69 * use the within-computation forms listed in the table unless using
70 * async event-style tasks that are not usually joined, in which case
71 * there is little difference among choice of methods.
72 *
73 * <table BORDER CELLPADDING=3 CELLSPACING=1>
74 * <tr>
75 * <td></td>
76 * <td ALIGN=CENTER> <b>Call from non-fork/join clients</b></td>
77 * <td ALIGN=CENTER> <b>Call from within fork/join computations</b></td>
78 * </tr>
79 * <tr>
80 * <td> <b>Arrange async execution</td>
81 * <td> {@link #execute(ForkJoinTask)}</td>
82 * <td> {@link ForkJoinTask#fork}</td>
83 * </tr>
84 * <tr>
85 * <td> <b>Await and obtain result</td>
86 * <td> {@link #invoke(ForkJoinTask)}</td>
87 * <td> {@link ForkJoinTask#invoke}</td>
88 * </tr>
89 * <tr>
90 * <td> <b>Arrange exec and obtain Future</td>
91 * <td> {@link #submit(ForkJoinTask)}</td>
92 * <td> {@link ForkJoinTask#fork} (ForkJoinTasks <em>are</em> Futures)</td>
93 * </tr>
94 * </table>
95 *
96 * <p><b>Sample Usage.</b> Normally a single {@code ForkJoinPool} is
97 * used for all parallel task execution in a program or subsystem.
98 * Otherwise, use would not usually outweigh the construction and
99 * bookkeeping overhead of creating a large set of threads. For
100 * example, a common pool could be used for the {@code SortTasks}
101 * illustrated in {@link RecursiveAction}. Because {@code
102 * ForkJoinPool} uses threads in {@linkplain java.lang.Thread#isDaemon
103 * daemon} mode, there is typically no need to explicitly {@link
104 * #shutdown} such a pool upon program exit.
105 *
106 * <pre> {@code
107 * static final ForkJoinPool mainPool = new ForkJoinPool();
108 * ...
109 * public void sort(long[] array) {
110 * mainPool.invoke(new SortTask(array, 0, array.length));
111 * }}</pre>
112 *
113 * <p><b>Implementation notes</b>: This implementation restricts the
114 * maximum number of running threads to 32767. Attempts to create
115 * pools with greater than the maximum number result in
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
120 * or internal resources have been exhausted.
121 *
122 * @since 1.7
123 * @author Doug Lea
124 */
125 public class ForkJoinPool extends AbstractExecutorService {
126
127 /*
128 * Implementation Overview
129 *
130 * This class and its nested classes provide the main
131 * functionality and control for a set of worker threads:
132 * Submissions from non-FJ threads enter into submission queues.
133 * Workers take these tasks and typically split them into subtasks
134 * that may be stolen by other workers. Preference rules give
135 * first priority to processing tasks from their own queues (LIFO
136 * or FIFO, depending on mode), then to randomized FIFO steals of
137 * tasks in other queues.
138 *
139 * WorkQueues
140 * ==========
141 *
142 * Most operations occur within work-stealing queues (in nested
143 * class WorkQueue). These are special forms of Deques that
144 * support only three of the four possible end-operations -- push,
145 * pop, and poll (aka steal), under the further constraints that
146 * push and pop are called only from the owning thread (or, as
147 * extended here, under a lock), while poll may be called from
148 * other threads. (If you are unfamiliar with them, you probably
149 * want to read Herlihy and Shavit's book "The Art of
150 * Multiprocessor programming", chapter 16 describing these in
151 * more detail before proceeding.) The main work-stealing queue
152 * design is roughly similar to those in the papers "Dynamic
153 * Circular Work-Stealing Deque" by Chase and Lev, SPAA 2005
154 * (http://research.sun.com/scalable/pubs/index.html) and
155 * "Idempotent work stealing" by Michael, Saraswat, and Vechev,
156 * PPoPP 2009 (http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1504186).
157 * The main differences ultimately stem from GC requirements that
158 * we null out taken slots as soon as we can, to maintain as small
159 * a footprint as possible even in programs generating huge
160 * numbers of tasks. To accomplish this, we shift the CAS
161 * arbitrating pop vs poll (steal) from being on the indices
162 * ("base" and "top") to the slots themselves. So, both a
163 * successful pop and poll mainly entail a CAS of a slot from
164 * non-null to null. Because we rely on CASes of references, we
165 * do not need tag bits on base or top. They are simple ints as
166 * used in any circular array-based queue (see for example
167 * ArrayDeque). Updates to the indices must still be ordered in a
168 * way that guarantees that top == base means the queue is empty,
169 * but otherwise may err on the side of possibly making the queue
170 * appear nonempty when a push, pop, or poll have not fully
171 * committed. Note that this means that the poll operation,
172 * considered individually, is not wait-free. One thief cannot
173 * successfully continue until another in-progress one (or, if
174 * previously empty, a push) completes. However, in the
175 * aggregate, we ensure at least probabilistic non-blockingness.
176 * If an attempted steal fails, a thief always chooses a different
177 * random victim target to try next. So, in order for one thief to
178 * progress, it suffices for any in-progress poll or new push on
179 * any empty queue to complete. (This is why we normally use
180 * method pollAt and its variants that try once at the apparent
181 * base index, else consider alternative actions, rather than
182 * method poll.)
183 *
184 * This approach also enables support of a user mode in which local
185 * task processing is in FIFO, not LIFO order, simply by using
186 * poll rather than pop. This can be useful in message-passing
187 * frameworks in which tasks are never joined. However neither
188 * mode considers affinities, loads, cache localities, etc, so
189 * rarely provide the best possible performance on a given
190 * machine, but portably provide good throughput by averaging over
191 * these factors. (Further, even if we did try to use such
192 * information, we do not usually have a basis for exploiting it.
193 * For example, some sets of tasks profit from cache affinities,
194 * but others are harmed by cache pollution effects.)
195 *
196 * WorkQueues are also used in a similar way for tasks submitted
197 * to the pool. We cannot mix these tasks in the same queues used
198 * for work-stealing (this would contaminate lifo/fifo
199 * processing). Instead, we loosely associate submission queues
200 * with submitting threads, using a form of hashing. The
201 * ThreadLocal Submitter class contains a value initially used as
202 * a hash code for choosing existing queues, but may be randomly
203 * repositioned upon contention with other submitters. In
204 * essence, submitters act like workers except that they never
205 * take tasks, and they are multiplexed on to a finite number of
206 * shared work queues. However, classes are set up so that future
207 * extensions could allow submitters to optionally help perform
208 * tasks as well. Insertion of tasks in shared mode requires a
209 * lock (mainly to protect in the case of resizing) but we use
210 * only a simple spinlock (using bits in field runState), because
211 * submitters encountering a busy queue move on to try or create
212 * other queues -- they block only when creating and registering
213 * new queues.
214 *
215 * Management
216 * ==========
217 *
218 * The main throughput advantages of work-stealing stem from
219 * decentralized control -- workers mostly take tasks from
220 * themselves or each other. We cannot negate this in the
221 * implementation of other management responsibilities. The main
222 * tactic for avoiding bottlenecks is packing nearly all
223 * essentially atomic control state into two volatile variables
224 * that are by far most often read (not written) as status and
225 * consistency checks.
226 *
227 * Field "ctl" contains 64 bits holding all the information needed
228 * to atomically decide to add, inactivate, enqueue (on an event
229 * queue), dequeue, and/or re-activate workers. To enable this
230 * packing, we restrict maximum parallelism to (1<<15)-1 (which is
231 * far in excess of normal operating range) to allow ids, counts,
232 * and their negations (used for thresholding) to fit into 16bit
233 * fields.
234 *
235 * Field "runState" contains 32 bits needed to register and
236 * deregister WorkQueues, as well as to enable shutdown. It is
237 * only modified under a lock (normally briefly held, but
238 * occasionally protecting allocations and resizings) but even
239 * when locked remains available to check consistency.
240 *
241 * Recording WorkQueues. WorkQueues are recorded in the
242 * "workQueues" array that is created upon pool construction and
243 * expanded if necessary. Updates to the array while recording
244 * new workers and unrecording terminated ones are protected from
245 * each other by a lock but the array is otherwise concurrently
246 * readable, and accessed directly. To simplify index-based
247 * operations, the array size is always a power of two, and all
248 * readers must tolerate null slots. Shared (submission) queues
249 * are at even indices, worker queues at odd indices. Grouping
250 * them together in this way simplifies and speeds up task
251 * scanning.
252 *
253 * All worker thread creation is on-demand, triggered by task
254 * submissions, replacement of terminated workers, and/or
255 * compensation for blocked workers. However, all other support
256 * code is set up to work with other policies. To ensure that we
257 * do not hold on to worker references that would prevent GC, ALL
258 * accesses to workQueues are via indices into the workQueues
259 * array (which is one source of some of the messy code
260 * constructions here). In essence, the workQueues array serves as
261 * a weak reference mechanism. Thus for example the wait queue
262 * field of ctl stores indices, not references. Access to the
263 * workQueues in associated methods (for example signalWork) must
264 * both index-check and null-check the IDs. All such accesses
265 * ignore bad IDs by returning out early from what they are doing,
266 * since this can only be associated with termination, in which
267 * case it is OK to give up. All uses of the workQueues array
268 * also check that it is non-null (even if previously
269 * non-null). This allows nulling during termination, which is
270 * currently not necessary, but remains an option for
271 * resource-revocation-based shutdown schemes. It also helps
272 * reduce JIT issuance of uncommon-trap code, which tends to
273 * unnecessarily complicate control flow in some methods.
274 *
275 * Event Queuing. Unlike HPC work-stealing frameworks, we cannot
276 * let workers spin indefinitely scanning for tasks when none can
277 * be found immediately, and we cannot start/resume workers unless
278 * there appear to be tasks available. On the other hand, we must
279 * quickly prod them into action when new tasks are submitted or
280 * generated. In many usages, ramp-up time to activate workers is
281 * the main limiting factor in overall performance (this is
282 * compounded at program start-up by JIT compilation and
283 * allocation). So we try to streamline this as much as possible.
284 * We park/unpark workers after placing in an event wait queue
285 * when they cannot find work. This "queue" is actually a simple
286 * Treiber stack, headed by the "id" field of ctl, plus a 15bit
287 * counter value (that reflects the number of times a worker has
288 * been inactivated) to avoid ABA effects (we need only as many
289 * version numbers as worker threads). Successors are held in
290 * field WorkQueue.nextWait. Queuing deals with several intrinsic
291 * races, mainly that a task-producing thread can miss seeing (and
292 * signalling) another thread that gave up looking for work but
293 * has not yet entered the wait queue. We solve this by requiring
294 * a full sweep of all workers (via repeated calls to method
295 * scan()) both before and after a newly waiting worker is added
296 * to the wait queue. During a rescan, the worker might release
297 * some other queued worker rather than itself, which has the same
298 * net effect. Because enqueued workers may actually be rescanning
299 * rather than waiting, we set and clear the "parker" field of
300 * WorkQueues to reduce unnecessary calls to unpark. (This
301 * requires a secondary recheck to avoid missed signals.) Note
302 * the unusual conventions about Thread.interrupts surrounding
303 * parking and other blocking: Because interrupts are used solely
304 * to alert threads to check termination, which is checked anyway
305 * upon blocking, we clear status (using Thread.interrupted)
306 * before any call to park, so that park does not immediately
307 * return due to status being set via some other unrelated call to
308 * interrupt in user code.
309 *
310 * Signalling. We create or wake up workers only when there
311 * appears to be at least one task they might be able to find and
312 * execute. When a submission is added or another worker adds a
313 * task to a queue that previously had fewer than two tasks, they
314 * signal waiting workers (or trigger creation of new ones if
315 * fewer than the given parallelism level -- see signalWork).
316 * These primary signals are buttressed by signals during rescans;
317 * together these cover the signals needed in cases when more
318 * tasks are pushed but untaken, and improve performance compared
319 * to having one thread wake up all workers.
320 *
321 * Trimming workers. To release resources after periods of lack of
322 * use, a worker starting to wait when the pool is quiescent will
323 * time out and terminate if the pool has remained quiescent for
324 * SHRINK_RATE nanosecs. This will slowly propagate, eventually
325 * terminating all workers after long periods of non-use.
326 *
327 * Shutdown and Termination. A call to shutdownNow atomically sets
328 * a runState bit and then (non-atomically) sets each worker's
329 * runState status, cancels all unprocessed tasks, and wakes up
330 * all waiting workers. Detecting whether termination should
331 * commence after a non-abrupt shutdown() call requires more work
332 * and bookkeeping. We need consensus about quiescence (i.e., that
333 * there is no more work). The active count provides a primary
334 * indication but non-abrupt shutdown still requires a rechecking
335 * scan for any workers that are inactive but not queued.
336 *
337 * Joining Tasks
338 * =============
339 *
340 * Any of several actions may be taken when one worker is waiting
341 * to join a task stolen (or always held) by another. Because we
342 * are multiplexing many tasks on to a pool of workers, we can't
343 * just let them block (as in Thread.join). We also cannot just
344 * reassign the joiner's run-time stack with another and replace
345 * it later, which would be a form of "continuation", that even if
346 * possible is not necessarily a good idea since we sometimes need
347 * both an unblocked task and its continuation to progress.
348 * Instead we combine two tactics:
349 *
350 * Helping: Arranging for the joiner to execute some task that it
351 * would be running if the steal had not occurred.
352 *
353 * Compensating: Unless there are already enough live threads,
354 * method tryCompensate() may create or re-activate a spare
355 * thread to compensate for blocked joiners until they unblock.
356 *
357 * A third form (implemented in tryRemoveAndExec and
358 * tryPollForAndExec) amounts to helping a hypothetical
359 * compensator: If we can readily tell that a possible action of a
360 * compensator is to steal and execute the task being joined, the
361 * joining thread can do so directly, without the need for a
362 * compensation thread (although at the expense of larger run-time
363 * stacks, but the tradeoff is typically worthwhile).
364 *
365 * The ManagedBlocker extension API can't use helping so relies
366 * only on compensation in method awaitBlocker.
367 *
368 * The algorithm in tryHelpStealer entails a form of "linear"
369 * helping: Each worker records (in field currentSteal) the most
370 * recent task it stole from some other worker. Plus, it records
371 * (in field currentJoin) the task it is currently actively
372 * joining. Method tryHelpStealer uses these markers to try to
373 * find a worker to help (i.e., steal back a task from and execute
374 * it) that could hasten completion of the actively joined task.
375 * In essence, the joiner executes a task that would be on its own
376 * local deque had the to-be-joined task not been stolen. This may
377 * be seen as a conservative variant of the approach in Wagner &
378 * Calder "Leapfrogging: a portable technique for implementing
379 * efficient futures" SIGPLAN Notices, 1993
380 * (http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=155354). It differs in
381 * that: (1) We only maintain dependency links across workers upon
382 * steals, rather than use per-task bookkeeping. This sometimes
383 * requires a linear scan of workQueues array to locate stealers,
384 * but often doesn't because stealers leave hints (that may become
385 * stale/wrong) of where to locate them. A stealHint is only a
386 * hint because a worker might have had multiple steals and the
387 * hint records only one of them (usually the most current).
388 * Hinting isolates cost to when it is needed, rather than adding
389 * to per-task overhead. (2) It is "shallow", ignoring nesting
390 * and potentially cyclic mutual steals. (3) It is intentionally
391 * racy: field currentJoin is updated only while actively joining,
392 * which means that we miss links in the chain during long-lived
393 * tasks, GC stalls etc (which is OK since blocking in such cases
394 * is usually a good idea). (4) We bound the number of attempts
395 * to find work (see MAX_HELP) and fall back to suspending the
396 * worker and if necessary replacing it with another.
397 *
398 * It is impossible to keep exactly the target parallelism number
399 * of threads running at any given time. Determining the
400 * existence of conservatively safe helping targets, the
401 * availability of already-created spares, and the apparent need
402 * to create new spares are all racy, so we rely on multiple
403 * retries of each. Compensation in the apparent absence of
404 * helping opportunities is challenging to control on JVMs, where
405 * GC and other activities can stall progress of tasks that in
406 * turn stall out many other dependent tasks, without us being
407 * able to determine whether they will ever require compensation.
408 * Even though work-stealing otherwise encounters little
409 * degradation in the presence of more threads than cores,
410 * aggressively adding new threads in such cases entails risk of
411 * unwanted positive feedback control loops in which more threads
412 * cause more dependent stalls (as well as delayed progress of
413 * unblocked threads to the point that we know they are available)
414 * leading to more situations requiring more threads, and so
415 * on. This aspect of control can be seen as an (analytically
416 * intractable) game with an opponent that may choose the worst
417 * (for us) active thread to stall at any time. We take several
418 * precautions to bound losses (and thus bound gains), mainly in
419 * methods tryCompensate and awaitJoin: (1) We only try
420 * compensation after attempting enough helping steps (measured
421 * via counting and timing) that we have already consumed the
422 * estimated cost of creating and activating a new thread. (2) We
423 * allow up to 50% of threads to be blocked before initially
424 * adding any others, and unless completely saturated, check that
425 * some work is available for a new worker before adding. Also, we
426 * create up to only 50% more threads until entering a mode that
427 * only adds a thread if all others are possibly blocked. All
428 * together, this means that we might be half as fast to react,
429 * and create half as many threads as possible in the ideal case,
430 * but present vastly fewer anomalies in all other cases compared
431 * to both more aggressive and more conservative alternatives.
432 *
433 * Style notes: There is a lot of representation-level coupling
434 * among classes ForkJoinPool, ForkJoinWorkerThread, and
435 * ForkJoinTask. The fields of WorkQueue maintain data structures
436 * managed by ForkJoinPool, so are directly accessed. There is
437 * little point trying to reduce this, since any associated future
438 * changes in representations will need to be accompanied by
439 * algorithmic changes anyway. Several methods intrinsically
440 * sprawl because they must accumulate sets of consistent reads of
441 * volatiles held in local variables. Methods signalWork() and
442 * scan() are the main bottlenecks, so are especially heavily
443 * micro-optimized/mangled. There are lots of inline assignments
444 * (of form "while ((local = field) != 0)") which are usually the
445 * simplest way to ensure the required read orderings (which are
446 * sometimes critical). This leads to a "C"-like style of listing
447 * declarations of these locals at the heads of methods or blocks.
448 * There are several occurrences of the unusual "do {} while
449 * (!cas...)" which is the simplest way to force an update of a
450 * CAS'ed variable. There are also other coding oddities that help
451 * some methods perform reasonably even when interpreted (not
452 * compiled).
453 *
454 * The order of declarations in this file is:
455 * (1) Static utility functions
456 * (2) Nested (static) classes
457 * (3) Static fields
458 * (4) Fields, along with constants used when unpacking some of them
459 * (5) Internal control methods
460 * (6) Callbacks and other support for ForkJoinTask methods
461 * (7) Exported methods
462 * (8) Static block initializing statics in minimally dependent order
463 */
464
465 // Static utilities
466
467 /**
468 * If there is a security manager, makes sure caller has
469 * permission to modify threads.
470 */
471 private static void checkPermission() {
472 SecurityManager security = System.getSecurityManager();
473 if (security != null)
474 security.checkPermission(modifyThreadPermission);
475 }
476
477 // Nested classes
478
479 /**
480 * Factory for creating new {@link ForkJoinWorkerThread}s.
481 * A {@code ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory} must be defined and used
482 * for {@code ForkJoinWorkerThread} subclasses that extend base
483 * functionality or initialize threads with different contexts.
484 */
485 public static interface ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory {
486 /**
487 * Returns a new worker thread operating in the given pool.
488 *
489 * @param pool the pool this thread works in
490 * @throws NullPointerException if the pool is null
491 */
492 public ForkJoinWorkerThread newThread(ForkJoinPool pool);
493 }
494
495 /**
496 * Default ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory implementation; creates a
497 * new ForkJoinWorkerThread.
498 */
499 static class DefaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory
500 implements ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory {
501 public ForkJoinWorkerThread newThread(ForkJoinPool pool) {
502 return new ForkJoinWorkerThread(pool);
503 }
504 }
505
506 /**
507 * A simple non-reentrant lock used for exclusion when managing
508 * queues and workers. We use a custom lock so that we can readily
509 * probe lock state in constructions that check among alternative
510 * actions. The lock is normally only very briefly held, and
511 * sometimes treated as a spinlock, but other usages block to
512 * reduce overall contention in those cases where locked code
513 * bodies perform allocation/resizing.
514 */
515 static final class Mutex extends AbstractQueuedSynchronizer {
516 public final boolean tryAcquire(int ignore) {
517 return compareAndSetState(0, 1);
518 }
519 public final boolean tryRelease(int ignore) {
520 setState(0);
521 return true;
522 }
523 public final void lock() { acquire(0); }
524 public final void unlock() { release(0); }
525 public final boolean isHeldExclusively() { return getState() == 1; }
526 public final Condition newCondition() { return new ConditionObject(); }
527 }
528
529 /**
530 * Class for artificial tasks that are used to replace the target
531 * of local joins if they are removed from an interior queue slot
532 * in WorkQueue.tryRemoveAndExec. We don't need the proxy to
533 * actually do anything beyond having a unique identity.
534 */
535 static final class EmptyTask extends ForkJoinTask<Void> {
536 EmptyTask() { status = ForkJoinTask.NORMAL; } // force done
537 public final Void getRawResult() { return null; }
538 public final void setRawResult(Void x) {}
539 public final boolean exec() { return true; }
540 }
541
542 /**
543 * Queues supporting work-stealing as well as external task
544 * submission. See above for main rationale and algorithms.
545 * Implementation relies heavily on "Unsafe" intrinsics
546 * and selective use of "volatile":
547 *
548 * Field "base" is the index (mod array.length) of the least valid
549 * queue slot, which is always the next position to steal (poll)
550 * from if nonempty. Reads and writes require volatile orderings
551 * but not CAS, because updates are only performed after slot
552 * CASes.
553 *
554 * Field "top" is the index (mod array.length) of the next queue
555 * slot to push to or pop from. It is written only by owner thread
556 * for push, or under lock for trySharedPush, and accessed by
557 * other threads only after reading (volatile) base. Both top and
558 * base are allowed to wrap around on overflow, but (top - base)
559 * (or more commonly -(base - top) to force volatile read of base
560 * before top) still estimates size.
561 *
562 * The array slots are read and written using the emulation of
563 * volatiles/atomics provided by Unsafe. Insertions must in
564 * general use putOrderedObject as a form of releasing store to
565 * ensure that all writes to the task object are ordered before
566 * its publication in the queue. (Although we can avoid one case
567 * of this when locked in trySharedPush.) All removals entail a
568 * CAS to null. The array is always a power of two. To ensure
569 * safety of Unsafe array operations, all accesses perform
570 * explicit null checks and implicit bounds checks via
571 * power-of-two masking.
572 *
573 * In addition to basic queuing support, this class contains
574 * fields described elsewhere to control execution. It turns out
575 * to work better memory-layout-wise to include them in this
576 * class rather than a separate class.
577 *
578 * Performance on most platforms is very sensitive to placement of
579 * instances of both WorkQueues and their arrays -- we absolutely
580 * do not want multiple WorkQueue instances or multiple queue
581 * arrays sharing cache lines. (It would be best for queue objects
582 * and their arrays to share, but there is nothing available to
583 * help arrange that). Unfortunately, because they are recorded
584 * in a common array, WorkQueue instances are often moved to be
585 * adjacent by garbage collectors. To reduce impact, we use field
586 * padding that works OK on common platforms; this effectively
587 * trades off slightly slower average field access for the sake of
588 * avoiding really bad worst-case access. (Until better JVM
589 * support is in place, this padding is dependent on transient
590 * properties of JVM field layout rules.) We also take care in
591 * allocating, sizing and resizing the array. Non-shared queue
592 * arrays are initialized (via method growArray) by workers before
593 * use. Others are allocated on first use.
594 */
595 static final class WorkQueue {
596 /**
597 * Capacity of work-stealing queue array upon initialization.
598 * Must be a power of two; at least 4, but should be larger to
599 * reduce or eliminate cacheline sharing among queues.
600 * Currently, it is much larger, as a partial workaround for
601 * the fact that JVMs often place arrays in locations that
602 * share GC bookkeeping (especially cardmarks) such that
603 * per-write accesses encounter serious memory contention.
604 */
605 static final int INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 1 << 13;
606
607 /**
608 * Maximum size for queue arrays. Must be a power of two less
609 * than or equal to 1 << (31 - width of array entry) to ensure
610 * lack of wraparound of index calculations, but defined to a
611 * value a bit less than this to help users trap runaway
612 * programs before saturating systems.
613 */
614 static final int MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 1 << 26; // 64M
615
616 volatile long totalSteals; // cumulative number of steals
617 int seed; // for random scanning; initialize nonzero
618 volatile int eventCount; // encoded inactivation count; < 0 if inactive
619 int nextWait; // encoded record of next event waiter
620 int rescans; // remaining scans until block
621 int nsteals; // top-level task executions since last idle
622 final int mode; // lifo, fifo, or shared
623 int poolIndex; // index of this queue in pool (or 0)
624 int stealHint; // index of most recent known stealer
625 volatile int runState; // 1: locked, -1: terminate; else 0
626 volatile int base; // index of next slot for poll
627 int top; // index of next slot for push
628 ForkJoinTask<?>[] array; // the elements (initially unallocated)
629 final ForkJoinPool pool; // the containing pool (may be null)
630 final ForkJoinWorkerThread owner; // owning thread or null if shared
631 volatile Thread parker; // == owner during call to park; else null
632 ForkJoinTask<?> currentJoin; // task being joined in awaitJoin
633 ForkJoinTask<?> currentSteal; // current non-local task being executed
634 // Heuristic padding to ameliorate unfortunate memory placements
635 Object p00, p01, p02, p03, p04, p05, p06, p07;
636 Object p08, p09, p0a, p0b, p0c, p0d, p0e;
637
638 WorkQueue(ForkJoinPool pool, ForkJoinWorkerThread owner, int mode) {
639 this.mode = mode;
640 this.pool = pool;
641 this.owner = owner;
642 // Place indices in the center of array (that is not yet allocated)
643 base = top = INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY >>> 1;
644 }
645
646 /**
647 * Returns the approximate number of tasks in the queue.
648 */
649 final int queueSize() {
650 int n = base - top; // non-owner callers must read base first
651 return (n >= 0) ? 0 : -n; // ignore transient negative
652 }
653
654 /**
655 * Provides a more accurate estimate of whether this queue has
656 * any tasks than does queueSize, by checking whether a
657 * near-empty queue has at least one unclaimed task.
658 */
659 final boolean isEmpty() {
660 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int m, s;
661 int n = base - (s = top);
662 return (n >= 0 ||
663 (n == -1 &&
664 ((a = array) == null ||
665 (m = a.length - 1) < 0 ||
666 U.getObjectVolatile
667 (a, ((m & (s - 1)) << ASHIFT) + ABASE) == null)));
668 }
669
670 /**
671 * Pushes a task. Call only by owner in unshared queues.
672 *
673 * @param task the task. Caller must ensure non-null.
674 * @throw RejectedExecutionException if array cannot be resized
675 */
676 final void push(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
677 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; ForkJoinPool p;
678 int s = top, m, n;
679 if ((a = array) != null) { // ignore if queue removed
680 U.putOrderedObject
681 (a, (((m = a.length - 1) & s) << ASHIFT) + ABASE, task);
682 if ((n = (top = s + 1) - base) <= 2) {
683 if ((p = pool) != null)
684 p.signalWork();
685 }
686 else if (n >= m)
687 growArray(true);
688 }
689 }
690
691 /**
692 * Pushes a task if lock is free and array is either big
693 * enough or can be resized to be big enough.
694 *
695 * @param task the task. Caller must ensure non-null.
696 * @return true if submitted
697 */
698 final boolean trySharedPush(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
699 boolean submitted = false;
700 if (runState == 0 && U.compareAndSwapInt(this, RUNSTATE, 0, 1)) {
701 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a = array;
702 int s = top;
703 try {
704 if ((a != null && a.length > s + 1 - base) ||
705 (a = growArray(false)) != null) { // must presize
706 int j = (((a.length - 1) & s) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
707 U.putObject(a, (long)j, task); // don't need "ordered"
708 top = s + 1;
709 submitted = true;
710 }
711 } finally {
712 runState = 0; // unlock
713 }
714 }
715 return submitted;
716 }
717
718 /**
719 * Takes next task, if one exists, in LIFO order. Call only
720 * by owner in unshared queues. (We do not have a shared
721 * version of this method because it is never needed.)
722 */
723 final ForkJoinTask<?> pop() {
724 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; ForkJoinTask<?> t; int m;
725 if ((a = array) != null && (m = a.length - 1) >= 0) {
726 for (int s; (s = top - 1) - base >= 0;) {
727 long j = ((m & s) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
728 if ((t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObject(a, j)) == null)
729 break;
730 if (U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, t, null)) {
731 top = s;
732 return t;
733 }
734 }
735 }
736 return null;
737 }
738
739 /**
740 * Takes a task in FIFO order if b is base of queue and a task
741 * can be claimed without contention. Specialized versions
742 * appear in ForkJoinPool methods scan and tryHelpStealer.
743 */
744 final ForkJoinTask<?> pollAt(int b) {
745 ForkJoinTask<?> t; ForkJoinTask<?>[] a;
746 if ((a = array) != null) {
747 int j = (((a.length - 1) & b) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
748 if ((t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, j)) != null &&
749 base == b &&
750 U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, t, null)) {
751 base = b + 1;
752 return t;
753 }
754 }
755 return null;
756 }
757
758 /**
759 * Takes next task, if one exists, in FIFO order.
760 */
761 final ForkJoinTask<?> poll() {
762 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int b; ForkJoinTask<?> t;
763 while ((b = base) - top < 0 && (a = array) != null) {
764 int j = (((a.length - 1) & b) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
765 t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, j);
766 if (t != null) {
767 if (base == b &&
768 U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, t, null)) {
769 base = b + 1;
770 return t;
771 }
772 }
773 else if (base == b) {
774 if (b + 1 == top)
775 break;
776 Thread.yield(); // wait for lagging update
777 }
778 }
779 return null;
780 }
781
782 /**
783 * Takes next task, if one exists, in order specified by mode.
784 */
785 final ForkJoinTask<?> nextLocalTask() {
786 return mode == 0 ? pop() : poll();
787 }
788
789 /**
790 * Returns next task, if one exists, in order specified by mode.
791 */
792 final ForkJoinTask<?> peek() {
793 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a = array; int m;
794 if (a == null || (m = a.length - 1) < 0)
795 return null;
796 int i = mode == 0 ? top - 1 : base;
797 int j = ((i & m) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
798 return (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, j);
799 }
800
801 /**
802 * Pops the given task only if it is at the current top.
803 */
804 final boolean tryUnpush(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
805 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int s;
806 if ((a = array) != null && (s = top) != base &&
807 U.compareAndSwapObject
808 (a, (((a.length - 1) & --s) << ASHIFT) + ABASE, t, null)) {
809 top = s;
810 return true;
811 }
812 return false;
813 }
814
815 /**
816 * Polls the given task only if it is at the current base.
817 */
818 final boolean pollFor(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
819 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int b;
820 if ((b = base) - top < 0 && (a = array) != null) {
821 int j = (((a.length - 1) & b) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
822 if (U.getObjectVolatile(a, j) == task && base == b &&
823 U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, task, null)) {
824 base = b + 1;
825 return true;
826 }
827 }
828 return false;
829 }
830
831 /**
832 * Initializes or doubles the capacity of array. Call either
833 * by owner or with lock held -- it is OK for base, but not
834 * top, to move while resizings are in progress.
835 *
836 * @param rejectOnFailure if true, throw exception if capacity
837 * exceeded (relayed ultimately to user); else return null.
838 */
839 final ForkJoinTask<?>[] growArray(boolean rejectOnFailure) {
840 ForkJoinTask<?>[] oldA = array;
841 int size = oldA != null ? oldA.length << 1 : INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY;
842 if (size <= MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY) {
843 int oldMask, t, b;
844 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a = array = new ForkJoinTask<?>[size];
845 if (oldA != null && (oldMask = oldA.length - 1) >= 0 &&
846 (t = top) - (b = base) > 0) {
847 int mask = size - 1;
848 do {
849 ForkJoinTask<?> x;
850 int oldj = ((b & oldMask) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
851 int j = ((b & mask) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
852 x = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(oldA, oldj);
853 if (x != null &&
854 U.compareAndSwapObject(oldA, oldj, x, null))
855 U.putObjectVolatile(a, j, x);
856 } while (++b != t);
857 }
858 return a;
859 }
860 else if (!rejectOnFailure)
861 return null;
862 else
863 throw new RejectedExecutionException("Queue capacity exceeded");
864 }
865
866 /**
867 * Removes and cancels all known tasks, ignoring any exceptions.
868 */
869 final void cancelAll() {
870 ForkJoinTask.cancelIgnoringExceptions(currentJoin);
871 ForkJoinTask.cancelIgnoringExceptions(currentSteal);
872 for (ForkJoinTask<?> t; (t = poll()) != null; )
873 ForkJoinTask.cancelIgnoringExceptions(t);
874 }
875
876 /**
877 * Computes next value for random probes. Scans don't require
878 * a very high quality generator, but also not a crummy one.
879 * Marsaglia xor-shift is cheap and works well enough. Note:
880 * This is manually inlined in its usages in ForkJoinPool to
881 * avoid writes inside busy scan loops.
882 */
883 final int nextSeed() {
884 int r = seed;
885 r ^= r << 13;
886 r ^= r >>> 17;
887 return seed = r ^= r << 5;
888 }
889
890 // Execution methods
891
892 /**
893 * Pops and runs tasks until empty.
894 */
895 private void popAndExecAll() {
896 // A bit faster than repeated pop calls
897 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int m, s; long j; ForkJoinTask<?> t;
898 while ((a = array) != null && (m = a.length - 1) >= 0 &&
899 (s = top - 1) - base >= 0 &&
900 (t = ((ForkJoinTask<?>)
901 U.getObject(a, j = ((m & s) << ASHIFT) + ABASE)))
902 != null) {
903 if (U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, t, null)) {
904 top = s;
905 t.doExec();
906 }
907 }
908 }
909
910 /**
911 * Polls and runs tasks until empty.
912 */
913 private void pollAndExecAll() {
914 for (ForkJoinTask<?> t; (t = poll()) != null;)
915 t.doExec();
916 }
917
918 /**
919 * If present, removes from queue and executes the given task, or
920 * any other cancelled task. Returns (true) immediately on any CAS
921 * or consistency check failure so caller can retry.
922 *
923 * @return false if no progress can be made
924 */
925 final boolean tryRemoveAndExec(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
926 boolean removed = false, empty = true, progress = true;
927 ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int m, s, b, n;
928 if ((a = array) != null && (m = a.length - 1) >= 0 &&
929 (n = (s = top) - (b = base)) > 0) {
930 for (ForkJoinTask<?> t;;) { // traverse from s to b
931 int j = ((--s & m) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
932 t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, j);
933 if (t == null) // inconsistent length
934 break;
935 else if (t == task) {
936 if (s + 1 == top) { // pop
937 if (!U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, task, null))
938 break;
939 top = s;
940 removed = true;
941 }
942 else if (base == b) // replace with proxy
943 removed = U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, task,
944 new EmptyTask());
945 break;
946 }
947 else if (t.status >= 0)
948 empty = false;
949 else if (s + 1 == top) { // pop and throw away
950 if (U.compareAndSwapObject(a, j, t, null))
951 top = s;
952 break;
953 }
954 if (--n == 0) {
955 if (!empty && base == b)
956 progress = false;
957 break;
958 }
959 }
960 }
961 if (removed)
962 task.doExec();
963 return progress;
964 }
965
966 /**
967 * Executes a top-level task and any local tasks remaining
968 * after execution.
969 */
970 final void runTask(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
971 if (t != null) {
972 currentSteal = t;
973 t.doExec();
974 if (top != base) { // process remaining local tasks
975 if (mode == 0)
976 popAndExecAll();
977 else
978 pollAndExecAll();
979 }
980 ++nsteals;
981 currentSteal = null;
982 }
983 }
984
985 /**
986 * Executes a non-top-level (stolen) task.
987 */
988 final void runSubtask(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
989 if (t != null) {
990 ForkJoinTask<?> ps = currentSteal;
991 currentSteal = t;
992 t.doExec();
993 currentSteal = ps;
994 }
995 }
996
997 /**
998 * Returns true if owned and not known to be blocked.
999 */
1000 final boolean isApparentlyUnblocked() {
1001 Thread wt; Thread.State s;
1002 return (eventCount >= 0 &&
1003 (wt = owner) != null &&
1004 (s = wt.getState()) != Thread.State.BLOCKED &&
1005 s != Thread.State.WAITING &&
1006 s != Thread.State.TIMED_WAITING);
1007 }
1008
1009 /**
1010 * If this owned and is not already interrupted, try to
1011 * interrupt and/or unpark, ignoring exceptions.
1012 */
1013 final void interruptOwner() {
1014 Thread wt, p;
1015 if ((wt = owner) != null && !wt.isInterrupted()) {
1016 try {
1017 wt.interrupt();
1018 } catch (SecurityException ignore) {
1019 }
1020 }
1021 if ((p = parker) != null)
1022 U.unpark(p);
1023 }
1024
1025 // Unsafe mechanics
1026 private static final sun.misc.Unsafe U;
1027 private static final long RUNSTATE;
1028 private static final int ABASE;
1029 private static final int ASHIFT;
1030 static {
1031 int s;
1032 try {
1033 U = getUnsafe();
1034 Class<?> k = WorkQueue.class;
1035 Class<?> ak = ForkJoinTask[].class;
1036 RUNSTATE = U.objectFieldOffset
1037 (k.getDeclaredField("runState"));
1038 ABASE = U.arrayBaseOffset(ak);
1039 s = U.arrayIndexScale(ak);
1040 } catch (Exception e) {
1041 throw new Error(e);
1042 }
1043 if ((s & (s-1)) != 0)
1044 throw new Error("data type scale not a power of two");
1045 ASHIFT = 31 - Integer.numberOfLeadingZeros(s);
1046 }
1047 }
1048
1049 /**
1050 * Per-thread records for threads that submit to pools. Currently
1051 * holds only pseudo-random seed / index that is used to choose
1052 * submission queues in method doSubmit. In the future, this may
1053 * also incorporate a means to implement different task rejection
1054 * and resubmission policies.
1055 *
1056 * Seeds for submitters and workers/workQueues work in basically
1057 * the same way but are initialized and updated using slightly
1058 * different mechanics. Both are initialized using the same
1059 * approach as in class ThreadLocal, where successive values are
1060 * unlikely to collide with previous values. This is done during
1061 * registration for workers, but requires a separate AtomicInteger
1062 * for submitters. Seeds are then randomly modified upon
1063 * collisions using xorshifts, which requires a non-zero seed.
1064 */
1065 static final class Submitter {
1066 int seed;
1067 Submitter() {
1068 int s = nextSubmitterSeed.getAndAdd(SEED_INCREMENT);
1069 seed = (s == 0) ? 1 : s; // ensure non-zero
1070 }
1071 }
1072
1073 /** ThreadLocal class for Submitters */
1074 static final class ThreadSubmitter extends ThreadLocal<Submitter> {
1075 public Submitter initialValue() { return new Submitter(); }
1076 }
1077
1078 // static fields (initialized in static initializer below)
1079
1080 /**
1081 * Creates a new ForkJoinWorkerThread. This factory is used unless
1082 * overridden in ForkJoinPool constructors.
1083 */
1084 public static final ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory
1085 defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory;
1086
1087 /**
1088 * Generator for assigning sequence numbers as pool names.
1089 */
1090 private static final AtomicInteger poolNumberGenerator;
1091
1092 /**
1093 * Generator for initial hashes/seeds for submitters. Accessed by
1094 * Submitter class constructor.
1095 */
1096 static final AtomicInteger nextSubmitterSeed;
1097
1098 /**
1099 * Permission required for callers of methods that may start or
1100 * kill threads.
1101 */
1102 private static final RuntimePermission modifyThreadPermission;
1103
1104 /**
1105 * Per-thread submission bookeeping. Shared across all pools
1106 * to reduce ThreadLocal pollution and because random motion
1107 * to avoid contention in one pool is likely to hold for others.
1108 */
1109 private static final ThreadSubmitter submitters;
1110
1111 // static constants
1112
1113 /**
1114 * The wakeup interval (in nanoseconds) for a worker waiting for a
1115 * task when the pool is quiescent to instead try to shrink the
1116 * number of workers. The exact value does not matter too
1117 * much. It must be short enough to release resources during
1118 * sustained periods of idleness, but not so short that threads
1119 * are continually re-created.
1120 */
1121 private static final long SHRINK_RATE =
1122 4L * 1000L * 1000L * 1000L; // 4 seconds
1123
1124 /**
1125 * The timeout value for attempted shrinkage, includes
1126 * some slop to cope with system timer imprecision.
1127 */
1128 private static final long SHRINK_TIMEOUT = SHRINK_RATE - (SHRINK_RATE / 10);
1129
1130 /**
1131 * The maximum stolen->joining link depth allowed in method
1132 * tryHelpStealer. Must be a power of two. This value also
1133 * controls the maximum number of times to try to help join a task
1134 * without any apparent progress or change in pool state before
1135 * giving up and blocking (see awaitJoin). Depths for legitimate
1136 * chains are unbounded, but we use a fixed constant to avoid
1137 * (otherwise unchecked) cycles and to bound staleness of
1138 * traversal parameters at the expense of sometimes blocking when
1139 * we could be helping.
1140 */
1141 private static final int MAX_HELP = 32;
1142
1143 /**
1144 * Secondary time-based bound (in nanosecs) for helping attempts
1145 * before trying compensated blocking in awaitJoin. Used in
1146 * conjunction with MAX_HELP to reduce variance due to different
1147 * polling rates associated with different helping options. The
1148 * value should roughly approximate the time required to create
1149 * and/or activate a worker thread.
1150 */
1151 private static final long COMPENSATION_DELAY = 100L * 1000L; // 0.1 millisec
1152
1153 /**
1154 * Increment for seed generators. See class ThreadLocal for
1155 * explanation.
1156 */
1157 private static final int SEED_INCREMENT = 0x61c88647;
1158
1159 /**
1160 * Bits and masks for control variables
1161 *
1162 * Field ctl is a long packed with:
1163 * AC: Number of active running workers minus target parallelism (16 bits)
1164 * TC: Number of total workers minus target parallelism (16 bits)
1165 * ST: true if pool is terminating (1 bit)
1166 * EC: the wait count of top waiting thread (15 bits)
1167 * ID: poolIndex of top of Treiber stack of waiters (16 bits)
1168 *
1169 * When convenient, we can extract the upper 32 bits of counts and
1170 * the lower 32 bits of queue state, u = (int)(ctl >>> 32) and e =
1171 * (int)ctl. The ec field is never accessed alone, but always
1172 * together with id and st. The offsets of counts by the target
1173 * parallelism and the positionings of fields makes it possible to
1174 * perform the most common checks via sign tests of fields: When
1175 * ac is negative, there are not enough active workers, when tc is
1176 * negative, there are not enough total workers, and when e is
1177 * negative, the pool is terminating. To deal with these possibly
1178 * negative fields, we use casts in and out of "short" and/or
1179 * signed shifts to maintain signedness.
1180 *
1181 * When a thread is queued (inactivated), its eventCount field is
1182 * set negative, which is the only way to tell if a worker is
1183 * prevented from executing tasks, even though it must continue to
1184 * scan for them to avoid queuing races. Note however that
1185 * eventCount updates lag releases so usage requires care.
1186 *
1187 * Field runState is an int packed with:
1188 * SHUTDOWN: true if shutdown is enabled (1 bit)
1189 * SEQ: a sequence number updated upon (de)registering workers (30 bits)
1190 * INIT: set true after workQueues array construction (1 bit)
1191 *
1192 * The sequence number enables simple consistency checks:
1193 * Staleness of read-only operations on the workQueues array can
1194 * be checked by comparing runState before vs after the reads.
1195 */
1196
1197 // bit positions/shifts for fields
1198 private static final int AC_SHIFT = 48;
1199 private static final int TC_SHIFT = 32;
1200 private static final int ST_SHIFT = 31;
1201 private static final int EC_SHIFT = 16;
1202
1203 // bounds
1204 private static final int SMASK = 0xffff; // short bits
1205 private static final int MAX_CAP = 0x7fff; // max #workers - 1
1206 private static final int SQMASK = 0xfffe; // even short bits
1207 private static final int SHORT_SIGN = 1 << 15;
1208 private static final int INT_SIGN = 1 << 31;
1209
1210 // masks
1211 private static final long STOP_BIT = 0x0001L << ST_SHIFT;
1212 private static final long AC_MASK = ((long)SMASK) << AC_SHIFT;
1213 private static final long TC_MASK = ((long)SMASK) << TC_SHIFT;
1214
1215 // units for incrementing and decrementing
1216 private static final long TC_UNIT = 1L << TC_SHIFT;
1217 private static final long AC_UNIT = 1L << AC_SHIFT;
1218
1219 // masks and units for dealing with u = (int)(ctl >>> 32)
1220 private static final int UAC_SHIFT = AC_SHIFT - 32;
1221 private static final int UTC_SHIFT = TC_SHIFT - 32;
1222 private static final int UAC_MASK = SMASK << UAC_SHIFT;
1223 private static final int UTC_MASK = SMASK << UTC_SHIFT;
1224 private static final int UAC_UNIT = 1 << UAC_SHIFT;
1225 private static final int UTC_UNIT = 1 << UTC_SHIFT;
1226
1227 // masks and units for dealing with e = (int)ctl
1228 private static final int E_MASK = 0x7fffffff; // no STOP_BIT
1229 private static final int E_SEQ = 1 << EC_SHIFT;
1230
1231 // runState bits
1232 private static final int SHUTDOWN = 1 << 31;
1233
1234 // access mode for WorkQueue
1235 static final int LIFO_QUEUE = 0;
1236 static final int FIFO_QUEUE = 1;
1237 static final int SHARED_QUEUE = -1;
1238
1239 // Instance fields
1240
1241 /*
1242 * Field layout order in this class tends to matter more than one
1243 * would like. Runtime layout order is only loosely related to
1244 * declaration order and may differ across JVMs, but the following
1245 * empirically works OK on current JVMs.
1246 */
1247
1248 volatile long ctl; // main pool control
1249 final int parallelism; // parallelism level
1250 final int localMode; // per-worker scheduling mode
1251 final int submitMask; // submit queue index bound
1252 int nextSeed; // for initializing worker seeds
1253 volatile int runState; // shutdown status and seq
1254 WorkQueue[] workQueues; // main registry
1255 final Mutex lock; // for registration
1256 final Condition termination; // for awaitTermination
1257 final ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory factory; // factory for new workers
1258 final Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler ueh; // per-worker UEH
1259 final AtomicLong stealCount; // collect counts when terminated
1260 final AtomicInteger nextWorkerNumber; // to create worker name string
1261 final String workerNamePrefix; // to create worker name string
1262
1263 // Creating, registering, and deregistering workers
1264
1265 /**
1266 * Tries to create and start a worker
1267 */
1268 private void addWorker() {
1269 Throwable ex = null;
1270 ForkJoinWorkerThread wt = null;
1271 try {
1272 if ((wt = factory.newThread(this)) != null) {
1273 wt.start();
1274 return;
1275 }
1276 } catch (Throwable e) {
1277 ex = e;
1278 }
1279 deregisterWorker(wt, ex); // adjust counts etc on failure
1280 }
1281
1282 /**
1283 * Callback from ForkJoinWorkerThread constructor to assign a
1284 * public name. This must be separate from registerWorker because
1285 * it is called during the "super" constructor call in
1286 * ForkJoinWorkerThread.
1287 */
1288 final String nextWorkerName() {
1289 return workerNamePrefix.concat
1290 (Integer.toString(nextWorkerNumber.addAndGet(1)));
1291 }
1292
1293 /**
1294 * Callback from ForkJoinWorkerThread constructor to establish its
1295 * poolIndex and record its WorkQueue. To avoid scanning bias due
1296 * to packing entries in front of the workQueues array, we treat
1297 * the array as a simple power-of-two hash table using per-thread
1298 * seed as hash, expanding as needed.
1299 *
1300 * @param w the worker's queue
1301 */
1302
1303 final void registerWorker(WorkQueue w) {
1304 Mutex lock = this.lock;
1305 lock.lock();
1306 try {
1307 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues;
1308 if (w != null && ws != null) { // skip on shutdown/failure
1309 int rs, n = ws.length, m = n - 1;
1310 int s = nextSeed += SEED_INCREMENT; // rarely-colliding sequence
1311 w.seed = (s == 0) ? 1 : s; // ensure non-zero seed
1312 int r = (s << 1) | 1; // use odd-numbered indices
1313 if (ws[r &= m] != null) { // collision
1314 int probes = 0; // step by approx half size
1315 int step = (n <= 4) ? 2 : ((n >>> 1) & SQMASK) + 2;
1316 while (ws[r = (r + step) & m] != null) {
1317 if (++probes >= n) {
1318 workQueues = ws = Arrays.copyOf(ws, n <<= 1);
1319 m = n - 1;
1320 probes = 0;
1321 }
1322 }
1323 }
1324 w.eventCount = w.poolIndex = r; // establish before recording
1325 ws[r] = w; // also update seq
1326 runState = ((rs = runState) & SHUTDOWN) | ((rs + 2) & ~SHUTDOWN);
1327 }
1328 } finally {
1329 lock.unlock();
1330 }
1331 }
1332
1333 /**
1334 * Final callback from terminating worker, as well as upon failure
1335 * to construct or start a worker in addWorker. Removes record of
1336 * worker from array, and adjusts counts. If pool is shutting
1337 * down, tries to complete termination.
1338 *
1339 * @param wt the worker thread or null if addWorker failed
1340 * @param ex the exception causing failure, or null if none
1341 */
1342 final void deregisterWorker(ForkJoinWorkerThread wt, Throwable ex) {
1343 Mutex lock = this.lock;
1344 WorkQueue w = null;
1345 if (wt != null && (w = wt.workQueue) != null) {
1346 w.runState = -1; // ensure runState is set
1347 stealCount.getAndAdd(w.totalSteals + w.nsteals);
1348 int idx = w.poolIndex;
1349 lock.lock();
1350 try { // remove record from array
1351 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues;
1352 if (ws != null && idx >= 0 && idx < ws.length && ws[idx] == w)
1353 ws[idx] = null;
1354 } finally {
1355 lock.unlock();
1356 }
1357 }
1358
1359 long c; // adjust ctl counts
1360 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong
1361 (this, CTL, c = ctl, (((c - AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) |
1362 ((c - TC_UNIT) & TC_MASK) |
1363 (c & ~(AC_MASK|TC_MASK)))));
1364
1365 if (!tryTerminate(false, false) && w != null) {
1366 w.cancelAll(); // cancel remaining tasks
1367 if (w.array != null) // suppress signal if never ran
1368 signalWork(); // wake up or create replacement
1369 if (ex == null) // help clean refs on way out
1370 ForkJoinTask.helpExpungeStaleExceptions();
1371 }
1372
1373 if (ex != null) // rethrow
1374 U.throwException(ex);
1375 }
1376
1377
1378 // Submissions
1379
1380 /**
1381 * Unless shutting down, adds the given task to a submission queue
1382 * at submitter's current queue index (modulo submission
1383 * range). If no queue exists at the index, one is created. If
1384 * the queue is busy, another index is randomly chosen. The
1385 * submitMask bounds the effective number of queues to the
1386 * (nearest power of two for) parallelism level.
1387 *
1388 * @param task the task. Caller must ensure non-null.
1389 */
1390 private void doSubmit(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1391 Submitter s = submitters.get();
1392 for (int r = s.seed, m = submitMask;;) {
1393 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue q;
1394 int k = r & m & SQMASK; // use only even indices
1395 if (runState < 0 || (ws = workQueues) == null || ws.length <= k)
1396 throw new RejectedExecutionException(); // shutting down
1397 else if ((q = ws[k]) == null) { // create new queue
1398 WorkQueue nq = new WorkQueue(this, null, SHARED_QUEUE);
1399 Mutex lock = this.lock; // construct outside lock
1400 lock.lock();
1401 try { // recheck under lock
1402 int rs = runState; // to update seq
1403 if (ws == workQueues && ws[k] == null) {
1404 ws[k] = nq;
1405 runState = ((rs & SHUTDOWN) | ((rs + 2) & ~SHUTDOWN));
1406 }
1407 } finally {
1408 lock.unlock();
1409 }
1410 }
1411 else if (q.trySharedPush(task)) {
1412 signalWork();
1413 return;
1414 }
1415 else if (m > 1) { // move to a different index
1416 r ^= r << 13; // same xorshift as WorkQueues
1417 r ^= r >>> 17;
1418 s.seed = r ^= r << 5;
1419 }
1420 else
1421 Thread.yield(); // yield if no alternatives
1422 }
1423 }
1424
1425 // Maintaining ctl counts
1426
1427 /**
1428 * Increments active count; mainly called upon return from blocking.
1429 */
1430 final void incrementActiveCount() {
1431 long c;
1432 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c = ctl, c + AC_UNIT));
1433 }
1434
1435 /**
1436 * Tries to activate or create a worker if too few are active.
1437 */
1438 final void signalWork() {
1439 long c; int u;
1440 while ((u = (int)((c = ctl) >>> 32)) < 0) { // too few active
1441 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues; int e, i; WorkQueue w; Thread p;
1442 if ((e = (int)c) > 0) { // at least one waiting
1443 if (ws != null && (i = e & SMASK) < ws.length &&
1444 (w = ws[i]) != null && w.eventCount == (e | INT_SIGN)) {
1445 long nc = (((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK)) |
1446 ((long)(u + UAC_UNIT) << 32));
1447 if (U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc)) {
1448 w.eventCount = (e + E_SEQ) & E_MASK;
1449 if ((p = w.parker) != null)
1450 U.unpark(p); // activate and release
1451 break;
1452 }
1453 }
1454 else
1455 break;
1456 }
1457 else if (e == 0 && (u & SHORT_SIGN) != 0) { // too few total
1458 long nc = (long)(((u + UTC_UNIT) & UTC_MASK) |
1459 ((u + UAC_UNIT) & UAC_MASK)) << 32;
1460 if (U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc)) {
1461 addWorker();
1462 break;
1463 }
1464 }
1465 else
1466 break;
1467 }
1468 }
1469
1470 // Scanning for tasks
1471
1472 /**
1473 * Top-level runloop for workers, called by ForkJoinWorkerThread.run.
1474 */
1475 final void runWorker(WorkQueue w) {
1476 w.growArray(false); // initialize queue array in this thread
1477 do { w.runTask(scan(w)); } while (w.runState >= 0);
1478 }
1479
1480 /**
1481 * Scans for and, if found, returns one task, else possibly
1482 * inactivates the worker. This method operates on single reads of
1483 * volatile state and is designed to be re-invoked continuously,
1484 * in part because it returns upon detecting inconsistencies,
1485 * contention, or state changes that indicate possible success on
1486 * re-invocation.
1487 *
1488 * The scan searches for tasks across a random permutation of
1489 * queues (starting at a random index and stepping by a random
1490 * relative prime, checking each at least once). The scan
1491 * terminates upon either finding a non-empty queue, or completing
1492 * the sweep. If the worker is not inactivated, it takes and
1493 * returns a task from this queue. On failure to find a task, we
1494 * take one of the following actions, after which the caller will
1495 * retry calling this method unless terminated.
1496 *
1497 * * If pool is terminating, terminate the worker.
1498 *
1499 * * If not a complete sweep, try to release a waiting worker. If
1500 * the scan terminated because the worker is inactivated, then the
1501 * released worker will often be the calling worker, and it can
1502 * succeed obtaining a task on the next call. Or maybe it is
1503 * another worker, but with same net effect. Releasing in other
1504 * cases as well ensures that we have enough workers running.
1505 *
1506 * * If not already enqueued, try to inactivate and enqueue the
1507 * worker on wait queue. Or, if inactivating has caused the pool
1508 * to be quiescent, relay to idleAwaitWork to check for
1509 * termination and possibly shrink pool.
1510 *
1511 * * If already inactive, and the caller has run a task since the
1512 * last empty scan, return (to allow rescan) unless others are
1513 * also inactivated. Field WorkQueue.rescans counts down on each
1514 * scan to ensure eventual inactivation and blocking.
1515 *
1516 * * If already enqueued and none of the above apply, park
1517 * awaiting signal,
1518 *
1519 * @param w the worker (via its WorkQueue)
1520 * @return a task or null of none found
1521 */
1522 private final ForkJoinTask<?> scan(WorkQueue w) {
1523 WorkQueue[] ws; // first update random seed
1524 int r = w.seed; r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; w.seed = r ^= r << 5;
1525 int rs = runState, m; // volatile read order matters
1526 if ((ws = workQueues) != null && (m = ws.length - 1) > 0) {
1527 int ec = w.eventCount; // ec is negative if inactive
1528 int step = (r >>> 16) | 1; // relative prime
1529 for (int j = (m + 1) << 2; ; r += step) {
1530 WorkQueue q; ForkJoinTask<?> t; ForkJoinTask<?>[] a; int b;
1531 if ((q = ws[r & m]) != null && (b = q.base) - q.top < 0 &&
1532 (a = q.array) != null) { // probably nonempty
1533 int i = (((a.length - 1) & b) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
1534 t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, i);
1535 if (q.base == b && ec >= 0 && t != null &&
1536 U.compareAndSwapObject(a, i, t, null)) {
1537 q.base = b + 1; // specialization of pollAt
1538 return t;
1539 }
1540 else if (ec < 0 || j <= m) {
1541 rs = 0; // mark scan as imcomplete
1542 break; // caller can retry after release
1543 }
1544 }
1545 if (--j < 0)
1546 break;
1547 }
1548 long c = ctl; int e = (int)c, a = (int)(c >> AC_SHIFT), nr, ns;
1549 if (e < 0) // decode ctl on empty scan
1550 w.runState = -1; // pool is terminating
1551 else if (rs == 0 || rs != runState) { // incomplete scan
1552 WorkQueue v; Thread p; // try to release a waiter
1553 if (e > 0 && a < 0 && w.eventCount == ec &&
1554 (v = ws[e & m]) != null && v.eventCount == (e | INT_SIGN)) {
1555 long nc = ((long)(v.nextWait & E_MASK) |
1556 ((c + AC_UNIT) & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK)));
1557 if (ctl == c && U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc)) {
1558 v.eventCount = (e + E_SEQ) & E_MASK;
1559 if ((p = v.parker) != null)
1560 U.unpark(p);
1561 }
1562 }
1563 }
1564 else if (ec >= 0) { // try to enqueue/inactivate
1565 long nc = (long)ec | ((c - AC_UNIT) & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK));
1566 w.nextWait = e;
1567 w.eventCount = ec | INT_SIGN; // mark as inactive
1568 if (ctl != c || !U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc))
1569 w.eventCount = ec; // unmark on CAS failure
1570 else {
1571 if ((ns = w.nsteals) != 0) {
1572 w.nsteals = 0; // set rescans if ran task
1573 w.rescans = (a > 0) ? 0 : a + parallelism;
1574 w.totalSteals += ns;
1575 }
1576 if (a == 1 - parallelism) // quiescent
1577 idleAwaitWork(w, nc, c);
1578 }
1579 }
1580 else if (w.eventCount < 0) { // already queued
1581 if ((nr = w.rescans) > 0) { // continue rescanning
1582 int ac = a + parallelism;
1583 if (((w.rescans = (ac < nr) ? ac : nr - 1) & 3) == 0)
1584 Thread.yield(); // yield before block
1585 }
1586 else {
1587 Thread.interrupted(); // clear status
1588 Thread wt = Thread.currentThread();
1589 U.putObject(wt, PARKBLOCKER, this);
1590 w.parker = wt; // emulate LockSupport.park
1591 if (w.eventCount < 0) // recheck
1592 U.park(false, 0L);
1593 w.parker = null;
1594 U.putObject(wt, PARKBLOCKER, null);
1595 }
1596 }
1597 }
1598 return null;
1599 }
1600
1601 /**
1602 * If inactivating worker w has caused the pool to become
1603 * quiescent, checks for pool termination, and, so long as this is
1604 * not the only worker, waits for event for up to SHRINK_RATE
1605 * nanosecs. On timeout, if ctl has not changed, terminates the
1606 * worker, which will in turn wake up another worker to possibly
1607 * repeat this process.
1608 *
1609 * @param w the calling worker
1610 * @param currentCtl the ctl value triggering possible quiescence
1611 * @param prevCtl the ctl value to restore if thread is terminated
1612 */
1613 private void idleAwaitWork(WorkQueue w, long currentCtl, long prevCtl) {
1614 if (w.eventCount < 0 && !tryTerminate(false, false) &&
1615 (int)prevCtl != 0 && !hasQueuedSubmissions() && ctl == currentCtl) {
1616 Thread wt = Thread.currentThread();
1617 Thread.yield(); // yield before block
1618 while (ctl == currentCtl) {
1619 long startTime = System.nanoTime();
1620 Thread.interrupted(); // timed variant of version in scan()
1621 U.putObject(wt, PARKBLOCKER, this);
1622 w.parker = wt;
1623 if (ctl == currentCtl)
1624 U.park(false, SHRINK_RATE);
1625 w.parker = null;
1626 U.putObject(wt, PARKBLOCKER, null);
1627 if (ctl != currentCtl)
1628 break;
1629 if (System.nanoTime() - startTime >= SHRINK_TIMEOUT &&
1630 U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, currentCtl, prevCtl)) {
1631 w.eventCount = (w.eventCount + E_SEQ) | E_MASK;
1632 w.runState = -1; // shrink
1633 break;
1634 }
1635 }
1636 }
1637 }
1638
1639 /**
1640 * Tries to locate and execute tasks for a stealer of the given
1641 * task, or in turn one of its stealers, Traces currentSteal ->
1642 * currentJoin links looking for a thread working on a descendant
1643 * of the given task and with a non-empty queue to steal back and
1644 * execute tasks from. The first call to this method upon a
1645 * waiting join will often entail scanning/search, (which is OK
1646 * because the joiner has nothing better to do), but this method
1647 * leaves hints in workers to speed up subsequent calls. The
1648 * implementation is very branchy to cope with potential
1649 * inconsistencies or loops encountering chains that are stale,
1650 * unknown, or so long that they are likely cyclic. All of these
1651 * cases are dealt with by just retrying by caller.
1652 *
1653 * @param joiner the joining worker
1654 * @param task the task to join
1655 * @return true if found or ran a task (and so is immediately retryable)
1656 */
1657 private boolean tryHelpStealer(WorkQueue joiner, ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1658 WorkQueue[] ws;
1659 int m, depth = MAX_HELP; // remaining chain depth
1660 boolean progress = false;
1661 if ((ws = workQueues) != null && (m = ws.length - 1) > 0 &&
1662 task.status >= 0) {
1663 ForkJoinTask<?> subtask = task; // current target
1664 outer: for (WorkQueue j = joiner;;) {
1665 WorkQueue stealer = null; // find stealer of subtask
1666 WorkQueue v = ws[j.stealHint & m]; // try hint
1667 if (v != null && v.currentSteal == subtask)
1668 stealer = v;
1669 else { // scan
1670 for (int i = 1; i <= m; i += 2) {
1671 if ((v = ws[i]) != null && v.currentSteal == subtask &&
1672 v != joiner) {
1673 stealer = v;
1674 j.stealHint = i; // save hint
1675 break;
1676 }
1677 }
1678 if (stealer == null)
1679 break;
1680 }
1681
1682 for (WorkQueue q = stealer;;) { // try to help stealer
1683 ForkJoinTask[] a; ForkJoinTask<?> t; int b;
1684 if (task.status < 0)
1685 break outer;
1686 if ((b = q.base) - q.top < 0 && (a = q.array) != null) {
1687 progress = true;
1688 int i = (((a.length - 1) & b) << ASHIFT) + ABASE;
1689 t = (ForkJoinTask<?>)U.getObjectVolatile(a, i);
1690 if (subtask.status < 0) // must recheck before taking
1691 break outer;
1692 if (t != null &&
1693 q.base == b &&
1694 U.compareAndSwapObject(a, i, t, null)) {
1695 q.base = b + 1;
1696 joiner.runSubtask(t);
1697 }
1698 else if (q.base == b)
1699 break outer; // possibly stalled
1700 }
1701 else { // descend
1702 ForkJoinTask<?> next = stealer.currentJoin;
1703 if (--depth <= 0 || subtask.status < 0 ||
1704 next == null || next == subtask)
1705 break outer; // stale, dead-end, or cyclic
1706 subtask = next;
1707 j = stealer;
1708 break;
1709 }
1710 }
1711 }
1712 }
1713 return progress;
1714 }
1715
1716 /**
1717 * If task is at base of some steal queue, steals and executes it.
1718 *
1719 * @param joiner the joining worker
1720 * @param task the task
1721 */
1722 private void tryPollForAndExec(WorkQueue joiner, ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1723 WorkQueue[] ws;
1724 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
1725 for (int j = 1; j < ws.length && task.status >= 0; j += 2) {
1726 WorkQueue q = ws[j];
1727 if (q != null && q.pollFor(task)) {
1728 joiner.runSubtask(task);
1729 break;
1730 }
1731 }
1732 }
1733 }
1734
1735 /**
1736 * Tries to decrement active count (sometimes implicitly) and
1737 * possibly release or create a compensating worker in preparation
1738 * for blocking. Fails on contention or termination. Otherwise,
1739 * adds a new thread if no idle workers are available and either
1740 * pool would become completely starved or: (at least half
1741 * starved, and fewer than 50% spares exist, and there is at least
1742 * one task apparently available). Even though the availability
1743 * check requires a full scan, it is worthwhile in reducing false
1744 * alarms.
1745 *
1746 * @param task if non-null, a task being waited for
1747 * @param blocker if non-null, a blocker being waited for
1748 * @return true if the caller can block, else should recheck and retry
1749 */
1750 final boolean tryCompensate(ForkJoinTask<?> task, ManagedBlocker blocker) {
1751 int pc = parallelism, e;
1752 long c = ctl;
1753 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues;
1754 if ((e = (int)c) >= 0 && ws != null) {
1755 int u, a, ac, hc;
1756 int tc = (short)((u = (int)(c >>> 32)) >>> UTC_SHIFT) + pc;
1757 boolean replace = false;
1758 if ((a = u >> UAC_SHIFT) <= 0) {
1759 if ((ac = a + pc) <= 1)
1760 replace = true;
1761 else if ((e > 0 || (task != null &&
1762 ac <= (hc = pc >>> 1) && tc < pc + hc))) {
1763 WorkQueue w;
1764 for (int j = 0; j < ws.length; ++j) {
1765 if ((w = ws[j]) != null && !w.isEmpty()) {
1766 replace = true;
1767 break; // in compensation range and tasks available
1768 }
1769 }
1770 }
1771 }
1772 if ((task == null || task.status >= 0) && // recheck need to block
1773 (blocker == null || !blocker.isReleasable()) && ctl == c) {
1774 if (!replace) { // no compensation
1775 long nc = ((c - AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) | (c & ~AC_MASK);
1776 if (U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc))
1777 return true;
1778 }
1779 else if (e != 0) { // release an idle worker
1780 WorkQueue w; Thread p; int i;
1781 if ((i = e & SMASK) < ws.length && (w = ws[i]) != null) {
1782 long nc = ((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK) |
1783 (c & (AC_MASK|TC_MASK)));
1784 if (w.eventCount == (e | INT_SIGN) &&
1785 U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc)) {
1786 w.eventCount = (e + E_SEQ) & E_MASK;
1787 if ((p = w.parker) != null)
1788 U.unpark(p);
1789 return true;
1790 }
1791 }
1792 }
1793 else if (tc < MAX_CAP) { // create replacement
1794 long nc = ((c + TC_UNIT) & TC_MASK) | (c & ~TC_MASK);
1795 if (U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, nc)) {
1796 addWorker();
1797 return true;
1798 }
1799 }
1800 }
1801 }
1802 return false;
1803 }
1804
1805 /**
1806 * Helps and/or blocks until the given task is done.
1807 *
1808 * @param joiner the joining worker
1809 * @param task the task
1810 * @return task status on exit
1811 */
1812 final int awaitJoin(WorkQueue joiner, ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1813 int s;
1814 ForkJoinTask<?> prevJoin = joiner.currentJoin;
1815 if ((s = task.status) >= 0) {
1816 joiner.currentJoin = task;
1817 long startTime = 0L;
1818 for (int k = 0;;) {
1819 if ((joiner.isEmpty() ? // try to help
1820 !tryHelpStealer(joiner, task) :
1821 !joiner.tryRemoveAndExec(task))) {
1822 if (k == 0) {
1823 startTime = System.nanoTime();
1824 tryPollForAndExec(joiner, task); // check uncommon case
1825 }
1826 else if ((k & (MAX_HELP - 1)) == 0 &&
1827 System.nanoTime() - startTime >=
1828 COMPENSATION_DELAY &&
1829 tryCompensate(task, null)) {
1830 if (task.trySetSignal() && task.status >= 0) {
1831 synchronized (task) {
1832 if (task.status >= 0) {
1833 try { // see ForkJoinTask
1834 task.wait(); // for explanation
1835 } catch (InterruptedException ie) {
1836 }
1837 }
1838 else
1839 task.notifyAll();
1840 }
1841 }
1842 long c; // re-activate
1843 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong
1844 (this, CTL, c = ctl, c + AC_UNIT));
1845 }
1846 }
1847 if ((s = task.status) < 0) {
1848 joiner.currentJoin = prevJoin;
1849 break;
1850 }
1851 else if ((k++ & (MAX_HELP - 1)) == MAX_HELP >>> 1)
1852 Thread.yield(); // for politeness
1853 }
1854 }
1855 return s;
1856 }
1857
1858 /**
1859 * Stripped-down variant of awaitJoin used by timed joins. Tries
1860 * to help join only while there is continuous progress. (Caller
1861 * will then enter a timed wait.)
1862 *
1863 * @param joiner the joining worker
1864 * @param task the task
1865 * @return task status on exit
1866 */
1867 final int helpJoinOnce(WorkQueue joiner, ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
1868 int s;
1869 while ((s = task.status) >= 0 &&
1870 (joiner.isEmpty() ?
1871 tryHelpStealer(joiner, task) :
1872 joiner.tryRemoveAndExec(task)))
1873 ;
1874 return s;
1875 }
1876
1877 /**
1878 * Returns a (probably) non-empty steal queue, if one is found
1879 * during a random, then cyclic scan, else null. This method must
1880 * be retried by caller if, by the time it tries to use the queue,
1881 * it is empty.
1882 */
1883 private WorkQueue findNonEmptyStealQueue(WorkQueue w) {
1884 // Similar to loop in scan(), but ignoring submissions
1885 int r = w.seed; r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; w.seed = r ^= r << 5;
1886 int step = (r >>> 16) | 1;
1887 for (WorkQueue[] ws;;) {
1888 int rs = runState, m;
1889 if ((ws = workQueues) == null || (m = ws.length - 1) < 1)
1890 return null;
1891 for (int j = (m + 1) << 2; ; r += step) {
1892 WorkQueue q = ws[((r << 1) | 1) & m];
1893 if (q != null && !q.isEmpty())
1894 return q;
1895 else if (--j < 0) {
1896 if (runState == rs)
1897 return null;
1898 break;
1899 }
1900 }
1901 }
1902 }
1903
1904 /**
1905 * Runs tasks until {@code isQuiescent()}. We piggyback on
1906 * active count ctl maintenance, but rather than blocking
1907 * when tasks cannot be found, we rescan until all others cannot
1908 * find tasks either.
1909 */
1910 final void helpQuiescePool(WorkQueue w) {
1911 for (boolean active = true;;) {
1912 ForkJoinTask<?> localTask; // exhaust local queue
1913 while ((localTask = w.nextLocalTask()) != null)
1914 localTask.doExec();
1915 WorkQueue q = findNonEmptyStealQueue(w);
1916 if (q != null) {
1917 ForkJoinTask<?> t; int b;
1918 if (!active) { // re-establish active count
1919 long c;
1920 active = true;
1921 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong
1922 (this, CTL, c = ctl, c + AC_UNIT));
1923 }
1924 if ((b = q.base) - q.top < 0 && (t = q.pollAt(b)) != null)
1925 w.runSubtask(t);
1926 }
1927 else {
1928 long c;
1929 if (active) { // decrement active count without queuing
1930 active = false;
1931 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong
1932 (this, CTL, c = ctl, c -= AC_UNIT));
1933 }
1934 else
1935 c = ctl; // re-increment on exit
1936 if ((int)(c >> AC_SHIFT) + parallelism == 0) {
1937 do {} while (!U.compareAndSwapLong
1938 (this, CTL, c = ctl, c + AC_UNIT));
1939 break;
1940 }
1941 }
1942 }
1943 }
1944
1945 /**
1946 * Gets and removes a local or stolen task for the given worker.
1947 *
1948 * @return a task, if available
1949 */
1950 final ForkJoinTask<?> nextTaskFor(WorkQueue w) {
1951 for (ForkJoinTask<?> t;;) {
1952 WorkQueue q; int b;
1953 if ((t = w.nextLocalTask()) != null)
1954 return t;
1955 if ((q = findNonEmptyStealQueue(w)) == null)
1956 return null;
1957 if ((b = q.base) - q.top < 0 && (t = q.pollAt(b)) != null)
1958 return t;
1959 }
1960 }
1961
1962 /**
1963 * Returns the approximate (non-atomic) number of idle threads per
1964 * active thread to offset steal queue size for method
1965 * ForkJoinTask.getSurplusQueuedTaskCount().
1966 */
1967 final int idlePerActive() {
1968 // Approximate at powers of two for small values, saturate past 4
1969 int p = parallelism;
1970 int a = p + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT);
1971 return (a > (p >>>= 1) ? 0 :
1972 a > (p >>>= 1) ? 1 :
1973 a > (p >>>= 1) ? 2 :
1974 a > (p >>>= 1) ? 4 :
1975 8);
1976 }
1977
1978 // Termination
1979
1980 /**
1981 * Possibly initiates and/or completes termination. The caller
1982 * triggering termination runs three passes through workQueues:
1983 * (0) Setting termination status, followed by wakeups of queued
1984 * workers; (1) cancelling all tasks; (2) interrupting lagging
1985 * threads (likely in external tasks, but possibly also blocked in
1986 * joins). Each pass repeats previous steps because of potential
1987 * lagging thread creation.
1988 *
1989 * @param now if true, unconditionally terminate, else only
1990 * if no work and no active workers
1991 * @param enable if true, enable shutdown when next possible
1992 * @return true if now terminating or terminated
1993 */
1994 private boolean tryTerminate(boolean now, boolean enable) {
1995 Mutex lock = this.lock;
1996 for (long c;;) {
1997 if (((c = ctl) & STOP_BIT) != 0) { // already terminating
1998 if ((short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) == -parallelism) {
1999 lock.lock(); // don't need try/finally
2000 termination.signalAll(); // signal when 0 workers
2001 lock.unlock();
2002 }
2003 return true;
2004 }
2005 if (runState >= 0) { // not yet enabled
2006 if (!enable)
2007 return false;
2008 lock.lock();
2009 runState |= SHUTDOWN;
2010 lock.unlock();
2011 }
2012 if (!now) { // check if idle & no tasks
2013 if ((int)(c >> AC_SHIFT) != -parallelism ||
2014 hasQueuedSubmissions())
2015 return false;
2016 // Check for unqueued inactive workers. One pass suffices.
2017 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues; WorkQueue w;
2018 if (ws != null) {
2019 for (int i = 1; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2020 if ((w = ws[i]) != null && w.eventCount >= 0)
2021 return false;
2022 }
2023 }
2024 }
2025 if (U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, c, c | STOP_BIT)) {
2026 for (int pass = 0; pass < 3; ++pass) {
2027 WorkQueue[] ws = workQueues;
2028 if (ws != null) {
2029 WorkQueue w;
2030 int n = ws.length;
2031 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
2032 if ((w = ws[i]) != null) {
2033 w.runState = -1;
2034 if (pass > 0) {
2035 w.cancelAll();
2036 if (pass > 1)
2037 w.interruptOwner();
2038 }
2039 }
2040 }
2041 // Wake up workers parked on event queue
2042 int i, e; long cc; Thread p;
2043 while ((e = (int)(cc = ctl) & E_MASK) != 0 &&
2044 (i = e & SMASK) < n &&
2045 (w = ws[i]) != null) {
2046 long nc = ((long)(w.nextWait & E_MASK) |
2047 ((cc + AC_UNIT) & AC_MASK) |
2048 (cc & (TC_MASK|STOP_BIT)));
2049 if (w.eventCount == (e | INT_SIGN) &&
2050 U.compareAndSwapLong(this, CTL, cc, nc)) {
2051 w.eventCount = (e + E_SEQ) & E_MASK;
2052 w.runState = -1;
2053 if ((p = w.parker) != null)
2054 U.unpark(p);
2055 }
2056 }
2057 }
2058 }
2059 }
2060 }
2061 }
2062
2063 // Exported methods
2064
2065 // Constructors
2066
2067 /**
2068 * Creates a {@code ForkJoinPool} with parallelism equal to {@link
2069 * java.lang.Runtime#availableProcessors}, using the {@linkplain
2070 * #defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory default thread factory},
2071 * no UncaughtExceptionHandler, and non-async LIFO processing mode.
2072 *
2073 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and
2074 * the caller is not permitted to modify threads
2075 * because it does not hold {@link
2076 * java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
2077 */
2078 public ForkJoinPool() {
2079 this(Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors(),
2080 defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory, null, false);
2081 }
2082
2083 /**
2084 * Creates a {@code ForkJoinPool} with the indicated parallelism
2085 * level, the {@linkplain
2086 * #defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory default thread factory},
2087 * no UncaughtExceptionHandler, and non-async LIFO processing mode.
2088 *
2089 * @param parallelism the parallelism level
2090 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if parallelism less than or
2091 * equal to zero, or greater than implementation limit
2092 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and
2093 * the caller is not permitted to modify threads
2094 * because it does not hold {@link
2095 * java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
2096 */
2097 public ForkJoinPool(int parallelism) {
2098 this(parallelism, defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory, null, false);
2099 }
2100
2101 /**
2102 * Creates a {@code ForkJoinPool} with the given parameters.
2103 *
2104 * @param parallelism the parallelism level. For default value,
2105 * use {@link java.lang.Runtime#availableProcessors}.
2106 * @param factory the factory for creating new threads. For default value,
2107 * use {@link #defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory}.
2108 * @param handler the handler for internal worker threads that
2109 * terminate due to unrecoverable errors encountered while executing
2110 * tasks. For default value, use {@code null}.
2111 * @param asyncMode if true,
2112 * establishes local first-in-first-out scheduling mode for forked
2113 * tasks that are never joined. This mode may be more appropriate
2114 * than default locally stack-based mode in applications in which
2115 * worker threads only process event-style asynchronous tasks.
2116 * For default value, use {@code false}.
2117 * @throws IllegalArgumentException if parallelism less than or
2118 * equal to zero, or greater than implementation limit
2119 * @throws NullPointerException if the factory is null
2120 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and
2121 * the caller is not permitted to modify threads
2122 * because it does not hold {@link
2123 * java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
2124 */
2125 public ForkJoinPool(int parallelism,
2126 ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory factory,
2127 Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler handler,
2128 boolean asyncMode) {
2129 checkPermission();
2130 if (factory == null)
2131 throw new NullPointerException();
2132 if (parallelism <= 0 || parallelism > MAX_CAP)
2133 throw new IllegalArgumentException();
2134 this.parallelism = parallelism;
2135 this.factory = factory;
2136 this.ueh = handler;
2137 this.localMode = asyncMode ? FIFO_QUEUE : LIFO_QUEUE;
2138 long np = (long)(-parallelism); // offset ctl counts
2139 this.ctl = ((np << AC_SHIFT) & AC_MASK) | ((np << TC_SHIFT) & TC_MASK);
2140 // Use nearest power 2 for workQueues size. See Hackers Delight sec 3.2.
2141 int n = parallelism - 1;
2142 n |= n >>> 1; n |= n >>> 2; n |= n >>> 4; n |= n >>> 8; n |= n >>> 16;
2143 int size = (n + 1) << 1; // #slots = 2*#workers
2144 this.submitMask = size - 1; // room for max # of submit queues
2145 this.workQueues = new WorkQueue[size];
2146 this.termination = (this.lock = new Mutex()).newCondition();
2147 this.stealCount = new AtomicLong();
2148 this.nextWorkerNumber = new AtomicInteger();
2149 int pn = poolNumberGenerator.incrementAndGet();
2150 StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder("ForkJoinPool-");
2151 sb.append(Integer.toString(pn));
2152 sb.append("-worker-");
2153 this.workerNamePrefix = sb.toString();
2154 lock.lock();
2155 this.runState = 1; // set init flag
2156 lock.unlock();
2157 }
2158
2159 // Execution methods
2160
2161 /**
2162 * Performs the given task, returning its result upon completion.
2163 * If the computation encounters an unchecked Exception or Error,
2164 * it is rethrown as the outcome of this invocation. Rethrown
2165 * exceptions behave in the same way as regular exceptions, but,
2166 * when possible, contain stack traces (as displayed for example
2167 * using {@code ex.printStackTrace()}) of both the current thread
2168 * as well as the thread actually encountering the exception;
2169 * minimally only the latter.
2170 *
2171 * @param task the task
2172 * @return the task's result
2173 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2174 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2175 * scheduled for execution
2176 */
2177 public <T> T invoke(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
2178 if (task == null)
2179 throw new NullPointerException();
2180 doSubmit(task);
2181 return task.join();
2182 }
2183
2184 /**
2185 * Arranges for (asynchronous) execution of the given task.
2186 *
2187 * @param task the task
2188 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2189 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2190 * scheduled for execution
2191 */
2192 public void execute(ForkJoinTask<?> task) {
2193 if (task == null)
2194 throw new NullPointerException();
2195 doSubmit(task);
2196 }
2197
2198 // AbstractExecutorService methods
2199
2200 /**
2201 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2202 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2203 * scheduled for execution
2204 */
2205 public void execute(Runnable task) {
2206 if (task == null)
2207 throw new NullPointerException();
2208 ForkJoinTask<?> job;
2209 if (task instanceof ForkJoinTask<?>) // avoid re-wrap
2210 job = (ForkJoinTask<?>) task;
2211 else
2212 job = new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedRunnableAction(task);
2213 doSubmit(job);
2214 }
2215
2216 /**
2217 * Submits a ForkJoinTask for execution.
2218 *
2219 * @param task the task to submit
2220 * @return the task
2221 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2222 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2223 * scheduled for execution
2224 */
2225 public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(ForkJoinTask<T> task) {
2226 if (task == null)
2227 throw new NullPointerException();
2228 doSubmit(task);
2229 return task;
2230 }
2231
2232 /**
2233 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2234 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2235 * scheduled for execution
2236 */
2237 public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(Callable<T> task) {
2238 ForkJoinTask<T> job = new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedCallable<T>(task);
2239 doSubmit(job);
2240 return job;
2241 }
2242
2243 /**
2244 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2245 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2246 * scheduled for execution
2247 */
2248 public <T> ForkJoinTask<T> submit(Runnable task, T result) {
2249 ForkJoinTask<T> job = new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedRunnable<T>(task, result);
2250 doSubmit(job);
2251 return job;
2252 }
2253
2254 /**
2255 * @throws NullPointerException if the task is null
2256 * @throws RejectedExecutionException if the task cannot be
2257 * scheduled for execution
2258 */
2259 public ForkJoinTask<?> submit(Runnable task) {
2260 if (task == null)
2261 throw new NullPointerException();
2262 ForkJoinTask<?> job;
2263 if (task instanceof ForkJoinTask<?>) // avoid re-wrap
2264 job = (ForkJoinTask<?>) task;
2265 else
2266 job = new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedRunnableAction(task);
2267 doSubmit(job);
2268 return job;
2269 }
2270
2271 /**
2272 * @throws NullPointerException {@inheritDoc}
2273 * @throws RejectedExecutionException {@inheritDoc}
2274 */
2275 public <T> List<Future<T>> invokeAll(Collection<? extends Callable<T>> tasks) {
2276 // In previous versions of this class, this method constructed
2277 // a task to run ForkJoinTask.invokeAll, but now external
2278 // invocation of multiple tasks is at least as efficient.
2279 List<ForkJoinTask<T>> fs = new ArrayList<ForkJoinTask<T>>(tasks.size());
2280 // Workaround needed because method wasn't declared with
2281 // wildcards in return type but should have been.
2282 @SuppressWarnings({"unchecked", "rawtypes"})
2283 List<Future<T>> futures = (List<Future<T>>) (List) fs;
2284
2285 boolean done = false;
2286 try {
2287 for (Callable<T> t : tasks) {
2288 ForkJoinTask<T> f = new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedCallable<T>(t);
2289 doSubmit(f);
2290 fs.add(f);
2291 }
2292 for (ForkJoinTask<T> f : fs)
2293 f.quietlyJoin();
2294 done = true;
2295 return futures;
2296 } finally {
2297 if (!done)
2298 for (ForkJoinTask<T> f : fs)
2299 f.cancel(false);
2300 }
2301 }
2302
2303 /**
2304 * Returns the factory used for constructing new workers.
2305 *
2306 * @return the factory used for constructing new workers
2307 */
2308 public ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory getFactory() {
2309 return factory;
2310 }
2311
2312 /**
2313 * Returns the handler for internal worker threads that terminate
2314 * due to unrecoverable errors encountered while executing tasks.
2315 *
2316 * @return the handler, or {@code null} if none
2317 */
2318 public Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler getUncaughtExceptionHandler() {
2319 return ueh;
2320 }
2321
2322 /**
2323 * Returns the targeted parallelism level of this pool.
2324 *
2325 * @return the targeted parallelism level of this pool
2326 */
2327 public int getParallelism() {
2328 return parallelism;
2329 }
2330
2331 /**
2332 * Returns the number of worker threads that have started but not
2333 * yet terminated. The result returned by this method may differ
2334 * from {@link #getParallelism} when threads are created to
2335 * maintain parallelism when others are cooperatively blocked.
2336 *
2337 * @return the number of worker threads
2338 */
2339 public int getPoolSize() {
2340 return parallelism + (short)(ctl >>> TC_SHIFT);
2341 }
2342
2343 /**
2344 * Returns {@code true} if this pool uses local first-in-first-out
2345 * scheduling mode for forked tasks that are never joined.
2346 *
2347 * @return {@code true} if this pool uses async mode
2348 */
2349 public boolean getAsyncMode() {
2350 return localMode != 0;
2351 }
2352
2353 /**
2354 * Returns an estimate of the number of worker threads that are
2355 * not blocked waiting to join tasks or for other managed
2356 * synchronization. This method may overestimate the
2357 * number of running threads.
2358 *
2359 * @return the number of worker threads
2360 */
2361 public int getRunningThreadCount() {
2362 int rc = 0;
2363 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2364 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2365 for (int i = 1; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2366 if ((w = ws[i]) != null && w.isApparentlyUnblocked())
2367 ++rc;
2368 }
2369 }
2370 return rc;
2371 }
2372
2373 /**
2374 * Returns an estimate of the number of threads that are currently
2375 * stealing or executing tasks. This method may overestimate the
2376 * number of active threads.
2377 *
2378 * @return the number of active threads
2379 */
2380 public int getActiveThreadCount() {
2381 int r = parallelism + (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT);
2382 return (r <= 0) ? 0 : r; // suppress momentarily negative values
2383 }
2384
2385 /**
2386 * Returns {@code true} if all worker threads are currently idle.
2387 * An idle worker is one that cannot obtain a task to execute
2388 * because none are available to steal from other threads, and
2389 * there are no pending submissions to the pool. This method is
2390 * conservative; it might not return {@code true} immediately upon
2391 * idleness of all threads, but will eventually become true if
2392 * threads remain inactive.
2393 *
2394 * @return {@code true} if all threads are currently idle
2395 */
2396 public boolean isQuiescent() {
2397 return (int)(ctl >> AC_SHIFT) + parallelism == 0;
2398 }
2399
2400 /**
2401 * Returns an estimate of the total number of tasks stolen from
2402 * one thread's work queue by another. The reported value
2403 * underestimates the actual total number of steals when the pool
2404 * is not quiescent. This value may be useful for monitoring and
2405 * tuning fork/join programs: in general, steal counts should be
2406 * high enough to keep threads busy, but low enough to avoid
2407 * overhead and contention across threads.
2408 *
2409 * @return the number of steals
2410 */
2411 public long getStealCount() {
2412 long count = stealCount.get();
2413 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2414 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2415 for (int i = 1; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2416 if ((w = ws[i]) != null)
2417 count += w.totalSteals;
2418 }
2419 }
2420 return count;
2421 }
2422
2423 /**
2424 * Returns an estimate of the total number of tasks currently held
2425 * in queues by worker threads (but not including tasks submitted
2426 * to the pool that have not begun executing). This value is only
2427 * an approximation, obtained by iterating across all threads in
2428 * the pool. This method may be useful for tuning task
2429 * granularities.
2430 *
2431 * @return the number of queued tasks
2432 */
2433 public long getQueuedTaskCount() {
2434 long count = 0;
2435 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2436 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2437 for (int i = 1; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2438 if ((w = ws[i]) != null)
2439 count += w.queueSize();
2440 }
2441 }
2442 return count;
2443 }
2444
2445 /**
2446 * Returns an estimate of the number of tasks submitted to this
2447 * pool that have not yet begun executing. This method may take
2448 * time proportional to the number of submissions.
2449 *
2450 * @return the number of queued submissions
2451 */
2452 public int getQueuedSubmissionCount() {
2453 int count = 0;
2454 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2455 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2456 for (int i = 0; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2457 if ((w = ws[i]) != null)
2458 count += w.queueSize();
2459 }
2460 }
2461 return count;
2462 }
2463
2464 /**
2465 * Returns {@code true} if there are any tasks submitted to this
2466 * pool that have not yet begun executing.
2467 *
2468 * @return {@code true} if there are any queued submissions
2469 */
2470 public boolean hasQueuedSubmissions() {
2471 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2472 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2473 for (int i = 0; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2474 if ((w = ws[i]) != null && !w.isEmpty())
2475 return true;
2476 }
2477 }
2478 return false;
2479 }
2480
2481 /**
2482 * Removes and returns the next unexecuted submission if one is
2483 * available. This method may be useful in extensions to this
2484 * class that re-assign work in systems with multiple pools.
2485 *
2486 * @return the next submission, or {@code null} if none
2487 */
2488 protected ForkJoinTask<?> pollSubmission() {
2489 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w; ForkJoinTask<?> t;
2490 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2491 for (int i = 0; i < ws.length; i += 2) {
2492 if ((w = ws[i]) != null && (t = w.poll()) != null)
2493 return t;
2494 }
2495 }
2496 return null;
2497 }
2498
2499 /**
2500 * Removes all available unexecuted submitted and forked tasks
2501 * from scheduling queues and adds them to the given collection,
2502 * without altering their execution status. These may include
2503 * artificially generated or wrapped tasks. This method is
2504 * designed to be invoked only when the pool is known to be
2505 * quiescent. Invocations at other times may not remove all
2506 * tasks. A failure encountered while attempting to add elements
2507 * to collection {@code c} may result in elements being in
2508 * neither, either or both collections when the associated
2509 * exception is thrown. The behavior of this operation is
2510 * undefined if the specified collection is modified while the
2511 * operation is in progress.
2512 *
2513 * @param c the collection to transfer elements into
2514 * @return the number of elements transferred
2515 */
2516 protected int drainTasksTo(Collection<? super ForkJoinTask<?>> c) {
2517 int count = 0;
2518 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w; ForkJoinTask<?> t;
2519 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2520 for (int i = 0; i < ws.length; ++i) {
2521 if ((w = ws[i]) != null) {
2522 while ((t = w.poll()) != null) {
2523 c.add(t);
2524 ++count;
2525 }
2526 }
2527 }
2528 }
2529 return count;
2530 }
2531
2532 /**
2533 * Returns a string identifying this pool, as well as its state,
2534 * including indications of run state, parallelism level, and
2535 * worker and task counts.
2536 *
2537 * @return a string identifying this pool, as well as its state
2538 */
2539 public String toString() {
2540 // Use a single pass through workQueues to collect counts
2541 long qt = 0L, qs = 0L; int rc = 0;
2542 long st = stealCount.get();
2543 long c = ctl;
2544 WorkQueue[] ws; WorkQueue w;
2545 if ((ws = workQueues) != null) {
2546 for (int i = 0; i < ws.length; ++i) {
2547 if ((w = ws[i]) != null) {
2548 int size = w.queueSize();
2549 if ((i & 1) == 0)
2550 qs += size;
2551 else {
2552 qt += size;
2553 st += w.totalSteals;
2554 if (w.isApparentlyUnblocked())
2555 ++rc;
2556 }
2557 }
2558 }
2559 }
2560 int pc = parallelism;
2561 int tc = pc + (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT);
2562 int ac = pc + (int)(c >> AC_SHIFT);
2563 if (ac < 0) // ignore transient negative
2564 ac = 0;
2565 String level;
2566 if ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0)
2567 level = (tc == 0) ? "Terminated" : "Terminating";
2568 else
2569 level = runState < 0 ? "Shutting down" : "Running";
2570 return super.toString() +
2571 "[" + level +
2572 ", parallelism = " + pc +
2573 ", size = " + tc +
2574 ", active = " + ac +
2575 ", running = " + rc +
2576 ", steals = " + st +
2577 ", tasks = " + qt +
2578 ", submissions = " + qs +
2579 "]";
2580 }
2581
2582 /**
2583 * Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted
2584 * tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted.
2585 * Invocation has no additional effect if already shut down.
2586 * Tasks that are in the process of being submitted concurrently
2587 * during the course of this method may or may not be rejected.
2588 *
2589 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and
2590 * the caller is not permitted to modify threads
2591 * because it does not hold {@link
2592 * java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
2593 */
2594 public void shutdown() {
2595 checkPermission();
2596 tryTerminate(false, true);
2597 }
2598
2599 /**
2600 * Attempts to cancel and/or stop all tasks, and reject all
2601 * subsequently submitted tasks. Tasks that are in the process of
2602 * being submitted or executed concurrently during the course of
2603 * this method may or may not be rejected. This method cancels
2604 * both existing and unexecuted tasks, in order to permit
2605 * termination in the presence of task dependencies. So the method
2606 * always returns an empty list (unlike the case for some other
2607 * Executors).
2608 *
2609 * @return an empty list
2610 * @throws SecurityException if a security manager exists and
2611 * the caller is not permitted to modify threads
2612 * because it does not hold {@link
2613 * java.lang.RuntimePermission}{@code ("modifyThread")}
2614 */
2615 public List<Runnable> shutdownNow() {
2616 checkPermission();
2617 tryTerminate(true, true);
2618 return Collections.emptyList();
2619 }
2620
2621 /**
2622 * Returns {@code true} if all tasks have completed following shut down.
2623 *
2624 * @return {@code true} if all tasks have completed following shut down
2625 */
2626 public boolean isTerminated() {
2627 long c = ctl;
2628 return ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0L &&
2629 (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) == -parallelism);
2630 }
2631
2632 /**
2633 * Returns {@code true} if the process of termination has
2634 * commenced but not yet completed. This method may be useful for
2635 * debugging. A return of {@code true} reported a sufficient
2636 * period after shutdown may indicate that submitted tasks have
2637 * ignored or suppressed interruption, or are waiting for IO,
2638 * causing this executor not to properly terminate. (See the
2639 * advisory notes for class {@link ForkJoinTask} stating that
2640 * tasks should not normally entail blocking operations. But if
2641 * they do, they must abort them on interrupt.)
2642 *
2643 * @return {@code true} if terminating but not yet terminated
2644 */
2645 public boolean isTerminating() {
2646 long c = ctl;
2647 return ((c & STOP_BIT) != 0L &&
2648 (short)(c >>> TC_SHIFT) != -parallelism);
2649 }
2650
2651 /**
2652 * Returns {@code true} if this pool has been shut down.
2653 *
2654 * @return {@code true} if this pool has been shut down
2655 */
2656 public boolean isShutdown() {
2657 return runState < 0;
2658 }
2659
2660 /**
2661 * Blocks until all tasks have completed execution after a shutdown
2662 * request, or the timeout occurs, or the current thread is
2663 * interrupted, whichever happens first.
2664 *
2665 * @param timeout the maximum time to wait
2666 * @param unit the time unit of the timeout argument
2667 * @return {@code true} if this executor terminated and
2668 * {@code false} if the timeout elapsed before termination
2669 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting
2670 */
2671 public boolean awaitTermination(long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
2672 throws InterruptedException {
2673 long nanos = unit.toNanos(timeout);
2674 final Mutex lock = this.lock;
2675 lock.lock();
2676 try {
2677 for (;;) {
2678 if (isTerminated())
2679 return true;
2680 if (nanos <= 0)
2681 return false;
2682 nanos = termination.awaitNanos(nanos);
2683 }
2684 } finally {
2685 lock.unlock();
2686 }
2687 }
2688
2689 /**
2690 * Interface for extending managed parallelism for tasks running
2691 * in {@link ForkJoinPool}s.
2692 *
2693 * <p>A {@code ManagedBlocker} provides two methods. Method
2694 * {@code isReleasable} must return {@code true} if blocking is
2695 * not necessary. Method {@code block} blocks the current thread
2696 * if necessary (perhaps internally invoking {@code isReleasable}
2697 * before actually blocking). These actions are performed by any
2698 * thread invoking {@link ForkJoinPool#managedBlock}. The
2699 * unusual methods in this API accommodate synchronizers that may,
2700 * but don't usually, block for long periods. Similarly, they
2701 * allow more efficient internal handling of cases in which
2702 * additional workers may be, but usually are not, needed to
2703 * ensure sufficient parallelism. Toward this end,
2704 * implementations of method {@code isReleasable} must be amenable
2705 * to repeated invocation.
2706 *
2707 * <p>For example, here is a ManagedBlocker based on a
2708 * ReentrantLock:
2709 * <pre> {@code
2710 * class ManagedLocker implements ManagedBlocker {
2711 * final ReentrantLock lock;
2712 * boolean hasLock = false;
2713 * ManagedLocker(ReentrantLock lock) { this.lock = lock; }
2714 * public boolean block() {
2715 * if (!hasLock)
2716 * lock.lock();
2717 * return true;
2718 * }
2719 * public boolean isReleasable() {
2720 * return hasLock || (hasLock = lock.tryLock());
2721 * }
2722 * }}</pre>
2723 *
2724 * <p>Here is a class that possibly blocks waiting for an
2725 * item on a given queue:
2726 * <pre> {@code
2727 * class QueueTaker<E> implements ManagedBlocker {
2728 * final BlockingQueue<E> queue;
2729 * volatile E item = null;
2730 * QueueTaker(BlockingQueue<E> q) { this.queue = q; }
2731 * public boolean block() throws InterruptedException {
2732 * if (item == null)
2733 * item = queue.take();
2734 * return true;
2735 * }
2736 * public boolean isReleasable() {
2737 * return item != null || (item = queue.poll()) != null;
2738 * }
2739 * public E getItem() { // call after pool.managedBlock completes
2740 * return item;
2741 * }
2742 * }}</pre>
2743 */
2744 public static interface ManagedBlocker {
2745 /**
2746 * Possibly blocks the current thread, for example waiting for
2747 * a lock or condition.
2748 *
2749 * @return {@code true} if no additional blocking is necessary
2750 * (i.e., if isReleasable would return true)
2751 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting
2752 * (the method is not required to do so, but is allowed to)
2753 */
2754 boolean block() throws InterruptedException;
2755
2756 /**
2757 * Returns {@code true} if blocking is unnecessary.
2758 */
2759 boolean isReleasable();
2760 }
2761
2762 /**
2763 * Blocks in accord with the given blocker. If the current thread
2764 * is a {@link ForkJoinWorkerThread}, this method possibly
2765 * arranges for a spare thread to be activated if necessary to
2766 * ensure sufficient parallelism while the current thread is blocked.
2767 *
2768 * <p>If the caller is not a {@link ForkJoinTask}, this method is
2769 * behaviorally equivalent to
2770 * <pre> {@code
2771 * while (!blocker.isReleasable())
2772 * if (blocker.block())
2773 * return;
2774 * }</pre>
2775 *
2776 * If the caller is a {@code ForkJoinTask}, then the pool may
2777 * first be expanded to ensure parallelism, and later adjusted.
2778 *
2779 * @param blocker the blocker
2780 * @throws InterruptedException if blocker.block did so
2781 */
2782 public static void managedBlock(ManagedBlocker blocker)
2783 throws InterruptedException {
2784 Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
2785 ForkJoinPool p = ((t instanceof ForkJoinWorkerThread) ?
2786 ((ForkJoinWorkerThread)t).pool : null);
2787 while (!blocker.isReleasable()) {
2788 if (p == null || p.tryCompensate(null, blocker)) {
2789 try {
2790 do {} while (!blocker.isReleasable() && !blocker.block());
2791 } finally {
2792 if (p != null)
2793 p.incrementActiveCount();
2794 }
2795 break;
2796 }
2797 }
2798 }
2799
2800 // AbstractExecutorService overrides. These rely on undocumented
2801 // fact that ForkJoinTask.adapt returns ForkJoinTasks that also
2802 // implement RunnableFuture.
2803
2804 protected <T> RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor(Runnable runnable, T value) {
2805 return new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedRunnable<T>(runnable, value);
2806 }
2807
2808 protected <T> RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor(Callable<T> callable) {
2809 return new ForkJoinTask.AdaptedCallable<T>(callable);
2810 }
2811
2812 // Unsafe mechanics
2813 private static final sun.misc.Unsafe U;
2814 private static final long CTL;
2815 private static final long PARKBLOCKER;
2816 private static final int ABASE;
2817 private static final int ASHIFT;
2818
2819 static {
2820 poolNumberGenerator = new AtomicInteger();
2821 nextSubmitterSeed = new AtomicInteger(0x55555555);
2822 modifyThreadPermission = new RuntimePermission("modifyThread");
2823 defaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory =
2824 new DefaultForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory();
2825 submitters = new ThreadSubmitter();
2826 int s;
2827 try {
2828 U = getUnsafe();
2829 Class<?> k = ForkJoinPool.class;
2830 Class<?> ak = ForkJoinTask[].class;
2831 CTL = U.objectFieldOffset
2832 (k.getDeclaredField("ctl"));
2833 Class<?> tk = Thread.class;
2834 PARKBLOCKER = U.objectFieldOffset
2835 (tk.getDeclaredField("parkBlocker"));
2836 ABASE = U.arrayBaseOffset(ak);
2837 s = U.arrayIndexScale(ak);
2838 } catch (Exception e) {
2839 throw new Error(e);
2840 }
2841 if ((s & (s-1)) != 0)
2842 throw new Error("data type scale not a power of two");
2843 ASHIFT = 31 - Integer.numberOfLeadingZeros(s);
2844 }
2845
2846 /**
2847 * Returns a sun.misc.Unsafe. Suitable for use in a 3rd party package.
2848 * Replace with a simple call to Unsafe.getUnsafe when integrating
2849 * into a jdk.
2850 *
2851 * @return a sun.misc.Unsafe
2852 */
2853 private static sun.misc.Unsafe getUnsafe() {
2854 try {
2855 return sun.misc.Unsafe.getUnsafe();
2856 } catch (SecurityException se) {
2857 try {
2858 return java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged
2859 (new java.security
2860 .PrivilegedExceptionAction<sun.misc.Unsafe>() {
2861 public sun.misc.Unsafe run() throws Exception {
2862 java.lang.reflect.Field f = sun.misc
2863 .Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField("theUnsafe");
2864 f.setAccessible(true);
2865 return (sun.misc.Unsafe) f.get(null);
2866 }});
2867 } catch (java.security.PrivilegedActionException e) {
2868 throw new RuntimeException("Could not initialize intrinsics",
2869 e.getCause());
2870 }
2871 }
2872 }
2873
2874 }