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root/jsr166/jsr166/src/jsr166y/ForkJoinWorkerThread.java
Revision: 1.33
Committed: Thu May 27 16:46:49 2010 UTC (13 years, 11 months ago) by dl
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.32: +85 -59 lines
Log Message:
Adaptive spins for joins; streamline call paths

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/licenses/publicdomain
5 */
6
7 package jsr166y;
8
9 import java.util.concurrent.*;
10
11 import java.util.Random;
12 import java.util.Collection;
13 import java.util.concurrent.locks.LockSupport;
14
15 /**
16 * A thread managed by a {@link ForkJoinPool}. This class is
17 * subclassable solely for the sake of adding functionality -- there
18 * are no overridable methods dealing with scheduling or execution.
19 * However, you can override initialization and termination methods
20 * surrounding the main task processing loop. If you do create such a
21 * subclass, you will also need to supply a custom {@link
22 * ForkJoinPool.ForkJoinWorkerThreadFactory} to use it in a {@code
23 * ForkJoinPool}.
24 *
25 * @since 1.7
26 * @author Doug Lea
27 */
28 public class ForkJoinWorkerThread extends Thread {
29 /*
30 * Overview:
31 *
32 * ForkJoinWorkerThreads are managed by ForkJoinPools and perform
33 * ForkJoinTasks. This class includes bookkeeping in support of
34 * worker activation, suspension, and lifecycle control described
35 * in more detail in the internal documentation of class
36 * ForkJoinPool. And as described further below, this class also
37 * includes special-cased support for some ForkJoinTask
38 * methods. But the main mechanics involve work-stealing:
39 *
40 * Work-stealing queues are special forms of Deques that support
41 * only three of the four possible end-operations -- push, pop,
42 * and deq (aka steal), under the further constraints that push
43 * and pop are called only from the owning thread, while deq may
44 * be called from other threads. (If you are unfamiliar with
45 * them, you probably want to read Herlihy and Shavit's book "The
46 * Art of Multiprocessor programming", chapter 16 describing these
47 * in more detail before proceeding.) The main work-stealing
48 * queue design is roughly similar to those in the papers "Dynamic
49 * Circular Work-Stealing Deque" by Chase and Lev, SPAA 2005
50 * (http://research.sun.com/scalable/pubs/index.html) and
51 * "Idempotent work stealing" by Michael, Saraswat, and Vechev,
52 * PPoPP 2009 (http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1504186).
53 * The main differences ultimately stem from gc requirements that
54 * we null out taken slots as soon as we can, to maintain as small
55 * a footprint as possible even in programs generating huge
56 * numbers of tasks. To accomplish this, we shift the CAS
57 * arbitrating pop vs deq (steal) from being on the indices
58 * ("base" and "sp") to the slots themselves (mainly via method
59 * "casSlotNull()"). So, both a successful pop and deq mainly
60 * entail a CAS of a slot from non-null to null. Because we rely
61 * on CASes of references, we do not need tag bits on base or sp.
62 * They are simple ints as used in any circular array-based queue
63 * (see for example ArrayDeque). Updates to the indices must
64 * still be ordered in a way that guarantees that sp == base means
65 * the queue is empty, but otherwise may err on the side of
66 * possibly making the queue appear nonempty when a push, pop, or
67 * deq have not fully committed. Note that this means that the deq
68 * operation, considered individually, is not wait-free. One thief
69 * cannot successfully continue until another in-progress one (or,
70 * if previously empty, a push) completes. However, in the
71 * aggregate, we ensure at least probabilistic non-blockingness.
72 * If an attempted steal fails, a thief always chooses a different
73 * random victim target to try next. So, in order for one thief to
74 * progress, it suffices for any in-progress deq or new push on
75 * any empty queue to complete. One reason this works well here is
76 * that apparently-nonempty often means soon-to-be-stealable,
77 * which gives threads a chance to set activation status if
78 * necessary before stealing.
79 *
80 * This approach also enables support for "async mode" where local
81 * task processing is in FIFO, not LIFO order; simply by using a
82 * version of deq rather than pop when locallyFifo is true (as set
83 * by the ForkJoinPool). This allows use in message-passing
84 * frameworks in which tasks are never joined.
85 *
86 * Efficient implementation of this approach currently relies on
87 * an uncomfortable amount of "Unsafe" mechanics. To maintain
88 * correct orderings, reads and writes of variable base require
89 * volatile ordering. Variable sp does not require volatile
90 * writes but still needs store-ordering, which we accomplish by
91 * pre-incrementing sp before filling the slot with an ordered
92 * store. (Pre-incrementing also enables backouts used in
93 * scanWhileJoining.) Because they are protected by volatile base
94 * reads, reads of the queue array and its slots by other threads
95 * do not need volatile load semantics, but writes (in push)
96 * require store order and CASes (in pop and deq) require
97 * (volatile) CAS semantics. (Michael, Saraswat, and Vechev's
98 * algorithm has similar properties, but without support for
99 * nulling slots.) Since these combinations aren't supported
100 * using ordinary volatiles, the only way to accomplish these
101 * efficiently is to use direct Unsafe calls. (Using external
102 * AtomicIntegers and AtomicReferenceArrays for the indices and
103 * array is significantly slower because of memory locality and
104 * indirection effects.)
105 *
106 * Further, performance on most platforms is very sensitive to
107 * placement and sizing of the (resizable) queue array. Even
108 * though these queues don't usually become all that big, the
109 * initial size must be large enough to counteract cache
110 * contention effects across multiple queues (especially in the
111 * presence of GC cardmarking). Also, to improve thread-locality,
112 * queues are initialized after starting. All together, these
113 * low-level implementation choices produce as much as a factor of
114 * 4 performance improvement compared to naive implementations,
115 * and enable the processing of billions of tasks per second,
116 * sometimes at the expense of ugliness.
117 */
118
119 /**
120 * Generator for initial random seeds for random victim
121 * selection. This is used only to create initial seeds. Random
122 * steals use a cheaper xorshift generator per steal attempt. We
123 * expect only rare contention on seedGenerator, so just use a
124 * plain Random.
125 */
126 private static final Random seedGenerator = new Random();
127
128 /**
129 * The timeout value for suspending spares. Spare workers that
130 * remain unsignalled for more than this time may be trimmed
131 * (killed and removed from pool). Since our goal is to avoid
132 * long-term thread buildup, the exact value of timeout does not
133 * matter too much so long as it avoids most false-alarm timeouts
134 * under GC stalls or momentarily high system load.
135 */
136 private static final long SPARE_KEEPALIVE_NANOS =
137 5L * 1000L * 1000L * 1000L; // 5 secs
138
139 /**
140 * Capacity of work-stealing queue array upon initialization.
141 * Must be a power of two. Initial size must be at least 2, but is
142 * padded to minimize cache effects.
143 */
144 private static final int INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 1 << 13;
145
146 /**
147 * Maximum work-stealing queue array size. Must be less than or
148 * equal to 1 << 28 to ensure lack of index wraparound. (This
149 * is less than usual bounds, because we need leftshift by 3
150 * to be in int range).
151 */
152 private static final int MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY = 1 << 28;
153
154 /**
155 * The pool this thread works in. Accessed directly by ForkJoinTask.
156 */
157 final ForkJoinPool pool;
158
159 /**
160 * The work-stealing queue array. Size must be a power of two.
161 * Initialized in onStart, to improve memory locality.
162 */
163 private ForkJoinTask<?>[] queue;
164
165 /**
166 * Index (mod queue.length) of least valid queue slot, which is
167 * always the next position to steal from if nonempty.
168 */
169 private volatile int base;
170
171 /**
172 * Index (mod queue.length) of next queue slot to push to or pop
173 * from. It is written only by owner thread, and accessed by other
174 * threads only after reading (volatile) base. Both sp and base
175 * are allowed to wrap around on overflow, but (sp - base) still
176 * estimates size.
177 */
178 private int sp;
179
180 /**
181 * Run state of this worker. In addition to the usual run levels,
182 * tracks if this worker is suspended as a spare, and if it was
183 * killed (trimmed) while suspended. However, "active" status is
184 * maintained separately.
185 */
186 private volatile int runState;
187
188 private static final int TERMINATING = 0x01;
189 private static final int TERMINATED = 0x02;
190 private static final int SUSPENDED = 0x04; // inactive spare
191 private static final int TRIMMED = 0x08; // killed while suspended
192
193 /**
194 * Number of LockSupport.park calls to block this thread for
195 * suspension or event waits. Used for internal instrumention;
196 * currently not exported but included because volatile write upon
197 * park also provides a workaround for a JVM bug.
198 */
199 private volatile int parkCount;
200
201 /**
202 * Number of steals, transferred and reset in pool callbacks pool
203 * when idle Accessed directly by pool.
204 */
205 int stealCount;
206
207 /**
208 * Seed for random number generator for choosing steal victims.
209 * Uses Marsaglia xorshift. Must be initialized as nonzero.
210 */
211 private int seed;
212
213 /**
214 * Activity status. When true, this worker is considered active.
215 * Accessed directly by pool. Must be false upon construction.
216 */
217 boolean active;
218
219 /**
220 * True if use local fifo, not default lifo, for local polling.
221 * Shadows value from ForkJoinPool, which resets it if changed
222 * pool-wide.
223 */
224 private boolean locallyFifo;
225
226 /**
227 * Index of this worker in pool array. Set once by pool before
228 * running, and accessed directly by pool to locate this worker in
229 * its workers array.
230 */
231 int poolIndex;
232
233 /**
234 * The last pool event waited for. Accessed only by pool in
235 * callback methods invoked within this thread.
236 */
237 int lastEventCount;
238
239 /**
240 * Encoded index and event count of next event waiter. Used only
241 * by ForkJoinPool for managing event waiters.
242 */
243 volatile long nextWaiter;
244
245 /**
246 * Creates a ForkJoinWorkerThread operating in the given pool.
247 *
248 * @param pool the pool this thread works in
249 * @throws NullPointerException if pool is null
250 */
251 protected ForkJoinWorkerThread(ForkJoinPool pool) {
252 if (pool == null) throw new NullPointerException();
253 this.pool = pool;
254 // To avoid exposing construction details to subclasses,
255 // remaining initialization is in start() and onStart()
256 }
257
258 /**
259 * Performs additional initialization and starts this thread
260 */
261 final void start(int poolIndex, boolean locallyFifo,
262 UncaughtExceptionHandler ueh) {
263 this.poolIndex = poolIndex;
264 this.locallyFifo = locallyFifo;
265 if (ueh != null)
266 setUncaughtExceptionHandler(ueh);
267 setDaemon(true);
268 start();
269 }
270
271 // Public/protected methods
272
273 /**
274 * Returns the pool hosting this thread.
275 *
276 * @return the pool
277 */
278 public ForkJoinPool getPool() {
279 return pool;
280 }
281
282 /**
283 * Returns the index number of this thread in its pool. The
284 * returned value ranges from zero to the maximum number of
285 * threads (minus one) that have ever been created in the pool.
286 * This method may be useful for applications that track status or
287 * collect results per-worker rather than per-task.
288 *
289 * @return the index number
290 */
291 public int getPoolIndex() {
292 return poolIndex;
293 }
294
295 /**
296 * Initializes internal state after construction but before
297 * processing any tasks. If you override this method, you must
298 * invoke super.onStart() at the beginning of the method.
299 * Initialization requires care: Most fields must have legal
300 * default values, to ensure that attempted accesses from other
301 * threads work correctly even before this thread starts
302 * processing tasks.
303 */
304 protected void onStart() {
305 int rs = seedGenerator.nextInt();
306 seed = rs == 0? 1 : rs; // seed must be nonzero
307
308 // Allocate name string and queue array in this thread
309 String pid = Integer.toString(pool.getPoolNumber());
310 String wid = Integer.toString(poolIndex);
311 setName("ForkJoinPool-" + pid + "-worker-" + wid);
312
313 queue = new ForkJoinTask<?>[INITIAL_QUEUE_CAPACITY];
314 }
315
316 /**
317 * Performs cleanup associated with termination of this worker
318 * thread. If you override this method, you must invoke
319 * {@code super.onTermination} at the end of the overridden method.
320 *
321 * @param exception the exception causing this thread to abort due
322 * to an unrecoverable error, or {@code null} if completed normally
323 */
324 protected void onTermination(Throwable exception) {
325 try {
326 cancelTasks();
327 setTerminated();
328 pool.workerTerminated(this);
329 } catch (Throwable ex) { // Shouldn't ever happen
330 if (exception == null) // but if so, at least rethrown
331 exception = ex;
332 } finally {
333 if (exception != null)
334 UNSAFE.throwException(exception);
335 }
336 }
337
338 /**
339 * This method is required to be public, but should never be
340 * called explicitly. It performs the main run loop to execute
341 * ForkJoinTasks.
342 */
343 public void run() {
344 Throwable exception = null;
345 try {
346 onStart();
347 mainLoop();
348 } catch (Throwable ex) {
349 exception = ex;
350 } finally {
351 onTermination(exception);
352 }
353 }
354
355 // helpers for run()
356
357 /**
358 * Find and execute tasks and check status while running
359 */
360 private void mainLoop() {
361 boolean ran = false; // true if ran task on previous step
362 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
363 for (;;) {
364 p.preStep(this, ran);
365 if (runState != 0)
366 return;
367 ForkJoinTask<?> t; // try to get and run stolen or submitted task
368 if (ran = (t = scan()) != null || (t = pollSubmission()) != null) {
369 t.tryExec();
370 if (base != sp)
371 runLocalTasks();
372 }
373 }
374 }
375
376 /**
377 * Runs local tasks until queue is empty or shut down. Call only
378 * while active.
379 */
380 private void runLocalTasks() {
381 while (runState == 0) {
382 ForkJoinTask<?> t = locallyFifo? locallyDeqTask() : popTask();
383 if (t != null)
384 t.tryExec();
385 else if (base == sp)
386 break;
387 }
388 }
389
390 /**
391 * If a submission exists, try to activate and take it
392 *
393 * @return a task, if available
394 */
395 private ForkJoinTask<?> pollSubmission() {
396 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
397 while (p.hasQueuedSubmissions()) {
398 if (active || (active = p.tryIncrementActiveCount())) {
399 ForkJoinTask<?> t = p.pollSubmission();
400 return t != null ? t : scan(); // if missed, rescan
401 }
402 }
403 return null;
404 }
405
406 /*
407 * Intrinsics-based atomic writes for queue slots. These are
408 * basically the same as methods in AtomicObjectArray, but
409 * specialized for (1) ForkJoinTask elements (2) requirement that
410 * nullness and bounds checks have already been performed by
411 * callers and (3) effective offsets are known not to overflow
412 * from int to long (because of MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY). We don't
413 * need corresponding version for reads: plain array reads are OK
414 * because they protected by other volatile reads and are
415 * confirmed by CASes.
416 *
417 * Most uses don't actually call these methods, but instead contain
418 * inlined forms that enable more predictable optimization. We
419 * don't define the version of write used in pushTask at all, but
420 * instead inline there a store-fenced array slot write.
421 */
422
423 /**
424 * CASes slot i of array q from t to null. Caller must ensure q is
425 * non-null and index is in range.
426 */
427 private static final boolean casSlotNull(ForkJoinTask<?>[] q, int i,
428 ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
429 return UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null);
430 }
431
432 /**
433 * Performs a volatile write of the given task at given slot of
434 * array q. Caller must ensure q is non-null and index is in
435 * range. This method is used only during resets and backouts.
436 */
437 private static final void writeSlot(ForkJoinTask<?>[] q, int i,
438 ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
439 UNSAFE.putObjectVolatile(q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t);
440 }
441
442 // queue methods
443
444 /**
445 * Pushes a task. Call only from this thread.
446 *
447 * @param t the task. Caller must ensure non-null.
448 */
449 final void pushTask(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
450 int s;
451 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q = queue;
452 int mask = q.length - 1; // implicit assert q != null
453 UNSAFE.putOrderedObject(q, (((s = sp++) & mask) << qShift) + qBase, t);
454 if ((s -= base) <= 0)
455 pool.signalWork();
456 else if (s + 1 >= mask)
457 growQueue();
458 }
459
460 /**
461 * Tries to take a task from the base of the queue, failing if
462 * empty or contended. Note: Specializations of this code appear
463 * in scan and scanWhileJoining.
464 *
465 * @return a task, or null if none or contended
466 */
467 final ForkJoinTask<?> deqTask() {
468 ForkJoinTask<?> t;
469 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
470 int b, i;
471 if ((b = base) != sp &&
472 (q = queue) != null && // must read q after b
473 (t = q[i = (q.length - 1) & b]) != null &&
474 UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
475 base = b + 1;
476 return t;
477 }
478 return null;
479 }
480
481 /**
482 * Tries to take a task from the base of own queue. Assumes active
483 * status. Called only by current thread.
484 *
485 * @return a task, or null if none
486 */
487 final ForkJoinTask<?> locallyDeqTask() {
488 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q = queue;
489 if (q != null) {
490 ForkJoinTask<?> t;
491 int b, i;
492 while (sp != (b = base)) {
493 if ((t = q[i = (q.length - 1) & b]) != null &&
494 UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject(q, (i << qShift) + qBase,
495 t, null)) {
496 base = b + 1;
497 return t;
498 }
499 }
500 }
501 return null;
502 }
503
504 /**
505 * Returns a popped task, or null if empty. Assumes active status.
506 * Called only by current thread. (Note: a specialization of this
507 * code appears in popWhileJoining.)
508 */
509 final ForkJoinTask<?> popTask() {
510 int s;
511 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
512 if (base != (s = sp) && (q = queue) != null) {
513 int i = (q.length - 1) & --s;
514 ForkJoinTask<?> t = q[i];
515 if (t != null && UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject
516 (q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
517 sp = s;
518 return t;
519 }
520 }
521 return null;
522 }
523
524 /**
525 * Specialized version of popTask to pop only if topmost element
526 * is the given task. Called only by current thread while
527 * active.
528 *
529 * @param t the task. Caller must ensure non-null.
530 */
531 final boolean unpushTask(ForkJoinTask<?> t) {
532 int s;
533 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
534 if (base != (s = sp) && (q = queue) != null &&
535 UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject
536 (q, (((q.length - 1) & --s) << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
537 sp = s;
538 return true;
539 }
540 return false;
541 }
542
543 /**
544 * Returns next task or null if empty or contended
545 */
546 final ForkJoinTask<?> peekTask() {
547 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q = queue;
548 if (q == null)
549 return null;
550 int mask = q.length - 1;
551 int i = locallyFifo ? base : (sp - 1);
552 return q[i & mask];
553 }
554
555 /**
556 * Doubles queue array size. Transfers elements by emulating
557 * steals (deqs) from old array and placing, oldest first, into
558 * new array.
559 */
560 private void growQueue() {
561 ForkJoinTask<?>[] oldQ = queue;
562 int oldSize = oldQ.length;
563 int newSize = oldSize << 1;
564 if (newSize > MAXIMUM_QUEUE_CAPACITY)
565 throw new RejectedExecutionException("Queue capacity exceeded");
566 ForkJoinTask<?>[] newQ = queue = new ForkJoinTask<?>[newSize];
567
568 int b = base;
569 int bf = b + oldSize;
570 int oldMask = oldSize - 1;
571 int newMask = newSize - 1;
572 do {
573 int oldIndex = b & oldMask;
574 ForkJoinTask<?> t = oldQ[oldIndex];
575 if (t != null && !casSlotNull(oldQ, oldIndex, t))
576 t = null;
577 writeSlot(newQ, b & newMask, t);
578 } while (++b != bf);
579 pool.signalWork();
580 }
581
582 /**
583 * Computes next value for random victim probe in scan(). Scans
584 * don't require a very high quality generator, but also not a
585 * crummy one. Marsaglia xor-shift is cheap and works well enough.
586 * Note: This is manually inlined in scan()
587 */
588 private static final int xorShift(int r) {
589 r ^= r << 13;
590 r ^= r >>> 17;
591 return r ^ (r << 5);
592 }
593
594 /**
595 * Tries to steal a task from another worker. Starts at a random
596 * index of workers array, and probes workers until finding one
597 * with non-empty queue or finding that all are empty. It
598 * randomly selects the first n probes. If these are empty, it
599 * resorts to a circular sweep, which is necessary to accurately
600 * set active status. (The circular sweep uses steps of
601 * approximately half the array size plus 1, to avoid bias
602 * stemming from leftmost packing of the array in ForkJoinPool.)
603 *
604 * This method must be both fast and quiet -- usually avoiding
605 * memory accesses that could disrupt cache sharing etc other than
606 * those needed to check for and take tasks (or to activate if not
607 * already active). This accounts for, among other things,
608 * updating random seed in place without storing it until exit.
609 *
610 * @return a task, or null if none found
611 */
612 private ForkJoinTask<?> scan() {
613 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
614 ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws; // worker array
615 int n; // upper bound of #workers
616 if ((ws = p.workers) != null && (n = ws.length) > 1) {
617 boolean canSteal = active; // shadow active status
618 int r = seed; // extract seed once
619 int mask = n - 1;
620 int j = -n; // loop counter
621 int k = r; // worker index, random if j < 0
622 for (;;) {
623 ForkJoinWorkerThread v = ws[k & mask];
624 r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; r ^= r << 5; // inline xorshift
625 if (v != null && v.base != v.sp) {
626 int b, i; // inline specialized deqTask
627 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
628 ForkJoinTask<?> t;
629 if ((canSteal || // ensure active status
630 (canSteal = active = p.tryIncrementActiveCount())) &&
631 (q = v.queue) != null &&
632 (t = q[i = (q.length - 1) & (b = v.base)]) != null &&
633 UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject
634 (q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
635 v.base = b + 1;
636 seed = r;
637 ++stealCount;
638 return t;
639 }
640 j = -n;
641 k = r; // restart on contention
642 }
643 else if (++j <= 0)
644 k = r;
645 else if (j <= n)
646 k += (n >>> 1) | 1;
647 else
648 break;
649 }
650 }
651 return null;
652 }
653
654 // Run State management
655
656 // status check methods used mainly by ForkJoinPool
657 final boolean isTerminating() { return (runState & TERMINATING) != 0; }
658 final boolean isTerminated() { return (runState & TERMINATED) != 0; }
659 final boolean isSuspended() { return (runState & SUSPENDED) != 0; }
660 final boolean isTrimmed() { return (runState & TRIMMED) != 0; }
661
662 /**
663 * Sets state to TERMINATING, also resuming if suspended.
664 */
665 final void shutdown() {
666 for (;;) {
667 int s = runState;
668 if ((s & SUSPENDED) != 0) { // kill and wakeup if suspended
669 if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
670 (s & ~SUSPENDED) |
671 (TRIMMED|TERMINATING))) {
672 LockSupport.unpark(this);
673 break;
674 }
675 }
676 else if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
677 s | TERMINATING))
678 break;
679 }
680 }
681
682 /**
683 * Sets state to TERMINATED. Called only by this thread.
684 */
685 private void setTerminated() {
686 int s;
687 do {} while (!UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset,
688 s = runState,
689 s | (TERMINATING|TERMINATED)));
690 }
691
692 /**
693 * Instrumented version of park. Also used by ForkJoinPool.awaitEvent
694 */
695 final void doPark() {
696 ++parkCount;
697 LockSupport.park(this);
698 }
699
700 /**
701 * If suspended, tries to set status to unsuspended.
702 * Caller must unpark to actually resume
703 *
704 * @return true if successful
705 */
706 final boolean tryUnsuspend() {
707 int s;
708 return (((s = runState) & SUSPENDED) != 0 &&
709 UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
710 s & ~SUSPENDED));
711 }
712
713 /**
714 * Sets suspended status and blocks as spare until resumed,
715 * shutdown, or timed out.
716 *
717 * @return false if trimmed
718 */
719 final boolean suspendAsSpare() {
720 for (;;) { // set suspended unless terminating
721 int s = runState;
722 if ((s & TERMINATING) != 0) { // must kill
723 if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
724 s | (TRIMMED | TERMINATING)))
725 return false;
726 }
727 else if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
728 s | SUSPENDED))
729 break;
730 }
731 lastEventCount = 0; // reset upon resume
732 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
733 p.releaseWaiters(); // help others progress
734 p.accumulateStealCount(this);
735 interrupted(); // clear/ignore interrupts
736 if (poolIndex < p.getParallelism()) { // untimed wait
737 while ((runState & SUSPENDED) != 0)
738 doPark();
739 return true;
740 }
741 return timedSuspend(); // timed wait if apparently non-core
742 }
743
744 /**
745 * Blocks as spare until resumed or timed out
746 * @return false if trimmed
747 */
748 private boolean timedSuspend() {
749 long nanos = SPARE_KEEPALIVE_NANOS;
750 long startTime = System.nanoTime();
751 while ((runState & SUSPENDED) != 0) {
752 ++parkCount;
753 if ((nanos -= (System.nanoTime() - startTime)) > 0)
754 LockSupport.parkNanos(this, nanos);
755 else { // try to trim on timeout
756 int s = runState;
757 if (UNSAFE.compareAndSwapInt(this, runStateOffset, s,
758 (s & ~SUSPENDED) |
759 (TRIMMED|TERMINATING)))
760 return false;
761 }
762 }
763 return true;
764 }
765
766 // Misc support methods for ForkJoinPool
767
768 /**
769 * Returns an estimate of the number of tasks in the queue. Also
770 * used by ForkJoinTask.
771 */
772 final int getQueueSize() {
773 return -base + sp;
774 }
775
776 /**
777 * Set locallyFifo mode. Called only by ForkJoinPool
778 */
779 final void setAsyncMode(boolean async) {
780 locallyFifo = async;
781 }
782
783 /**
784 * Removes and cancels all tasks in queue. Can be called from any
785 * thread.
786 */
787 final void cancelTasks() {
788 while (base != sp) {
789 ForkJoinTask<?> t = deqTask();
790 if (t != null)
791 t.cancelIgnoringExceptions();
792 }
793 }
794
795 /**
796 * Drains tasks to given collection c.
797 *
798 * @return the number of tasks drained
799 */
800 final int drainTasksTo(Collection<? super ForkJoinTask<?>> c) {
801 int n = 0;
802 while (base != sp) {
803 ForkJoinTask<?> t = deqTask();
804 if (t != null) {
805 c.add(t);
806 ++n;
807 }
808 }
809 return n;
810 }
811
812 // Support methods for ForkJoinTask
813
814 /**
815 * Returns an estimate of the number of tasks, offset by a
816 * function of number of idle workers.
817 *
818 * This method provides a cheap heuristic guide for task
819 * partitioning when programmers, frameworks, tools, or languages
820 * have little or no idea about task granularity. In essence by
821 * offering this method, we ask users only about tradeoffs in
822 * overhead vs expected throughput and its variance, rather than
823 * how finely to partition tasks.
824 *
825 * In a steady state strict (tree-structured) computation, each
826 * thread makes available for stealing enough tasks for other
827 * threads to remain active. Inductively, if all threads play by
828 * the same rules, each thread should make available only a
829 * constant number of tasks.
830 *
831 * The minimum useful constant is just 1. But using a value of 1
832 * would require immediate replenishment upon each steal to
833 * maintain enough tasks, which is infeasible. Further,
834 * partitionings/granularities of offered tasks should minimize
835 * steal rates, which in general means that threads nearer the top
836 * of computation tree should generate more than those nearer the
837 * bottom. In perfect steady state, each thread is at
838 * approximately the same level of computation tree. However,
839 * producing extra tasks amortizes the uncertainty of progress and
840 * diffusion assumptions.
841 *
842 * So, users will want to use values larger, but not much larger
843 * than 1 to both smooth over transient shortages and hedge
844 * against uneven progress; as traded off against the cost of
845 * extra task overhead. We leave the user to pick a threshold
846 * value to compare with the results of this call to guide
847 * decisions, but recommend values such as 3.
848 *
849 * When all threads are active, it is on average OK to estimate
850 * surplus strictly locally. In steady-state, if one thread is
851 * maintaining say 2 surplus tasks, then so are others. So we can
852 * just use estimated queue length (although note that (sp - base)
853 * can be an overestimate because of stealers lagging increments
854 * of base). However, this strategy alone leads to serious
855 * mis-estimates in some non-steady-state conditions (ramp-up,
856 * ramp-down, other stalls). We can detect many of these by
857 * further considering the number of "idle" threads, that are
858 * known to have zero queued tasks, so compensate by a factor of
859 * (#idle/#active) threads.
860 */
861 final int getEstimatedSurplusTaskCount() {
862 return sp - base - pool.idlePerActive();
863 }
864
865 /**
866 * Gets and removes a local task.
867 *
868 * @return a task, if available
869 */
870 final ForkJoinTask<?> pollLocalTask() {
871 while (base != sp) {
872 if (active || (active = pool.tryIncrementActiveCount()))
873 return locallyFifo? locallyDeqTask() : popTask();
874 }
875 return null;
876 }
877
878 /**
879 * Gets and removes a local or stolen task.
880 *
881 * @return a task, if available
882 */
883 final ForkJoinTask<?> pollTask() {
884 ForkJoinTask<?> t;
885 return (t = pollLocalTask()) != null ? t : scan();
886 }
887
888 /**
889 * Executes or processes other tasks awaiting the given task
890 * @return task completion status
891 */
892 final int execWhileJoining(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe) {
893 int s;
894 while ((s = joinMe.status) >= 0) {
895 ForkJoinTask<?> t = base != sp?
896 popWhileJoining(joinMe) :
897 scanWhileJoining(joinMe);
898 if (t != null)
899 t.tryExec();
900 }
901 return s;
902 }
903
904 /**
905 * Returns or stolen task, if available, unless joinMe is done
906 *
907 * This method is intrinsically nonmodular. To maintain the
908 * property that tasks are never stolen if the awaited task is
909 * ready, we must interleave mechanics of scan with status
910 * checks. We rely here on the commit points of deq that allow us
911 * to cancel a steal even after CASing slot to null, but before
912 * adjusting base index: If, after the CAS, we see that joinMe is
913 * ready, we can back out by placing the task back into the slot,
914 * without adjusting index. The loop is otherwise a variant of the
915 * one in scan().
916 *
917 */
918 private ForkJoinTask<?> scanWhileJoining(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe) {
919 int r = seed;
920 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
921 ForkJoinWorkerThread[] ws;
922 int n;
923 outer:while ((ws = p.workers) != null && (n = ws.length) > 1) {
924 int mask = n - 1;
925 int k = r;
926 boolean contended = false; // to retry loop if deq contends
927 for (int j = -n; j <= n; ++j) {
928 if (joinMe.status < 0)
929 break outer;
930 int b;
931 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
932 ForkJoinWorkerThread v = ws[k & mask];
933 r ^= r << 13; r ^= r >>> 17; r ^= r << 5; // xorshift
934 if (v != null && (b=v.base) != v.sp && (q=v.queue) != null) {
935 int i = (q.length - 1) & b;
936 ForkJoinTask<?> t = q[i];
937 if (t != null && UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject
938 (q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
939 if (joinMe.status >= 0) {
940 v.base = b + 1;
941 seed = r;
942 ++stealCount;
943 return t;
944 }
945 UNSAFE.putObjectVolatile(q, (i<<qShift)+qBase, t);
946 break outer; // back out
947 }
948 contended = true;
949 }
950 k = j < 0 ? r : (k + ((n >>> 1) | 1));
951 }
952 if (!contended && p.tryAwaitBusyJoin(joinMe))
953 break;
954 }
955 return null;
956 }
957
958 /**
959 * Version of popTask with join checks surrounding extraction.
960 * Uses the same backout strategy as helpJoinTask. Note that
961 * we ignore locallyFifo flag for local tasks here since helping
962 * joins only make sense in LIFO mode.
963 *
964 * @return a popped task, if available, unless joinMe is done
965 */
966 private ForkJoinTask<?> popWhileJoining(ForkJoinTask<?> joinMe) {
967 int s;
968 ForkJoinTask<?>[] q;
969 while ((s = sp) != base && (q = queue) != null && joinMe.status >= 0) {
970 int i = (q.length - 1) & --s;
971 ForkJoinTask<?> t = q[i];
972 if (t != null && UNSAFE.compareAndSwapObject
973 (q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t, null)) {
974 if (joinMe.status >= 0) {
975 sp = s;
976 return t;
977 }
978 UNSAFE.putObjectVolatile(q, (i << qShift) + qBase, t);
979 break; // back out
980 }
981 }
982 return null;
983 }
984
985 /**
986 * Runs tasks until {@code pool.isQuiescent()}.
987 */
988 final void helpQuiescePool() {
989 for (;;) {
990 ForkJoinTask<?> t = pollLocalTask();
991 if (t != null || (t = scan()) != null)
992 t.tryExec();
993 else {
994 ForkJoinPool p = pool;
995 if (active) {
996 active = false; // inactivate
997 do {} while (!p.tryDecrementActiveCount());
998 }
999 if (p.isQuiescent()) {
1000 active = true; // re-activate
1001 do {} while (!p.tryIncrementActiveCount());
1002 return;
1003 }
1004 }
1005 }
1006 }
1007
1008 // Unsafe mechanics
1009
1010 private static final sun.misc.Unsafe UNSAFE = getUnsafe();
1011 private static final long runStateOffset =
1012 objectFieldOffset("runState", ForkJoinWorkerThread.class);
1013 private static final long qBase =
1014 UNSAFE.arrayBaseOffset(ForkJoinTask[].class);
1015 private static final int qShift;
1016
1017 static {
1018 int s = UNSAFE.arrayIndexScale(ForkJoinTask[].class);
1019 if ((s & (s-1)) != 0)
1020 throw new Error("data type scale not a power of two");
1021 qShift = 31 - Integer.numberOfLeadingZeros(s);
1022 }
1023
1024 private static long objectFieldOffset(String field, Class<?> klazz) {
1025 try {
1026 return UNSAFE.objectFieldOffset(klazz.getDeclaredField(field));
1027 } catch (NoSuchFieldException e) {
1028 // Convert Exception to corresponding Error
1029 NoSuchFieldError error = new NoSuchFieldError(field);
1030 error.initCause(e);
1031 throw error;
1032 }
1033 }
1034
1035 /**
1036 * Returns a sun.misc.Unsafe. Suitable for use in a 3rd party package.
1037 * Replace with a simple call to Unsafe.getUnsafe when integrating
1038 * into a jdk.
1039 *
1040 * @return a sun.misc.Unsafe
1041 */
1042 private static sun.misc.Unsafe getUnsafe() {
1043 try {
1044 return sun.misc.Unsafe.getUnsafe();
1045 } catch (SecurityException se) {
1046 try {
1047 return java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged
1048 (new java.security
1049 .PrivilegedExceptionAction<sun.misc.Unsafe>() {
1050 public sun.misc.Unsafe run() throws Exception {
1051 java.lang.reflect.Field f = sun.misc
1052 .Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField("theUnsafe");
1053 f.setAccessible(true);
1054 return (sun.misc.Unsafe) f.get(null);
1055 }});
1056 } catch (java.security.PrivilegedActionException e) {
1057 throw new RuntimeException("Could not initialize intrinsics",
1058 e.getCause());
1059 }
1060 }
1061 }
1062 }