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1   <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
2   <html>
3   <head>
4 <   <title>JSR 166 Snapshot Introduction.</title>
4 >   <title>JSR 166 Introduction.</title>
5    </head>
6  
7    <body bgcolor="#ffffee" vlink="#0000aa" link="#cc0000">
8 <  <h1>JSR 166 Snapshot Introduction.</h1>
8 >  <h1>JSR 166 Introduction.</h1>
9  
10    by <a href="http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl">Doug Lea</a>
11    <p>
12  
13 < To join a mailing list discussing this JSR, go to:
14 < <A HREF="http://altair.cs.oswego.edu/mailman/listinfo/concurrency-interest"> http://altair.cs.oswego.edu/mailman/listinfo/concurrency-interest</A> .
15 <
16 < <p>
17 < <em>
18 < Disclaimer - This prototype is experimental code developed as part of
19 < JSR166 and made available to the developer community for use
20 < as-is. It is not a supported product. Use it at your own risk. The
21 < specification, language and implementation are subject to change as a
22 < result of your feedback. Because these features have not yet been
23 < approved for addition to the Java language, there is no schedule for
24 < their inclusion in a product.
25 < </em>
26 <
27 < <p>
28 < Package java.util.concurrent contains utility classes that are
29 < commonly useful in concurrent programming. Like package java.util, it
30 < includes a few small standardized extensible frameworks, as well as
31 < some classes that provide useful functionality and are otherwise
32 < tedious or difficult to implement.  In this JSR, we have been
33 < conservative in selecting only those APIs and implementations that are
34 < useful enough to encourage nearly all concurrent programmers to use
35 < routinely.  JSR 166 also includes a few changes and additions in
36 < packages outside of java.util.concurrent: java.lang, to address
37 < uncaught exceptions, and java.util to better integrate queues.
38 < The API covers:
39 <
40 <  <ul>
41 <    <li> Queues
42 <    <li> Executors
43 <    <li> Locks
44 <    <li> Condition variables
45 <    <li> Atomic variables
46 <    <li> Timing
47 <    <li> Synchronizers
48 <    <li> Concurrent Collections
49 <    <li> Uncaught Exception Handlers
50 <  </ul>
51 <
52 <
53 < The main rationale for JSR 166 is that threading primitives, such as
54 < synchronized blocks, Object.wait and Object.notify, are insufficient
55 < for many programming tasks.  Currently, developers can use only the
56 < concurrency control constructs provided in the Java language
57 < itself. These are too low level for some applications, and are
58 < incomplete for others.  As a result, application programmers are often
59 < forced to implement their own concurrency facilities, resulting in
60 < enormous duplication of effort creating facilities that are
61 < notoriously hard to get right and even harder to optimize.  Offering a
62 < standard set of concurrency utilities will ease the task of writing a
63 < wide variety of multithreaded applications and generally improve the
64 < quality of the applications that use them.
65 <
66 < <p>
67 < Here are brief descriptions and rationales of the main components.
68 < For details see the javadocs at <a
69 < href="http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/concurrent/index.html">http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/concurrent/index.html</a>
70 <
13 > This is the proposed final draft JSR166 specification.  To check for
14 > further updates, or join a mailing list discussing JSR-166, go to: <A
15 > HREF="http://altair.cs.oswego.edu/mailman/listinfo/concurrency-interest">
16 > http://altair.cs.oswego.edu/mailman/listinfo/concurrency-interest</A>.
17 >
18 > <p><em>Note: The javadocs here includes some existing java.util
19 > Collection interfaces and classes that are not part of the JSR-166
20 > spec, but are included because JSR-166 methods implement or inherit
21 > from their specifications.</em>
22 >
23 > <p> JSR-166 introduces package <tt>java.util.concurrent</tt>
24 > containing utility classes commonly useful in concurrent
25 > programming. Like package <tt>java.util</tt>, it includes a few small
26 > standardized extensible frameworks, as well as other classes that
27 > provide useful functionality and are otherwise tedious or difficult to
28 > implement.
29 >
30 > <p>JSR-166 focusses on breadth, providing critical functionality
31 > useful across a wide range of concurrent programming styles and
32 > applications, ranging from low-level atomic operations, to
33 > customizable locks and synchronization aids, to various concurrent
34 > data structures, to high-level execution agents including thread
35 > pools. This diversity reflects the range of contexts in which
36 > developers of concurrent programs have been found to require or desire
37 > support not previously available in J2SE, which also keeping the
38 > resulting package small; providing only functionality that has been
39 > found to be worthwhile to standardize.
40 >
41 > <p>Descriptions and brief motivations for the main components may be
42 > found in the associated package documentation.  JSR-166 also includes
43 > a few changes and additions in packages outside of
44 > java.util.concurrent.  Here are brief descriptions.
45  
46   <h2>Queues</h2>
47  
48 < A basic (nonblocking) Queue interface that is compatatible with
49 < java.util.Collections will be introduced into java.util. Also,
50 < although it is at the borders of being in scope of JSR-166,
51 < java.util.LinkedList will be adapted to support Queue, and
52 < a new non-thread-safe java.util.PriorityQueue will be added.
53 <
54 < <p> Five implementations in java.util.concurrent support the extended
55 < BlockingQueue interface, that defines blocking versions of put and
56 < take: LinkedBlockingQueue, ArrayBlockingQueue, SynchronousQueue,
57 < PriorityBlockingQueue, and DelayQueue. Additionally,
58 < java.util.concurrent.LinkedQueue supplies an efficient thread-safe
59 < non-blocking queue.
60 <
61 < <p> Since the target release is JDK1.5, and generics are slated to be
62 < in 1.5, Queues are parametrized on element type. (Also some others
63 < below.)
64 <
65 <
66 < <h2>Executors</h2>
67 <
68 < Executors provide a simple standardized interface for defining custom
69 < thread-like subsystems, including thread pools, asynch-IO, and
70 < lightweight task frameworks.  Executors also standardize ways of
71 < calling threads that compute functions returning results, via
72 < Futures. This is supported in part by defining interface Callable, the
73 < argument/result analog of Runnable.
74 <
75 < <p> Executors provide a framework for executing Runnables.  The
76 < Executor manages queueing and scheduling of tasks, and creation and
77 < teardown of threads.  Depending on which concrete Executor class is
104 < being used, tasks may execute in a newly created thread, an existing
105 < task-execution thread, or the thread calling execute(), and may
106 < execute sequentially or concurrently.
107 <
108 < <p> Several concrete implementations of Executor are included in
109 < java.util.concurrent, including ThreadPoolExecutor, a flexible thread
110 < pool and ScheduledExecutor, which adds support for delayed and
111 < periodic task execution.  Executor can be used in conjunction with
112 < FutureTask (which implements Runnable) to asynchronously start a
113 < potentially long-running computation and query the FutureTask to
114 < determine if its execution has completed.
115 <
116 < <p> The <tt>Executors</tt> class provides factory methods for all
117 < of the types of executors provided in
118 < <tt>java.util.concurrent</tt>.
119 <
120 <
121 < <h2>Locks</h2>
122 <
123 < The Lock interface supports locking disciplines that differ in
124 < semantics (reentrant, fair, etc), and that can be used in
125 < non-block-structured contexts including hand-over-hand and lock
126 < reordering algorithms. This flexibility comes at the price of more
127 < awkward syntax.  Implementations include ReentrantLock and
128 < FairReentrantLock.
129 <
130 < <p>
131 < The Locks class additionally supports trylock-designs using builtin
132 < locks without needing to use Lock classes.  This requires adding new
133 < capabilities to builtin locks inside JVMs.
134 <
135 < <p>
136 < A ReadWriteLock interface similarly defines locks that may be shared
137 < among readers but are exclusive to writers. For this release, only a
138 < single implementation, ReentrantReadWriteLock, is planned, since it
139 < covers all standard usage contexts. But programmers may create their
140 < own implementations to cover nonstandard requirements.
141 <
142 < <h2>Conditions</h2>
143 <
144 < A Condition class provides the kinds of condition variables associated
145 < with monitors in other cocurrent languages, as well as pthreads
146 < condvars.  Their support reduces the need for tricky and/or
147 < inefficient solutions to many classic concurrent problems.  Conditions
148 < also address the annoying problem that Object.wait(msecs) does not
149 < return an indication of whether the wait timed out. This leads to
150 < error-prone code. Since this method is in class Object, the problem is
151 < basically unfixable.
152 < <p>
153 < To avoid compatibility problems, the names of Condition methods need
154 < to be different than Object versions. The downside of this is that
155 < people can make the mistake of calling cond.notify instead of
156 < cond.signal. However, they will get IllegalMonitorState exceptions if
157 < they do, so they can detect the error if they ever run the code.
158 <
159 <
160 < <h2>Atomic variables</h2>
161 <
162 < The atomic subpackage includes a small library of classes, including
163 < AtomicInteger, AtomicLong, and AtomicReference that support variables
164 < performinf compareAndSet (CAS) and related atomic operations.
48 > A basic (nonblocking) {@link java.util.Queue} interface extending
49 > {@link java.util.Collection} is introduced into
50 > <tt>java.util</tt>. Existing class {@link java.util.LinkedList} is
51 > adapted to support Queue, and a new non-thread-safe {@link
52 > java.util.PriorityQueue} is added.
53 >
54 > <h2>Threads</h2>
55 >
56 > Three minor changes are introduced to the {@link java.lang.Thread}
57 > class:
58 > <ul>
59 >  <li> It now allows per-thread installation of handlers for uncaught
60 >  exceptions. Ths optionally disassociates handlers from ThreadGroups,
61 >  which has proven to be too inflexible. (Note that the combination of
62 >  features in JSR-166 make ThreadGroups even less likely to be used in
63 >  most programs. Perhaps they will eventually be deprecated.)
64 >
65 >  <li> Access checks are no longer required when a Thread interrupts
66 >  <em>itself</em>.  The <tt>interrupt</tt> method is the only way to
67 >  re-assert a thread's interruption status (and in the case of
68 >  self-interruption has no other effect than this).  The check here
69 >  previously caused unjustifiable and uncontrollable failures when
70 >  restricted code invoked library code that must reassert interruption
71 >  to correctly propagate status when encountering some
72 >  <tt>InterruptedExceptions</tt>.
73 >  <li> The <tt>destroy</tt> method, which has never been implemented,
74 >  has finally been deprecated. This is just a spec change, reflecting
75 >  the fact that that the reason it has never been implemented is that
76 >  it was undesirable and unworkable.
77 > </ul>
78  
79   <h2>Timing</h2>
80  
81 < Java has always supported sub-millisecond versions of several native
82 < time-out-based methods (such as Object.wait), but not methods to
83 < actually perform timing in finer-grained units. We address this by
171 < introducing class TimeUnit, which provides multiple granularities for
172 < both accessing time and performing time-out based operations.
173 <
174 <
175 < <h2>Synchronizers</h2>
176 <
177 < Five classes aid common special-purpose synchronization idioms.
178 < Semaphores and FairSemaphores are classic concurrency tools.
179 < CountDownLatches are very simple yet very common objects useful for
180 < blocking until a single signal, event, or condition holds.
181 < CyclicBarriers are resettable multiway synchronization points very
182 < common in some styles of parallel programming. Exchangers allow two
183 < threads to exchange objects at a rendezvous point.
81 > Method <tt>nanoTime</tt> is added to {@link java.lang.System}. It
82 > provides a high-precision timing facility that is distinct from and
83 > uncoordinated with <tt>System.currentTimeMillis</tt>.
84  
85 + <h2>Removing ThreadLocals</h2>
86  
87 < <h2>Concurrent Collections</h2>
88 <
89 < JSR 166 will supply a few Collection implementations designed for use
189 < in multithreaded contexts: ConcurrentHashMap, CopyOnWriteArrayList,
190 < and CopyOnWriteArraySet.
191 <
192 < <h2>Uncaught Exception Handlers</h2>
87 > The {@link java.lang.ThreadLocal} class now supports a means to remove
88 > a ThreadLocal, which is needed in some thread-pool and worker-thread
89 > designs.
90  
194 The java.lang.Thread class will be modified to allow per-thread
195 installation of handlers for uncaught exceptions. Ths optionally
196 disassociates these handlers from ThreadGroups, which has proven to be
197 too inflexible in many multithreaded programs. (Note that the combination
198 of features in JSR 166 make ThreadGroups even less likely to
199 be used in most programs. Perhaps they will eventually be deprecated.)
91  
201 <p> Additionally, ThreadLocals will now support a means to remove a
202 ThreadLocal, which is needed in some thread-pool and worker-thread
203 designs.
92  
93    <hr>
206  <address><A HREF="http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl">Doug Lea</A></address>
94   </body>
95   </html>

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