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Revision: 1.16
Committed: Sun Feb 8 15:35:10 2004 UTC (20 years, 3 months ago) by dl
Content type: text/html
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: JSR166_PFD
Changes since 1.15: +10 -10 lines
Log Message:
Wording cleanups; Improve SynchronousQueue serialization and fairness support

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 dl 1.1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
2     <html> <head>
3     <title>Concurrency Utilities</title>
4     </head>
5    
6     <body>
7    
8 dl 1.3 <p> Utility classes commonly useful in concurrent programming. This
9     package includes a few small standardized extensible frameworks, as
10     well as some classes that provide useful functionality and are
11     otherwise tedious or difficult to implement. Here are brief
12     descriptions of the main components. See also the <tt>locks</tt> and
13     <tt>atomic</tt> packages.
14 dl 1.1
15     <h2>Executors</h2>
16    
17 dl 1.12 <b>Interfaces.</b> {@link java.util.concurrent.Executor} is a simple
18     standardized interface for defining custom thread-like subsystems,
19     including thread pools, asynchronous IO, and lightweight task
20     frameworks. Depending on which concrete Executor class is being used,
21     tasks may execute in a newly created thread, an existing
22     task-execution thread, or the thread calling <tt>execute()</tt>, and
23     may execute sequentially or concurrently. {@link
24     java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService} provides a more complete
25     asynchronous task execution framework. An ExecutorService manages
26 dl 1.14 queuing and scheduling of tasks, and allows controlled shutdown. The
27 dl 1.12 {@link java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService} subinterface
28     adds support for delayed and periodic task execution.
29     ExecutorServices provide methods arranging asynchronous execution of
30     any function expressed as {@link java.util.concurrent.Callable}, the
31     result-bearing analog of {@link java.lang.Runnable}. A {@link
32     java.util.concurrent.Future} returns the results of a function, allows
33 dl 1.16 determination of whether execution has completed, and provides a means to
34 dl 1.12 cancel execution.
35    
36     <p>
37    
38 dl 1.16 <b>Implementations.</b> Classes {@link
39 dl 1.12 java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor} and {@link
40 dl 1.16 java.util.concurrent.ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor} provide tunable,
41     flexible thread pools. The {@link java.util.concurrent.Executors}
42     class provides factory methods for the most common kinds and
43     configurations of Executors, as well as a few utility methods for
44     using them. Other utilities based on Executors include the concrete
45     class {@link java.util.concurrent.FutureTask} providing a common
46     extensible implementation of Futures, and {@link
47 dl 1.12 java.util.concurrent.ExecutorCompletionService}, that assists in
48     coordinating the processing of groups of asynchronous tasks.
49 dl 1.1
50     <h2>Queues</h2>
51    
52 dl 1.6 The java.util.concurrent {@link
53 dl 1.1 java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentLinkedQueue} class supplies an
54 dl 1.6 efficient scalable thread-safe non-blocking FIFO queue. Five
55     implementations in java.util.concurrent support the extended {@link
56     java.util.concurrent.BlockingQueue} interface, that defines blocking
57     versions of put and take: {@link
58 dl 1.1 java.util.concurrent.LinkedBlockingQueue}, {@link
59     java.util.concurrent.ArrayBlockingQueue}, {@link
60     java.util.concurrent.SynchronousQueue}, {@link
61     java.util.concurrent.PriorityBlockingQueue}, and {@link
62 dl 1.2 java.util.concurrent.DelayQueue}. The different classes cover the most
63     common usage contexts for producer-consumer, messaging, parallel
64     tasking, and related concurrent designs.
65 dl 1.1
66    
67     <h2>Timing</h2>
68    
69     The {@link java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit} class provides multiple
70 dl 1.2 granularities (including nanoseconds) for specifying and controlling
71 dl 1.9 time-out based operations. Most classes in the package contain
72     operations based on time-outs in addition to indefinite waits. In all
73     cases that time-outs are used, the time-out specifies the minimum time
74     that the method should wait before indicating that it
75     timed-out. Implementations make a &quot;best effort&quot; to detect
76     time-outs as soon as possible after they occur. However, an indefinite
77     amount of time may elapse between a time-out being detected and a
78     thread actually executing again after that time-out.
79 dholmes 1.4
80 dl 1.1 <h2>Synchronizers</h2>
81    
82 dl 1.13 Four classes aid common special-purpose synchronization idioms.
83 dl 1.10 {@link java.util.concurrent.Semaphore} is a classic concurrency tool.
84 dl 1.16 {@link java.util.concurrent.CountDownLatch} is a very simple yet very
85 dl 1.11 common utility for blocking until a given number of signals, events,
86     or conditions hold. A {@link java.util.concurrent.CyclicBarrier} is a
87 dl 1.13 resettable multiway synchronization point useful in some styles of
88 dl 1.11 parallel programming. An {@link java.util.concurrent.Exchanger} allows
89 dl 1.13 two threads to exchange objects at a rendezvous point, and is useful
90     in several pipeline designs.
91 dl 1.1
92     <h2>Concurrent Collections</h2>
93    
94     Besides Queues, this package supplies a few Collection implementations
95     designed for use in multithreaded contexts: {@link
96     java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap}, {@link
97     java.util.concurrent.CopyOnWriteArrayList}, and {@link
98     java.util.concurrent.CopyOnWriteArraySet}.
99    
100 dl 1.6 <p>The "Concurrent" prefix used with some classes in this package is a
101     shorthand indicating several differences from similar "synchronized"
102 dl 1.1 classes. For example <tt>java.util.Hashtable</tt> and
103     <tt>Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap())</tt> are
104 dl 1.6 synchronized. But {@link java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap} is
105     "concurrent". A concurrent collection is thread-safe, but not
106     governed by a single exclusion lock. In the particular case of
107     ConcurrentHashMap, it safely permits any number of concurrent reads as
108 dl 1.9 well as a tunable number of concurrent writes. "Synchronized" classes
109     can be useful when you need to prevent all access to a collection via
110     a single lock, at the expense of poorer scalability. In other cases in
111     which multiple threads are expected to access a common collection,
112     "concurrent" versions are normally preferable. And unsynchronized
113     collections are preferable when either collections are unshared, or
114     are accessible only when holding other locks.
115 dl 1.1
116     <p> Most concurrent Collection implementations (including most Queues)
117     also differ from the usual java.util conventions in that their Iterators
118     provide <em>weakly consistent</em> rather than fast-fail traversal. A
119     weakly consistent iterator is thread-safe, but does not necessarily
120     freeze the collection while iterating, so it may (or may not) reflect
121     any updates since the iterator was created.
122    
123 dl 1.15 @since 1.5
124    
125 dl 1.1 </body> </html>