001/* 002 * Copyright (C) 2010 The Guava Authors 003 * 004 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except 005 * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at 006 * 007 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 008 * 009 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License 010 * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express 011 * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under 012 * the License. 013 */ 014 015package com.google.common.util.concurrent; 016 017import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull; 018import static com.google.common.util.concurrent.Internal.toNanosSaturated; 019 020import com.google.common.annotations.Beta; 021import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible; 022import com.google.common.primitives.Longs; 023import com.google.errorprone.annotations.concurrent.GuardedBy; 024import com.google.j2objc.annotations.Weak; 025import java.time.Duration; 026import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit; 027import java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition; 028import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock; 029import java.util.function.BooleanSupplier; 030import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable; 031 032/** 033 * A synchronization abstraction supporting waiting on arbitrary boolean conditions. 034 * 035 * <p>This class is intended as a replacement for {@link ReentrantLock}. Code using {@code Monitor} 036 * is less error-prone and more readable than code using {@code ReentrantLock}, without significant 037 * performance loss. {@code Monitor} even has the potential for performance gain by optimizing the 038 * evaluation and signaling of conditions. Signaling is entirely <a 039 * href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monitor_(synchronization)#Implicit_signaling">implicit</a>. By 040 * eliminating explicit signaling, this class can guarantee that only one thread is awakened when a 041 * condition becomes true (no "signaling storms" due to use of {@link 042 * java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition#signalAll Condition.signalAll}) and that no signals are lost 043 * (no "hangs" due to incorrect use of {@link java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition#signal 044 * Condition.signal}). 045 * 046 * <p>A thread is said to <i>occupy</i> a monitor if it has <i>entered</i> the monitor but not yet 047 * <i>left</i>. Only one thread may occupy a given monitor at any moment. A monitor is also 048 * reentrant, so a thread may enter a monitor any number of times, and then must leave the same 049 * number of times. The <i>enter</i> and <i>leave</i> operations have the same synchronization 050 * semantics as the built-in Java language synchronization primitives. 051 * 052 * <p>A call to any of the <i>enter</i> methods with <b>void</b> return type should always be 053 * followed immediately by a <i>try/finally</i> block to ensure that the current thread leaves the 054 * monitor cleanly: 055 * 056 * <pre>{@code 057 * monitor.enter(); 058 * try { 059 * // do things while occupying the monitor 060 * } finally { 061 * monitor.leave(); 062 * } 063 * }</pre> 064 * 065 * <p>A call to any of the <i>enter</i> methods with <b>boolean</b> return type should always appear 066 * as the condition of an <i>if</i> statement containing a <i>try/finally</i> block to ensure that 067 * the current thread leaves the monitor cleanly: 068 * 069 * <pre>{@code 070 * if (monitor.tryEnter()) { 071 * try { 072 * // do things while occupying the monitor 073 * } finally { 074 * monitor.leave(); 075 * } 076 * } else { 077 * // do other things since the monitor was not available 078 * } 079 * }</pre> 080 * 081 * <h2>Comparison with {@code synchronized} and {@code ReentrantLock}</h2> 082 * 083 * <p>The following examples show a simple threadsafe holder expressed using {@code synchronized}, 084 * {@link ReentrantLock}, and {@code Monitor}. 085 * 086 * <h3>{@code synchronized}</h3> 087 * 088 * <p>This version is the fewest lines of code, largely because the synchronization mechanism used 089 * is built into the language and runtime. But the programmer has to remember to avoid a couple of 090 * common bugs: The {@code wait()} must be inside a {@code while} instead of an {@code if}, and 091 * {@code notifyAll()} must be used instead of {@code notify()} because there are two different 092 * logical conditions being awaited. 093 * 094 * <pre>{@code 095 * public class SafeBox<V> { 096 * private V value; 097 * 098 * public synchronized V get() throws InterruptedException { 099 * while (value == null) { 100 * wait(); 101 * } 102 * V result = value; 103 * value = null; 104 * notifyAll(); 105 * return result; 106 * } 107 * 108 * public synchronized void set(V newValue) throws InterruptedException { 109 * while (value != null) { 110 * wait(); 111 * } 112 * value = newValue; 113 * notifyAll(); 114 * } 115 * } 116 * }</pre> 117 * 118 * <h3>{@code ReentrantLock}</h3> 119 * 120 * <p>This version is much more verbose than the {@code synchronized} version, and still suffers 121 * from the need for the programmer to remember to use {@code while} instead of {@code if}. However, 122 * one advantage is that we can introduce two separate {@code Condition} objects, which allows us to 123 * use {@code signal()} instead of {@code signalAll()}, which may be a performance benefit. 124 * 125 * <pre>{@code 126 * public class SafeBox<V> { 127 * private V value; 128 * private final ReentrantLock lock = new ReentrantLock(); 129 * private final Condition valuePresent = lock.newCondition(); 130 * private final Condition valueAbsent = lock.newCondition(); 131 * 132 * public V get() throws InterruptedException { 133 * lock.lock(); 134 * try { 135 * while (value == null) { 136 * valuePresent.await(); 137 * } 138 * V result = value; 139 * value = null; 140 * valueAbsent.signal(); 141 * return result; 142 * } finally { 143 * lock.unlock(); 144 * } 145 * } 146 * 147 * public void set(V newValue) throws InterruptedException { 148 * lock.lock(); 149 * try { 150 * while (value != null) { 151 * valueAbsent.await(); 152 * } 153 * value = newValue; 154 * valuePresent.signal(); 155 * } finally { 156 * lock.unlock(); 157 * } 158 * } 159 * } 160 * }</pre> 161 * 162 * <h3>{@code Monitor}</h3> 163 * 164 * <p>This version adds some verbosity around the {@code Guard} objects, but removes that same 165 * verbosity, and more, from the {@code get} and {@code set} methods. {@code Monitor} implements the 166 * same efficient signaling as we had to hand-code in the {@code ReentrantLock} version above. 167 * Finally, the programmer no longer has to hand-code the wait loop, and therefore doesn't have to 168 * remember to use {@code while} instead of {@code if}. 169 * 170 * <pre>{@code 171 * public class SafeBox<V> { 172 * private V value; 173 * private final Monitor monitor = new Monitor(); 174 * private final Monitor.Guard valuePresent = monitor.newGuard(() -> value != null); 175 * private final Monitor.Guard valueAbsent = monitor.newGuard(() -> value == null); 176 * 177 * public V get() throws InterruptedException { 178 * monitor.enterWhen(valuePresent); 179 * try { 180 * V result = value; 181 * value = null; 182 * return result; 183 * } finally { 184 * monitor.leave(); 185 * } 186 * } 187 * 188 * public void set(V newValue) throws InterruptedException { 189 * monitor.enterWhen(valueAbsent); 190 * try { 191 * value = newValue; 192 * } finally { 193 * monitor.leave(); 194 * } 195 * } 196 * } 197 * }</pre> 198 * 199 * @author Justin T. Sampson 200 * @author Martin Buchholz 201 * @since 10.0 202 */ 203@Beta 204@GwtIncompatible 205@SuppressWarnings("GuardedBy") // TODO(b/35466881): Fix or suppress. 206public final class Monitor { 207 // TODO(user): Use raw LockSupport or AbstractQueuedSynchronizer instead of ReentrantLock. 208 // TODO(user): "Port" jsr166 tests for ReentrantLock. 209 // 210 // TODO(user): Change API to make it impossible to use a Guard with the "wrong" monitor, 211 // by making the monitor implicit, and to eliminate other sources of IMSE. 212 // Imagine: 213 // guard.lock(); 214 // try { /* monitor locked and guard satisfied here */ } 215 // finally { guard.unlock(); } 216 // Here are Justin's design notes about this: 217 // 218 // This idea has come up from time to time, and I think one of my 219 // earlier versions of Monitor even did something like this. I ended 220 // up strongly favoring the current interface. 221 // 222 // I probably can't remember all the reasons (it's possible you 223 // could find them in the code review archives), but here are a few: 224 // 225 // 1. What about leaving/unlocking? Are you going to do 226 // guard.enter() paired with monitor.leave()? That might get 227 // confusing. It's nice for the finally block to look as close as 228 // possible to the thing right before the try. You could have 229 // guard.leave(), but that's a little odd as well because the 230 // guard doesn't have anything to do with leaving. You can't 231 // really enforce that the guard you're leaving is the same one 232 // you entered with, and it doesn't actually matter. 233 // 234 // 2. Since you can enter the monitor without a guard at all, some 235 // places you'll have monitor.enter()/monitor.leave() and other 236 // places you'll have guard.enter()/guard.leave() even though 237 // it's the same lock being acquired underneath. Always using 238 // monitor.enterXXX()/monitor.leave() will make it really clear 239 // which lock is held at any point in the code. 240 // 241 // 3. I think "enterWhen(notEmpty)" reads better than "notEmpty.enter()". 242 // 243 // TODO(user): Implement ReentrantLock features: 244 // - toString() method 245 // - getOwner() method 246 // - getQueuedThreads() method 247 // - getWaitingThreads(Guard) method 248 // - implement Serializable 249 // - redo the API to be as close to identical to ReentrantLock as possible, 250 // since, after all, this class is also a reentrant mutual exclusion lock!? 251 252 /* 253 * One of the key challenges of this class is to prevent lost signals, while trying hard to 254 * minimize unnecessary signals. One simple and correct algorithm is to signal some other waiter 255 * with a satisfied guard (if one exists) whenever any thread occupying the monitor exits the 256 * monitor, either by unlocking all of its held locks, or by starting to wait for a guard. This 257 * includes exceptional exits, so all control paths involving signalling must be protected by a 258 * finally block. 259 * 260 * Further optimizations of this algorithm become increasingly subtle. A wait that terminates 261 * without the guard being satisfied (due to timeout, but not interrupt) can then immediately exit 262 * the monitor without signalling. If it timed out without being signalled, it does not need to 263 * "pass on" the signal to another thread. If it *was* signalled, then its guard must have been 264 * satisfied at the time of signal, and has since been modified by some other thread to be 265 * non-satisfied before reacquiring the lock, and that other thread takes over the responsibility 266 * of signaling the next waiter. 267 * 268 * Unlike the underlying Condition, if we are not careful, an interrupt *can* cause a signal to be 269 * lost, because the signal may be sent to a condition whose sole waiter has just been 270 * interrupted. 271 * 272 * Imagine a monitor with multiple guards. A thread enters the monitor, satisfies all the guards, 273 * and leaves, calling signalNextWaiter. With traditional locks and conditions, all the conditions 274 * need to be signalled because it is not known which if any of them have waiters (and hasWaiters 275 * can't be used reliably because of a check-then-act race). With our Monitor guards, we only 276 * signal the first active guard that is satisfied. But the corresponding thread may have already 277 * been interrupted and is waiting to reacquire the lock while still registered in activeGuards, 278 * in which case the signal is a no-op, and the bigger-picture signal is lost unless interrupted 279 * threads take special action by participating in the signal-passing game. 280 */ 281 282 /* 283 * Timeout handling is intricate, especially given our ambitious goals: 284 * - Avoid underflow and overflow of timeout values when specified timeouts are close to 285 * Long.MIN_VALUE or Long.MAX_VALUE. 286 * - Favor responding to interrupts over timeouts. 287 * - System.nanoTime() is expensive enough that we want to call it the minimum required number of 288 * times, typically once before invoking a blocking method. This often requires keeping track of 289 * the first time in a method that nanoTime() has been invoked, for which the special value 0L 290 * is reserved to mean "uninitialized". If timeout is non-positive, then nanoTime need never be 291 * called. 292 * - Keep behavior of fair and non-fair instances consistent. 293 */ 294 295 /** 296 * A boolean condition for which a thread may wait. A {@code Guard} is associated with a single 297 * {@code Monitor}. The monitor may check the guard at arbitrary times from any thread occupying 298 * the monitor, so code should not be written to rely on how often a guard might or might not be 299 * checked. 300 * 301 * <p>If a {@code Guard} is passed into any method of a {@code Monitor} other than the one it is 302 * associated with, an {@link IllegalMonitorStateException} is thrown. 303 * 304 * @since 10.0 305 */ 306 @Beta 307 public abstract static class Guard { 308 309 @Weak final Monitor monitor; 310 final Condition condition; 311 312 @GuardedBy("monitor.lock") 313 int waiterCount = 0; 314 315 /** The next active guard */ 316 @GuardedBy("monitor.lock") 317 @Nullable 318 Guard next; 319 320 protected Guard(Monitor monitor) { 321 this.monitor = checkNotNull(monitor, "monitor"); 322 this.condition = monitor.lock.newCondition(); 323 } 324 325 /** 326 * Evaluates this guard's boolean condition. This method is always called with the associated 327 * monitor already occupied. Implementations of this method must depend only on state protected 328 * by the associated monitor, and must not modify that state. 329 */ 330 public abstract boolean isSatisfied(); 331 } 332 333 /** Whether this monitor is fair. */ 334 private final boolean fair; 335 336 /** The lock underlying this monitor. */ 337 private final ReentrantLock lock; 338 339 /** 340 * The guards associated with this monitor that currently have waiters ({@code waiterCount > 0}). 341 * A linked list threaded through the Guard.next field. 342 */ 343 @GuardedBy("lock") 344 private Guard activeGuards = null; 345 346 /** 347 * Creates a monitor with a non-fair (but fast) ordering policy. Equivalent to {@code 348 * Monitor(false)}. 349 */ 350 public Monitor() { 351 this(false); 352 } 353 354 /** 355 * Creates a monitor with the given ordering policy. 356 * 357 * @param fair whether this monitor should use a fair ordering policy rather than a non-fair (but 358 * fast) one 359 */ 360 public Monitor(boolean fair) { 361 this.fair = fair; 362 this.lock = new ReentrantLock(fair); 363 } 364 365 /** 366 * Creates a new {@linkplain Guard guard} for this monitor. 367 * 368 * @param isSatisfied the new guard's boolean condition (see {@link Guard#isSatisfied 369 * isSatisfied()}) 370 * @since 21.0 371 */ 372 public Guard newGuard(final BooleanSupplier isSatisfied) { 373 checkNotNull(isSatisfied, "isSatisfied"); 374 return new Guard(this) { 375 @Override 376 public boolean isSatisfied() { 377 return isSatisfied.getAsBoolean(); 378 } 379 }; 380 } 381 382 /** Enters this monitor. Blocks indefinitely. */ 383 public void enter() { 384 lock.lock(); 385 } 386 387 /** 388 * Enters this monitor. Blocks at most the given time. 389 * 390 * @return whether the monitor was entered 391 * @since 28.0 392 */ 393 public boolean enter(Duration time) { 394 return enter(toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 395 } 396 397 /** 398 * Enters this monitor. Blocks at most the given time. 399 * 400 * @return whether the monitor was entered 401 */ 402 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 403 public boolean enter(long time, TimeUnit unit) { 404 final long timeoutNanos = toSafeNanos(time, unit); 405 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 406 if (!fair && lock.tryLock()) { 407 return true; 408 } 409 boolean interrupted = Thread.interrupted(); 410 try { 411 final long startTime = System.nanoTime(); 412 for (long remainingNanos = timeoutNanos; ; ) { 413 try { 414 return lock.tryLock(remainingNanos, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 415 } catch (InterruptedException interrupt) { 416 interrupted = true; 417 remainingNanos = remainingNanos(startTime, timeoutNanos); 418 } 419 } 420 } finally { 421 if (interrupted) { 422 Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); 423 } 424 } 425 } 426 427 /** 428 * Enters this monitor. Blocks indefinitely, but may be interrupted. 429 * 430 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 431 */ 432 public void enterInterruptibly() throws InterruptedException { 433 lock.lockInterruptibly(); 434 } 435 436 /** 437 * Enters this monitor. Blocks at most the given time, and may be interrupted. 438 * 439 * @return whether the monitor was entered 440 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 441 * @since 28.0 442 */ 443 public boolean enterInterruptibly(Duration time) throws InterruptedException { 444 return enterInterruptibly(toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 445 } 446 447 /** 448 * Enters this monitor. Blocks at most the given time, and may be interrupted. 449 * 450 * @return whether the monitor was entered 451 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 452 */ 453 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 454 public boolean enterInterruptibly(long time, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { 455 return lock.tryLock(time, unit); 456 } 457 458 /** 459 * Enters this monitor if it is possible to do so immediately. Does not block. 460 * 461 * <p><b>Note:</b> This method disregards the fairness setting of this monitor. 462 * 463 * @return whether the monitor was entered 464 */ 465 public boolean tryEnter() { 466 return lock.tryLock(); 467 } 468 469 /** 470 * Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks indefinitely, but may be interrupted. 471 * 472 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 473 */ 474 public void enterWhen(Guard guard) throws InterruptedException { 475 if (guard.monitor != this) { 476 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 477 } 478 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 479 boolean signalBeforeWaiting = lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(); 480 lock.lockInterruptibly(); 481 482 boolean satisfied = false; 483 try { 484 if (!guard.isSatisfied()) { 485 await(guard, signalBeforeWaiting); 486 } 487 satisfied = true; 488 } finally { 489 if (!satisfied) { 490 leave(); 491 } 492 } 493 } 494 495 /** 496 * Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time, including both 497 * the time to acquire the lock and the time to wait for the guard to be satisfied, and may be 498 * interrupted. 499 * 500 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 501 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 502 * @since 28.0 503 */ 504 public boolean enterWhen(Guard guard, Duration time) throws InterruptedException { 505 return enterWhen(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 506 } 507 508 /** 509 * Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time, including both 510 * the time to acquire the lock and the time to wait for the guard to be satisfied, and may be 511 * interrupted. 512 * 513 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 514 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 515 */ 516 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 517 public boolean enterWhen(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { 518 final long timeoutNanos = toSafeNanos(time, unit); 519 if (guard.monitor != this) { 520 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 521 } 522 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 523 boolean reentrant = lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(); 524 long startTime = 0L; 525 526 locked: 527 { 528 if (!fair) { 529 // Check interrupt status to get behavior consistent with fair case. 530 if (Thread.interrupted()) { 531 throw new InterruptedException(); 532 } 533 if (lock.tryLock()) { 534 break locked; 535 } 536 } 537 startTime = initNanoTime(timeoutNanos); 538 if (!lock.tryLock(time, unit)) { 539 return false; 540 } 541 } 542 543 boolean satisfied = false; 544 boolean threw = true; 545 try { 546 satisfied = 547 guard.isSatisfied() 548 || awaitNanos( 549 guard, 550 (startTime == 0L) ? timeoutNanos : remainingNanos(startTime, timeoutNanos), 551 reentrant); 552 threw = false; 553 return satisfied; 554 } finally { 555 if (!satisfied) { 556 try { 557 // Don't need to signal if timed out, but do if interrupted 558 if (threw && !reentrant) { 559 signalNextWaiter(); 560 } 561 } finally { 562 lock.unlock(); 563 } 564 } 565 } 566 } 567 568 /** Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks indefinitely. */ 569 public void enterWhenUninterruptibly(Guard guard) { 570 if (guard.monitor != this) { 571 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 572 } 573 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 574 boolean signalBeforeWaiting = lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(); 575 lock.lock(); 576 577 boolean satisfied = false; 578 try { 579 if (!guard.isSatisfied()) { 580 awaitUninterruptibly(guard, signalBeforeWaiting); 581 } 582 satisfied = true; 583 } finally { 584 if (!satisfied) { 585 leave(); 586 } 587 } 588 } 589 590 /** 591 * Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time, including both 592 * the time to acquire the lock and the time to wait for the guard to be satisfied. 593 * 594 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 595 * @since 28.0 596 */ 597 public boolean enterWhenUninterruptibly(Guard guard, Duration time) { 598 return enterWhenUninterruptibly(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 599 } 600 601 /** 602 * Enters this monitor when the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time, including both 603 * the time to acquire the lock and the time to wait for the guard to be satisfied. 604 * 605 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 606 */ 607 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 608 public boolean enterWhenUninterruptibly(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) { 609 final long timeoutNanos = toSafeNanos(time, unit); 610 if (guard.monitor != this) { 611 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 612 } 613 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 614 long startTime = 0L; 615 boolean signalBeforeWaiting = lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(); 616 boolean interrupted = Thread.interrupted(); 617 try { 618 if (fair || !lock.tryLock()) { 619 startTime = initNanoTime(timeoutNanos); 620 for (long remainingNanos = timeoutNanos; ; ) { 621 try { 622 if (lock.tryLock(remainingNanos, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS)) { 623 break; 624 } else { 625 return false; 626 } 627 } catch (InterruptedException interrupt) { 628 interrupted = true; 629 remainingNanos = remainingNanos(startTime, timeoutNanos); 630 } 631 } 632 } 633 634 boolean satisfied = false; 635 try { 636 while (true) { 637 try { 638 if (guard.isSatisfied()) { 639 satisfied = true; 640 } else { 641 final long remainingNanos; 642 if (startTime == 0L) { 643 startTime = initNanoTime(timeoutNanos); 644 remainingNanos = timeoutNanos; 645 } else { 646 remainingNanos = remainingNanos(startTime, timeoutNanos); 647 } 648 satisfied = awaitNanos(guard, remainingNanos, signalBeforeWaiting); 649 } 650 return satisfied; 651 } catch (InterruptedException interrupt) { 652 interrupted = true; 653 signalBeforeWaiting = false; 654 } 655 } 656 } finally { 657 if (!satisfied) { 658 lock.unlock(); // No need to signal if timed out 659 } 660 } 661 } finally { 662 if (interrupted) { 663 Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); 664 } 665 } 666 } 667 668 /** 669 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks indefinitely acquiring the lock, but does 670 * not wait for the guard to be satisfied. 671 * 672 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 673 */ 674 public boolean enterIf(Guard guard) { 675 if (guard.monitor != this) { 676 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 677 } 678 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 679 lock.lock(); 680 681 boolean satisfied = false; 682 try { 683 return satisfied = guard.isSatisfied(); 684 } finally { 685 if (!satisfied) { 686 lock.unlock(); 687 } 688 } 689 } 690 691 /** 692 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time acquiring the 693 * lock, but does not wait for the guard to be satisfied. 694 * 695 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 696 * @since 28.0 697 */ 698 public boolean enterIf(Guard guard, Duration time) { 699 return enterIf(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 700 } 701 702 /** 703 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time acquiring the 704 * lock, but does not wait for the guard to be satisfied. 705 * 706 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 707 */ 708 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 709 public boolean enterIf(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) { 710 if (guard.monitor != this) { 711 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 712 } 713 if (!enter(time, unit)) { 714 return false; 715 } 716 717 boolean satisfied = false; 718 try { 719 return satisfied = guard.isSatisfied(); 720 } finally { 721 if (!satisfied) { 722 lock.unlock(); 723 } 724 } 725 } 726 727 /** 728 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks indefinitely acquiring the lock, but does 729 * not wait for the guard to be satisfied, and may be interrupted. 730 * 731 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 732 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 733 */ 734 public boolean enterIfInterruptibly(Guard guard) throws InterruptedException { 735 if (guard.monitor != this) { 736 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 737 } 738 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 739 lock.lockInterruptibly(); 740 741 boolean satisfied = false; 742 try { 743 return satisfied = guard.isSatisfied(); 744 } finally { 745 if (!satisfied) { 746 lock.unlock(); 747 } 748 } 749 } 750 751 /** 752 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time acquiring the 753 * lock, but does not wait for the guard to be satisfied, and may be interrupted. 754 * 755 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 756 * @since 28.0 757 */ 758 public boolean enterIfInterruptibly(Guard guard, Duration time) throws InterruptedException { 759 return enterIfInterruptibly(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 760 } 761 762 /** 763 * Enters this monitor if the guard is satisfied. Blocks at most the given time acquiring the 764 * lock, but does not wait for the guard to be satisfied, and may be interrupted. 765 * 766 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 767 */ 768 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 769 public boolean enterIfInterruptibly(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) 770 throws InterruptedException { 771 if (guard.monitor != this) { 772 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 773 } 774 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 775 if (!lock.tryLock(time, unit)) { 776 return false; 777 } 778 779 boolean satisfied = false; 780 try { 781 return satisfied = guard.isSatisfied(); 782 } finally { 783 if (!satisfied) { 784 lock.unlock(); 785 } 786 } 787 } 788 789 /** 790 * Enters this monitor if it is possible to do so immediately and the guard is satisfied. Does not 791 * block acquiring the lock and does not wait for the guard to be satisfied. 792 * 793 * <p><b>Note:</b> This method disregards the fairness setting of this monitor. 794 * 795 * @return whether the monitor was entered, which guarantees that the guard is now satisfied 796 */ 797 public boolean tryEnterIf(Guard guard) { 798 if (guard.monitor != this) { 799 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 800 } 801 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 802 if (!lock.tryLock()) { 803 return false; 804 } 805 806 boolean satisfied = false; 807 try { 808 return satisfied = guard.isSatisfied(); 809 } finally { 810 if (!satisfied) { 811 lock.unlock(); 812 } 813 } 814 } 815 816 /** 817 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits indefinitely, but may be interrupted. May be called 818 * only by a thread currently occupying this monitor. 819 * 820 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 821 */ 822 public void waitFor(Guard guard) throws InterruptedException { 823 if (!((guard.monitor == this) & lock.isHeldByCurrentThread())) { 824 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 825 } 826 if (!guard.isSatisfied()) { 827 await(guard, true); 828 } 829 } 830 831 /** 832 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits at most the given time, and may be interrupted. May 833 * be called only by a thread currently occupying this monitor. 834 * 835 * @return whether the guard is now satisfied 836 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 837 * @since 28.0 838 */ 839 public boolean waitFor(Guard guard, Duration time) throws InterruptedException { 840 return waitFor(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 841 } 842 843 /** 844 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits at most the given time, and may be interrupted. May 845 * be called only by a thread currently occupying this monitor. 846 * 847 * @return whether the guard is now satisfied 848 * @throws InterruptedException if interrupted while waiting 849 */ 850 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 851 public boolean waitFor(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { 852 final long timeoutNanos = toSafeNanos(time, unit); 853 if (!((guard.monitor == this) & lock.isHeldByCurrentThread())) { 854 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 855 } 856 if (guard.isSatisfied()) { 857 return true; 858 } 859 if (Thread.interrupted()) { 860 throw new InterruptedException(); 861 } 862 return awaitNanos(guard, timeoutNanos, true); 863 } 864 865 /** 866 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits indefinitely. May be called only by a thread 867 * currently occupying this monitor. 868 */ 869 public void waitForUninterruptibly(Guard guard) { 870 if (!((guard.monitor == this) & lock.isHeldByCurrentThread())) { 871 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 872 } 873 if (!guard.isSatisfied()) { 874 awaitUninterruptibly(guard, true); 875 } 876 } 877 878 /** 879 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits at most the given time. May be called only by a 880 * thread currently occupying this monitor. 881 * 882 * @return whether the guard is now satisfied 883 * @since 28.0 884 */ 885 public boolean waitForUninterruptibly(Guard guard, Duration time) { 886 return waitForUninterruptibly(guard, toNanosSaturated(time), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); 887 } 888 889 /** 890 * Waits for the guard to be satisfied. Waits at most the given time. May be called only by a 891 * thread currently occupying this monitor. 892 * 893 * @return whether the guard is now satisfied 894 */ 895 @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration 896 public boolean waitForUninterruptibly(Guard guard, long time, TimeUnit unit) { 897 final long timeoutNanos = toSafeNanos(time, unit); 898 if (!((guard.monitor == this) & lock.isHeldByCurrentThread())) { 899 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 900 } 901 if (guard.isSatisfied()) { 902 return true; 903 } 904 boolean signalBeforeWaiting = true; 905 final long startTime = initNanoTime(timeoutNanos); 906 boolean interrupted = Thread.interrupted(); 907 try { 908 for (long remainingNanos = timeoutNanos; ; ) { 909 try { 910 return awaitNanos(guard, remainingNanos, signalBeforeWaiting); 911 } catch (InterruptedException interrupt) { 912 interrupted = true; 913 if (guard.isSatisfied()) { 914 return true; 915 } 916 signalBeforeWaiting = false; 917 remainingNanos = remainingNanos(startTime, timeoutNanos); 918 } 919 } 920 } finally { 921 if (interrupted) { 922 Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); 923 } 924 } 925 } 926 927 /** Leaves this monitor. May be called only by a thread currently occupying this monitor. */ 928 public void leave() { 929 final ReentrantLock lock = this.lock; 930 try { 931 // No need to signal if we will still be holding the lock when we return 932 if (lock.getHoldCount() == 1) { 933 signalNextWaiter(); 934 } 935 } finally { 936 lock.unlock(); // Will throw IllegalMonitorStateException if not held 937 } 938 } 939 940 /** Returns whether this monitor is using a fair ordering policy. */ 941 public boolean isFair() { 942 return fair; 943 } 944 945 /** 946 * Returns whether this monitor is occupied by any thread. This method is designed for use in 947 * monitoring of the system state, not for synchronization control. 948 */ 949 public boolean isOccupied() { 950 return lock.isLocked(); 951 } 952 953 /** 954 * Returns whether the current thread is occupying this monitor (has entered more times than it 955 * has left). 956 */ 957 public boolean isOccupiedByCurrentThread() { 958 return lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(); 959 } 960 961 /** 962 * Returns the number of times the current thread has entered this monitor in excess of the number 963 * of times it has left. Returns 0 if the current thread is not occupying this monitor. 964 */ 965 public int getOccupiedDepth() { 966 return lock.getHoldCount(); 967 } 968 969 /** 970 * Returns an estimate of the number of threads waiting to enter this monitor. The value is only 971 * an estimate because the number of threads may change dynamically while this method traverses 972 * internal data structures. This method is designed for use in monitoring of the system state, 973 * not for synchronization control. 974 */ 975 public int getQueueLength() { 976 return lock.getQueueLength(); 977 } 978 979 /** 980 * Returns whether any threads are waiting to enter this monitor. Note that because cancellations 981 * may occur at any time, a {@code true} return does not guarantee that any other thread will ever 982 * enter this monitor. This method is designed primarily for use in monitoring of the system 983 * state. 984 */ 985 public boolean hasQueuedThreads() { 986 return lock.hasQueuedThreads(); 987 } 988 989 /** 990 * Queries whether the given thread is waiting to enter this monitor. Note that because 991 * cancellations may occur at any time, a {@code true} return does not guarantee that this thread 992 * will ever enter this monitor. This method is designed primarily for use in monitoring of the 993 * system state. 994 */ 995 public boolean hasQueuedThread(Thread thread) { 996 return lock.hasQueuedThread(thread); 997 } 998 999 /** 1000 * Queries whether any threads are waiting for the given guard to become satisfied. Note that 1001 * because timeouts and interrupts may occur at any time, a {@code true} return does not guarantee 1002 * that the guard becoming satisfied in the future will awaken any threads. This method is 1003 * designed primarily for use in monitoring of the system state. 1004 */ 1005 public boolean hasWaiters(Guard guard) { 1006 return getWaitQueueLength(guard) > 0; 1007 } 1008 1009 /** 1010 * Returns an estimate of the number of threads waiting for the given guard to become satisfied. 1011 * Note that because timeouts and interrupts may occur at any time, the estimate serves only as an 1012 * upper bound on the actual number of waiters. This method is designed for use in monitoring of 1013 * the system state, not for synchronization control. 1014 */ 1015 public int getWaitQueueLength(Guard guard) { 1016 if (guard.monitor != this) { 1017 throw new IllegalMonitorStateException(); 1018 } 1019 lock.lock(); 1020 try { 1021 return guard.waiterCount; 1022 } finally { 1023 lock.unlock(); 1024 } 1025 } 1026 1027 /** 1028 * Returns unit.toNanos(time), additionally ensuring the returned value is not at risk of 1029 * overflowing or underflowing, by bounding the value between 0 and (Long.MAX_VALUE / 4) * 3. 1030 * Actually waiting for more than 219 years is not supported! 1031 */ 1032 private static long toSafeNanos(long time, TimeUnit unit) { 1033 long timeoutNanos = unit.toNanos(time); 1034 return Longs.constrainToRange(timeoutNanos, 0L, (Long.MAX_VALUE / 4) * 3); 1035 } 1036 1037 /** 1038 * Returns System.nanoTime() unless the timeout has already elapsed. Returns 0L if and only if the 1039 * timeout has already elapsed. 1040 */ 1041 private static long initNanoTime(long timeoutNanos) { 1042 if (timeoutNanos <= 0L) { 1043 return 0L; 1044 } else { 1045 long startTime = System.nanoTime(); 1046 return (startTime == 0L) ? 1L : startTime; 1047 } 1048 } 1049 1050 /** 1051 * Returns the remaining nanos until the given timeout, or 0L if the timeout has already elapsed. 1052 * Caller must have previously sanitized timeoutNanos using toSafeNanos. 1053 */ 1054 private static long remainingNanos(long startTime, long timeoutNanos) { 1055 // assert timeoutNanos == 0L || startTime != 0L; 1056 1057 // TODO : NOT CORRECT, BUT TESTS PASS ANYWAYS! 1058 // if (true) return timeoutNanos; 1059 // ONLY 2 TESTS FAIL IF WE DO: 1060 // if (true) return 0; 1061 1062 return (timeoutNanos <= 0L) ? 0L : timeoutNanos - (System.nanoTime() - startTime); 1063 } 1064 1065 /** 1066 * Signals some other thread waiting on a satisfied guard, if one exists. 1067 * 1068 * <p>We manage calls to this method carefully, to signal only when necessary, but never losing a 1069 * signal, which is the classic problem of this kind of concurrency construct. We must signal if 1070 * the current thread is about to relinquish the lock and may have changed the state protected by 1071 * the monitor, thereby causing some guard to be satisfied. 1072 * 1073 * <p>In addition, any thread that has been signalled when its guard was satisfied acquires the 1074 * responsibility of signalling the next thread when it again relinquishes the lock. Unlike a 1075 * normal Condition, there is no guarantee that an interrupted thread has not been signalled, 1076 * since the concurrency control must manage multiple Conditions. So this method must generally be 1077 * called when waits are interrupted. 1078 * 1079 * <p>On the other hand, if a signalled thread wakes up to discover that its guard is still not 1080 * satisfied, it does *not* need to call this method before returning to wait. This can only 1081 * happen due to spurious wakeup (ignorable) or another thread acquiring the lock before the 1082 * current thread can and returning the guard to the unsatisfied state. In the latter case the 1083 * other thread (last thread modifying the state protected by the monitor) takes over the 1084 * responsibility of signalling the next waiter. 1085 * 1086 * <p>This method must not be called from within a beginWaitingFor/endWaitingFor block, or else 1087 * the current thread's guard might be mistakenly signalled, leading to a lost signal. 1088 */ 1089 @GuardedBy("lock") 1090 private void signalNextWaiter() { 1091 for (Guard guard = activeGuards; guard != null; guard = guard.next) { 1092 if (isSatisfied(guard)) { 1093 guard.condition.signal(); 1094 break; 1095 } 1096 } 1097 } 1098 1099 /** 1100 * Exactly like signalNextWaiter, but caller guarantees that guardToSkip need not be considered, 1101 * because caller has previously checked that guardToSkip.isSatisfied() returned false. An 1102 * optimization for the case that guardToSkip.isSatisfied() may be expensive. 1103 * 1104 * <p>We decided against using this method, since in practice, isSatisfied() is likely to be very 1105 * cheap (typically one field read). Resurrect this method if you find that not to be true. 1106 */ 1107 // @GuardedBy("lock") 1108 // private void signalNextWaiterSkipping(Guard guardToSkip) { 1109 // for (Guard guard = activeGuards; guard != null; guard = guard.next) { 1110 // if (guard != guardToSkip && isSatisfied(guard)) { 1111 // guard.condition.signal(); 1112 // break; 1113 // } 1114 // } 1115 // } 1116 1117 /** 1118 * Exactly like guard.isSatisfied(), but in addition signals all waiting threads in the (hopefully 1119 * unlikely) event that isSatisfied() throws. 1120 */ 1121 @GuardedBy("lock") 1122 private boolean isSatisfied(Guard guard) { 1123 try { 1124 return guard.isSatisfied(); 1125 } catch (Throwable throwable) { 1126 signalAllWaiters(); 1127 throw throwable; 1128 } 1129 } 1130 1131 /** Signals all threads waiting on guards. */ 1132 @GuardedBy("lock") 1133 private void signalAllWaiters() { 1134 for (Guard guard = activeGuards; guard != null; guard = guard.next) { 1135 guard.condition.signalAll(); 1136 } 1137 } 1138 1139 /** Records that the current thread is about to wait on the specified guard. */ 1140 @GuardedBy("lock") 1141 private void beginWaitingFor(Guard guard) { 1142 int waiters = guard.waiterCount++; 1143 if (waiters == 0) { 1144 // push guard onto activeGuards 1145 guard.next = activeGuards; 1146 activeGuards = guard; 1147 } 1148 } 1149 1150 /** Records that the current thread is no longer waiting on the specified guard. */ 1151 @GuardedBy("lock") 1152 private void endWaitingFor(Guard guard) { 1153 int waiters = --guard.waiterCount; 1154 if (waiters == 0) { 1155 // unlink guard from activeGuards 1156 for (Guard p = activeGuards, pred = null; ; pred = p, p = p.next) { 1157 if (p == guard) { 1158 if (pred == null) { 1159 activeGuards = p.next; 1160 } else { 1161 pred.next = p.next; 1162 } 1163 p.next = null; // help GC 1164 break; 1165 } 1166 } 1167 } 1168 } 1169 1170 /* 1171 * Methods that loop waiting on a guard's condition until the guard is satisfied, while recording 1172 * this fact so that other threads know to check our guard and signal us. It's caller's 1173 * responsibility to ensure that the guard is *not* currently satisfied. 1174 */ 1175 1176 @GuardedBy("lock") 1177 private void await(Guard guard, boolean signalBeforeWaiting) throws InterruptedException { 1178 if (signalBeforeWaiting) { 1179 signalNextWaiter(); 1180 } 1181 beginWaitingFor(guard); 1182 try { 1183 do { 1184 guard.condition.await(); 1185 } while (!guard.isSatisfied()); 1186 } finally { 1187 endWaitingFor(guard); 1188 } 1189 } 1190 1191 @GuardedBy("lock") 1192 private void awaitUninterruptibly(Guard guard, boolean signalBeforeWaiting) { 1193 if (signalBeforeWaiting) { 1194 signalNextWaiter(); 1195 } 1196 beginWaitingFor(guard); 1197 try { 1198 do { 1199 guard.condition.awaitUninterruptibly(); 1200 } while (!guard.isSatisfied()); 1201 } finally { 1202 endWaitingFor(guard); 1203 } 1204 } 1205 1206 /** Caller should check before calling that guard is not satisfied. */ 1207 @GuardedBy("lock") 1208 private boolean awaitNanos(Guard guard, long nanos, boolean signalBeforeWaiting) 1209 throws InterruptedException { 1210 boolean firstTime = true; 1211 try { 1212 do { 1213 if (nanos <= 0L) { 1214 return false; 1215 } 1216 if (firstTime) { 1217 if (signalBeforeWaiting) { 1218 signalNextWaiter(); 1219 } 1220 beginWaitingFor(guard); 1221 firstTime = false; 1222 } 1223 nanos = guard.condition.awaitNanos(nanos); 1224 } while (!guard.isSatisfied()); 1225 return true; 1226 } finally { 1227 if (!firstTime) { 1228 endWaitingFor(guard); 1229 } 1230 } 1231 } 1232}