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  • Java多线程系列--“JUC线程池”03之 线程池原理(二)

    概要

    在前面一章"Java多线程系列--“JUC线程池”02之 线程池原理(一)"中介绍了线程池的数据结构,本章会通过分析线程池的源码,对线程池进行说明。内容包括:
    线程池示例
    参考代码(基于JDK1.7.0_40)
    线程池源码分析
        (一) 创建“线程池”
        (二) 添加任务到“线程池”
        (三) 关闭“线程池”

    转载请注明出处:http://www.cnblogs.com/skywang12345/p/3509954.html

    线程池示例

    在分析线程池之前,先看一个简单的线程池示例。

     1 import java.util.concurrent.Executors;
     2 import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
     3 
     4 public class ThreadPoolDemo1 {
     5 
     6     public static void main(String[] args) {
     7         // 创建一个可重用固定线程数的线程池
     8         ExecutorService pool = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(2);
     9         // 创建实现了Runnable接口对象,Thread对象当然也实现了Runnable接口
    10         Thread ta = new MyThread();
    11         Thread tb = new MyThread();
    12         Thread tc = new MyThread();
    13         Thread td = new MyThread();
    14         Thread te = new MyThread();
    15         // 将线程放入池中进行执行
    16         pool.execute(ta);
    17         pool.execute(tb);
    18         pool.execute(tc);
    19         pool.execute(td);
    20         pool.execute(te);
    21         // 关闭线程池
    22         pool.shutdown();
    23     }
    24 }
    25 
    26 class MyThread extends Thread {
    27 
    28     @Override
    29     public void run() {
    30         System.out.println(Thread.currentThread().getName()+ " is running.");
    31     }
    32 }

    运行结果

    pool-1-thread-1 is running.
    pool-1-thread-2 is running.
    pool-1-thread-1 is running.
    pool-1-thread-2 is running.
    pool-1-thread-1 is running.

    示例中,包括了线程池的创建,将任务添加到线程池中,关闭线程池这3个主要的步骤。稍后,我们会从这3个方面来分析ThreadPoolExecutor。

    参考代码(基于JDK1.7.0_40)

    Executors完整源码

      1 /*
      2  * ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
      3  *
      4  *
      5  *
      6  *
      7  *
      8  *
      9  *
     10  *
     11  *
     12  *
     13  *
     14  *
     15  *
     16  *
     17  *
     18  *
     19  *
     20  *
     21  *
     22  *
     23  */
     24 
     25 /*
     26  *
     27  *
     28  *
     29  *
     30  *
     31  * Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166
     32  * Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at
     33  * http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
     34  */
     35 
     36 package java.util.concurrent;
     37 import java.util.*;
     38 import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
     39 import java.security.AccessControlContext;
     40 import java.security.AccessController;
     41 import java.security.PrivilegedAction;
     42 import java.security.PrivilegedExceptionAction;
     43 import java.security.PrivilegedActionException;
     44 import java.security.AccessControlException;
     45 import sun.security.util.SecurityConstants;
     46 
     47 /**
     48  * Factory and utility methods for {@link Executor}, {@link
     49  * ExecutorService}, {@link ScheduledExecutorService}, {@link
     50  * ThreadFactory}, and {@link Callable} classes defined in this
     51  * package. This class supports the following kinds of methods:
     52  *
     53  * <ul>
     54  *   <li> Methods that create and return an {@link ExecutorService}
     55  *        set up with commonly useful configuration settings.
     56  *   <li> Methods that create and return a {@link ScheduledExecutorService}
     57  *        set up with commonly useful configuration settings.
     58  *   <li> Methods that create and return a "wrapped" ExecutorService, that
     59  *        disables reconfiguration by making implementation-specific methods
     60  *        inaccessible.
     61  *   <li> Methods that create and return a {@link ThreadFactory}
     62  *        that sets newly created threads to a known state.
     63  *   <li> Methods that create and return a {@link Callable}
     64  *        out of other closure-like forms, so they can be used
     65  *        in execution methods requiring <tt>Callable</tt>.
     66  * </ul>
     67  *
     68  * @since 1.5
     69  * @author Doug Lea
     70  */
     71 public class Executors {
     72 
     73     /**
     74      * Creates a thread pool that reuses a fixed number of threads
     75      * operating off a shared unbounded queue.  At any point, at most
     76      * <tt>nThreads</tt> threads will be active processing tasks.
     77      * If additional tasks are submitted when all threads are active,
     78      * they will wait in the queue until a thread is available.
     79      * If any thread terminates due to a failure during execution
     80      * prior to shutdown, a new one will take its place if needed to
     81      * execute subsequent tasks.  The threads in the pool will exist
     82      * until it is explicitly {@link ExecutorService#shutdown shutdown}.
     83      *
     84      * @param nThreads the number of threads in the pool
     85      * @return the newly created thread pool
     86      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code nThreads <= 0}
     87      */
     88     public static ExecutorService newFixedThreadPool(int nThreads) {
     89         return new ThreadPoolExecutor(nThreads, nThreads,
     90                                       0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
     91                                       new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>());
     92     }
     93 
     94     /**
     95      * Creates a thread pool that reuses a fixed number of threads
     96      * operating off a shared unbounded queue, using the provided
     97      * ThreadFactory to create new threads when needed.  At any point,
     98      * at most <tt>nThreads</tt> threads will be active processing
     99      * tasks.  If additional tasks are submitted when all threads are
    100      * active, they will wait in the queue until a thread is
    101      * available.  If any thread terminates due to a failure during
    102      * execution prior to shutdown, a new one will take its place if
    103      * needed to execute subsequent tasks.  The threads in the pool will
    104      * exist until it is explicitly {@link ExecutorService#shutdown
    105      * shutdown}.
    106      *
    107      * @param nThreads the number of threads in the pool
    108      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when creating new threads
    109      * @return the newly created thread pool
    110      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    111      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code nThreads <= 0}
    112      */
    113     public static ExecutorService newFixedThreadPool(int nThreads, ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    114         return new ThreadPoolExecutor(nThreads, nThreads,
    115                                       0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
    116                                       new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>(),
    117                                       threadFactory);
    118     }
    119 
    120     /**
    121      * Creates an Executor that uses a single worker thread operating
    122      * off an unbounded queue. (Note however that if this single
    123      * thread terminates due to a failure during execution prior to
    124      * shutdown, a new one will take its place if needed to execute
    125      * subsequent tasks.)  Tasks are guaranteed to execute
    126      * sequentially, and no more than one task will be active at any
    127      * given time. Unlike the otherwise equivalent
    128      * <tt>newFixedThreadPool(1)</tt> the returned executor is
    129      * guaranteed not to be reconfigurable to use additional threads.
    130      *
    131      * @return the newly created single-threaded Executor
    132      */
    133     public static ExecutorService newSingleThreadExecutor() {
    134         return new FinalizableDelegatedExecutorService
    135             (new ThreadPoolExecutor(1, 1,
    136                                     0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
    137                                     new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>()));
    138     }
    139 
    140     /**
    141      * Creates an Executor that uses a single worker thread operating
    142      * off an unbounded queue, and uses the provided ThreadFactory to
    143      * create a new thread when needed. Unlike the otherwise
    144      * equivalent <tt>newFixedThreadPool(1, threadFactory)</tt> the
    145      * returned executor is guaranteed not to be reconfigurable to use
    146      * additional threads.
    147      *
    148      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when creating new
    149      * threads
    150      *
    151      * @return the newly created single-threaded Executor
    152      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    153      */
    154     public static ExecutorService newSingleThreadExecutor(ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    155         return new FinalizableDelegatedExecutorService
    156             (new ThreadPoolExecutor(1, 1,
    157                                     0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
    158                                     new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>(),
    159                                     threadFactory));
    160     }
    161 
    162     /**
    163      * Creates a thread pool that creates new threads as needed, but
    164      * will reuse previously constructed threads when they are
    165      * available.  These pools will typically improve the performance
    166      * of programs that execute many short-lived asynchronous tasks.
    167      * Calls to <tt>execute</tt> will reuse previously constructed
    168      * threads if available. If no existing thread is available, a new
    169      * thread will be created and added to the pool. Threads that have
    170      * not been used for sixty seconds are terminated and removed from
    171      * the cache. Thus, a pool that remains idle for long enough will
    172      * not consume any resources. Note that pools with similar
    173      * properties but different details (for example, timeout parameters)
    174      * may be created using {@link ThreadPoolExecutor} constructors.
    175      *
    176      * @return the newly created thread pool
    177      */
    178     public static ExecutorService newCachedThreadPool() {
    179         return new ThreadPoolExecutor(0, Integer.MAX_VALUE,
    180                                       60L, TimeUnit.SECONDS,
    181                                       new SynchronousQueue<Runnable>());
    182     }
    183 
    184     /**
    185      * Creates a thread pool that creates new threads as needed, but
    186      * will reuse previously constructed threads when they are
    187      * available, and uses the provided
    188      * ThreadFactory to create new threads when needed.
    189      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when creating new threads
    190      * @return the newly created thread pool
    191      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    192      */
    193     public static ExecutorService newCachedThreadPool(ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    194         return new ThreadPoolExecutor(0, Integer.MAX_VALUE,
    195                                       60L, TimeUnit.SECONDS,
    196                                       new SynchronousQueue<Runnable>(),
    197                                       threadFactory);
    198     }
    199 
    200     /**
    201      * Creates a single-threaded executor that can schedule commands
    202      * to run after a given delay, or to execute periodically.
    203      * (Note however that if this single
    204      * thread terminates due to a failure during execution prior to
    205      * shutdown, a new one will take its place if needed to execute
    206      * subsequent tasks.)  Tasks are guaranteed to execute
    207      * sequentially, and no more than one task will be active at any
    208      * given time. Unlike the otherwise equivalent
    209      * <tt>newScheduledThreadPool(1)</tt> the returned executor is
    210      * guaranteed not to be reconfigurable to use additional threads.
    211      * @return the newly created scheduled executor
    212      */
    213     public static ScheduledExecutorService newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor() {
    214         return new DelegatedScheduledExecutorService
    215             (new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(1));
    216     }
    217 
    218     /**
    219      * Creates a single-threaded executor that can schedule commands
    220      * to run after a given delay, or to execute periodically.  (Note
    221      * however that if this single thread terminates due to a failure
    222      * during execution prior to shutdown, a new one will take its
    223      * place if needed to execute subsequent tasks.)  Tasks are
    224      * guaranteed to execute sequentially, and no more than one task
    225      * will be active at any given time. Unlike the otherwise
    226      * equivalent <tt>newScheduledThreadPool(1, threadFactory)</tt>
    227      * the returned executor is guaranteed not to be reconfigurable to
    228      * use additional threads.
    229      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when creating new
    230      * threads
    231      * @return a newly created scheduled executor
    232      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    233      */
    234     public static ScheduledExecutorService newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor(ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    235         return new DelegatedScheduledExecutorService
    236             (new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(1, threadFactory));
    237     }
    238 
    239     /**
    240      * Creates a thread pool that can schedule commands to run after a
    241      * given delay, or to execute periodically.
    242      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool,
    243      * even if they are idle.
    244      * @return a newly created scheduled thread pool
    245      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0}
    246      */
    247     public static ScheduledExecutorService newScheduledThreadPool(int corePoolSize) {
    248         return new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(corePoolSize);
    249     }
    250 
    251     /**
    252      * Creates a thread pool that can schedule commands to run after a
    253      * given delay, or to execute periodically.
    254      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool,
    255      * even if they are idle.
    256      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when the executor
    257      * creates a new thread.
    258      * @return a newly created scheduled thread pool
    259      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0}
    260      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    261      */
    262     public static ScheduledExecutorService newScheduledThreadPool(
    263             int corePoolSize, ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    264         return new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(corePoolSize, threadFactory);
    265     }
    266 
    267 
    268     /**
    269      * Returns an object that delegates all defined {@link
    270      * ExecutorService} methods to the given executor, but not any
    271      * other methods that might otherwise be accessible using
    272      * casts. This provides a way to safely "freeze" configuration and
    273      * disallow tuning of a given concrete implementation.
    274      * @param executor the underlying implementation
    275      * @return an <tt>ExecutorService</tt> instance
    276      * @throws NullPointerException if executor null
    277      */
    278     public static ExecutorService unconfigurableExecutorService(ExecutorService executor) {
    279         if (executor == null)
    280             throw new NullPointerException();
    281         return new DelegatedExecutorService(executor);
    282     }
    283 
    284     /**
    285      * Returns an object that delegates all defined {@link
    286      * ScheduledExecutorService} methods to the given executor, but
    287      * not any other methods that might otherwise be accessible using
    288      * casts. This provides a way to safely "freeze" configuration and
    289      * disallow tuning of a given concrete implementation.
    290      * @param executor the underlying implementation
    291      * @return a <tt>ScheduledExecutorService</tt> instance
    292      * @throws NullPointerException if executor null
    293      */
    294     public static ScheduledExecutorService unconfigurableScheduledExecutorService(ScheduledExecutorService executor) {
    295         if (executor == null)
    296             throw new NullPointerException();
    297         return new DelegatedScheduledExecutorService(executor);
    298     }
    299 
    300     /**
    301      * Returns a default thread factory used to create new threads.
    302      * This factory creates all new threads used by an Executor in the
    303      * same {@link ThreadGroup}. If there is a {@link
    304      * java.lang.SecurityManager}, it uses the group of {@link
    305      * System#getSecurityManager}, else the group of the thread
    306      * invoking this <tt>defaultThreadFactory</tt> method. Each new
    307      * thread is created as a non-daemon thread with priority set to
    308      * the smaller of <tt>Thread.NORM_PRIORITY</tt> and the maximum
    309      * priority permitted in the thread group.  New threads have names
    310      * accessible via {@link Thread#getName} of
    311      * <em>pool-N-thread-M</em>, where <em>N</em> is the sequence
    312      * number of this factory, and <em>M</em> is the sequence number
    313      * of the thread created by this factory.
    314      * @return a thread factory
    315      */
    316     public static ThreadFactory defaultThreadFactory() {
    317         return new DefaultThreadFactory();
    318     }
    319 
    320     /**
    321      * Returns a thread factory used to create new threads that
    322      * have the same permissions as the current thread.
    323      * This factory creates threads with the same settings as {@link
    324      * Executors#defaultThreadFactory}, additionally setting the
    325      * AccessControlContext and contextClassLoader of new threads to
    326      * be the same as the thread invoking this
    327      * <tt>privilegedThreadFactory</tt> method.  A new
    328      * <tt>privilegedThreadFactory</tt> can be created within an
    329      * {@link AccessController#doPrivileged} action setting the
    330      * current thread's access control context to create threads with
    331      * the selected permission settings holding within that action.
    332      *
    333      * <p> Note that while tasks running within such threads will have
    334      * the same access control and class loader settings as the
    335      * current thread, they need not have the same {@link
    336      * java.lang.ThreadLocal} or {@link
    337      * java.lang.InheritableThreadLocal} values. If necessary,
    338      * particular values of thread locals can be set or reset before
    339      * any task runs in {@link ThreadPoolExecutor} subclasses using
    340      * {@link ThreadPoolExecutor#beforeExecute}. Also, if it is
    341      * necessary to initialize worker threads to have the same
    342      * InheritableThreadLocal settings as some other designated
    343      * thread, you can create a custom ThreadFactory in which that
    344      * thread waits for and services requests to create others that
    345      * will inherit its values.
    346      *
    347      * @return a thread factory
    348      * @throws AccessControlException if the current access control
    349      * context does not have permission to both get and set context
    350      * class loader.
    351      */
    352     public static ThreadFactory privilegedThreadFactory() {
    353         return new PrivilegedThreadFactory();
    354     }
    355 
    356     /**
    357      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that, when
    358      * called, runs the given task and returns the given result.  This
    359      * can be useful when applying methods requiring a
    360      * <tt>Callable</tt> to an otherwise resultless action.
    361      * @param task the task to run
    362      * @param result the result to return
    363      * @return a callable object
    364      * @throws NullPointerException if task null
    365      */
    366     public static <T> Callable<T> callable(Runnable task, T result) {
    367         if (task == null)
    368             throw new NullPointerException();
    369         return new RunnableAdapter<T>(task, result);
    370     }
    371 
    372     /**
    373      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that, when
    374      * called, runs the given task and returns <tt>null</tt>.
    375      * @param task the task to run
    376      * @return a callable object
    377      * @throws NullPointerException if task null
    378      */
    379     public static Callable<Object> callable(Runnable task) {
    380         if (task == null)
    381             throw new NullPointerException();
    382         return new RunnableAdapter<Object>(task, null);
    383     }
    384 
    385     /**
    386      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that, when
    387      * called, runs the given privileged action and returns its result.
    388      * @param action the privileged action to run
    389      * @return a callable object
    390      * @throws NullPointerException if action null
    391      */
    392     public static Callable<Object> callable(final PrivilegedAction<?> action) {
    393         if (action == null)
    394             throw new NullPointerException();
    395         return new Callable<Object>() {
    396             public Object call() { return action.run(); }};
    397     }
    398 
    399     /**
    400      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that, when
    401      * called, runs the given privileged exception action and returns
    402      * its result.
    403      * @param action the privileged exception action to run
    404      * @return a callable object
    405      * @throws NullPointerException if action null
    406      */
    407     public static Callable<Object> callable(final PrivilegedExceptionAction<?> action) {
    408         if (action == null)
    409             throw new NullPointerException();
    410         return new Callable<Object>() {
    411             public Object call() throws Exception { return action.run(); }};
    412     }
    413 
    414     /**
    415      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that will, when
    416      * called, execute the given <tt>callable</tt> under the current
    417      * access control context. This method should normally be
    418      * invoked within an {@link AccessController#doPrivileged} action
    419      * to create callables that will, if possible, execute under the
    420      * selected permission settings holding within that action; or if
    421      * not possible, throw an associated {@link
    422      * AccessControlException}.
    423      * @param callable the underlying task
    424      * @return a callable object
    425      * @throws NullPointerException if callable null
    426      *
    427      */
    428     public static <T> Callable<T> privilegedCallable(Callable<T> callable) {
    429         if (callable == null)
    430             throw new NullPointerException();
    431         return new PrivilegedCallable<T>(callable);
    432     }
    433 
    434     /**
    435      * Returns a {@link Callable} object that will, when
    436      * called, execute the given <tt>callable</tt> under the current
    437      * access control context, with the current context class loader
    438      * as the context class loader. This method should normally be
    439      * invoked within an {@link AccessController#doPrivileged} action
    440      * to create callables that will, if possible, execute under the
    441      * selected permission settings holding within that action; or if
    442      * not possible, throw an associated {@link
    443      * AccessControlException}.
    444      * @param callable the underlying task
    445      *
    446      * @return a callable object
    447      * @throws NullPointerException if callable null
    448      * @throws AccessControlException if the current access control
    449      * context does not have permission to both set and get context
    450      * class loader.
    451      */
    452     public static <T> Callable<T> privilegedCallableUsingCurrentClassLoader(Callable<T> callable) {
    453         if (callable == null)
    454             throw new NullPointerException();
    455         return new PrivilegedCallableUsingCurrentClassLoader<T>(callable);
    456     }
    457 
    458     // Non-public classes supporting the public methods
    459 
    460     /**
    461      * A callable that runs given task and returns given result
    462      */
    463     static final class RunnableAdapter<T> implements Callable<T> {
    464         final Runnable task;
    465         final T result;
    466         RunnableAdapter(Runnable task, T result) {
    467             this.task = task;
    468             this.result = result;
    469         }
    470         public T call() {
    471             task.run();
    472             return result;
    473         }
    474     }
    475 
    476     /**
    477      * A callable that runs under established access control settings
    478      */
    479     static final class PrivilegedCallable<T> implements Callable<T> {
    480         private final Callable<T> task;
    481         private final AccessControlContext acc;
    482 
    483         PrivilegedCallable(Callable<T> task) {
    484             this.task = task;
    485             this.acc = AccessController.getContext();
    486         }
    487 
    488         public T call() throws Exception {
    489             try {
    490                 return AccessController.doPrivileged(
    491                     new PrivilegedExceptionAction<T>() {
    492                         public T run() throws Exception {
    493                             return task.call();
    494                         }
    495                     }, acc);
    496             } catch (PrivilegedActionException e) {
    497                 throw e.getException();
    498             }
    499         }
    500     }
    501 
    502     /**
    503      * A callable that runs under established access control settings and
    504      * current ClassLoader
    505      */
    506     static final class PrivilegedCallableUsingCurrentClassLoader<T> implements Callable<T> {
    507         private final Callable<T> task;
    508         private final AccessControlContext acc;
    509         private final ClassLoader ccl;
    510 
    511         PrivilegedCallableUsingCurrentClassLoader(Callable<T> task) {
    512             SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager();
    513             if (sm != null) {
    514                 // Calls to getContextClassLoader from this class
    515                 // never trigger a security check, but we check
    516                 // whether our callers have this permission anyways.
    517                 sm.checkPermission(SecurityConstants.GET_CLASSLOADER_PERMISSION);
    518 
    519                 // Whether setContextClassLoader turns out to be necessary
    520                 // or not, we fail fast if permission is not available.
    521                 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("setContextClassLoader"));
    522             }
    523             this.task = task;
    524             this.acc = AccessController.getContext();
    525             this.ccl = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
    526         }
    527 
    528         public T call() throws Exception {
    529             try {
    530                 return AccessController.doPrivileged(
    531                     new PrivilegedExceptionAction<T>() {
    532                         public T run() throws Exception {
    533                             Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
    534                             ClassLoader cl = t.getContextClassLoader();
    535                             if (ccl == cl) {
    536                                 return task.call();
    537                             } else {
    538                                 t.setContextClassLoader(ccl);
    539                                 try {
    540                                     return task.call();
    541                                 } finally {
    542                                     t.setContextClassLoader(cl);
    543                                 }
    544                             }
    545                         }
    546                     }, acc);
    547             } catch (PrivilegedActionException e) {
    548                 throw e.getException();
    549             }
    550         }
    551     }
    552 
    553     /**
    554      * The default thread factory
    555      */
    556     static class DefaultThreadFactory implements ThreadFactory {
    557         private static final AtomicInteger poolNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
    558         private final ThreadGroup group;
    559         private final AtomicInteger threadNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
    560         private final String namePrefix;
    561 
    562         DefaultThreadFactory() {
    563             SecurityManager s = System.getSecurityManager();
    564             group = (s != null) ? s.getThreadGroup() :
    565                                   Thread.currentThread().getThreadGroup();
    566             namePrefix = "pool-" +
    567                           poolNumber.getAndIncrement() +
    568                          "-thread-";
    569         }
    570 
    571         public Thread newThread(Runnable r) {
    572             Thread t = new Thread(group, r,
    573                                   namePrefix + threadNumber.getAndIncrement(),
    574                                   0);
    575             if (t.isDaemon())
    576                 t.setDaemon(false);
    577             if (t.getPriority() != Thread.NORM_PRIORITY)
    578                 t.setPriority(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY);
    579             return t;
    580         }
    581     }
    582 
    583     /**
    584      * Thread factory capturing access control context and class loader
    585      */
    586     static class PrivilegedThreadFactory extends DefaultThreadFactory {
    587         private final AccessControlContext acc;
    588         private final ClassLoader ccl;
    589 
    590         PrivilegedThreadFactory() {
    591             super();
    592             SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager();
    593             if (sm != null) {
    594                 // Calls to getContextClassLoader from this class
    595                 // never trigger a security check, but we check
    596                 // whether our callers have this permission anyways.
    597                 sm.checkPermission(SecurityConstants.GET_CLASSLOADER_PERMISSION);
    598 
    599                 // Fail fast
    600                 sm.checkPermission(new RuntimePermission("setContextClassLoader"));
    601             }
    602             this.acc = AccessController.getContext();
    603             this.ccl = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
    604         }
    605 
    606         public Thread newThread(final Runnable r) {
    607             return super.newThread(new Runnable() {
    608                 public void run() {
    609                     AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction<Void>() {
    610                         public Void run() {
    611                             Thread.currentThread().setContextClassLoader(ccl);
    612                             r.run();
    613                             return null;
    614                         }
    615                     }, acc);
    616                 }
    617             });
    618         }
    619     }
    620 
    621     /**
    622      * A wrapper class that exposes only the ExecutorService methods
    623      * of an ExecutorService implementation.
    624      */
    625     static class DelegatedExecutorService extends AbstractExecutorService {
    626         private final ExecutorService e;
    627         DelegatedExecutorService(ExecutorService executor) { e = executor; }
    628         public void execute(Runnable command) { e.execute(command); }
    629         public void shutdown() { e.shutdown(); }
    630         public List<Runnable> shutdownNow() { return e.shutdownNow(); }
    631         public boolean isShutdown() { return e.isShutdown(); }
    632         public boolean isTerminated() { return e.isTerminated(); }
    633         public boolean awaitTermination(long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
    634             throws InterruptedException {
    635             return e.awaitTermination(timeout, unit);
    636         }
    637         public Future<?> submit(Runnable task) {
    638             return e.submit(task);
    639         }
    640         public <T> Future<T> submit(Callable<T> task) {
    641             return e.submit(task);
    642         }
    643         public <T> Future<T> submit(Runnable task, T result) {
    644             return e.submit(task, result);
    645         }
    646         public <T> List<Future<T>> invokeAll(Collection<? extends Callable<T>> tasks)
    647             throws InterruptedException {
    648             return e.invokeAll(tasks);
    649         }
    650         public <T> List<Future<T>> invokeAll(Collection<? extends Callable<T>> tasks,
    651                                              long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
    652             throws InterruptedException {
    653             return e.invokeAll(tasks, timeout, unit);
    654         }
    655         public <T> T invokeAny(Collection<? extends Callable<T>> tasks)
    656             throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException {
    657             return e.invokeAny(tasks);
    658         }
    659         public <T> T invokeAny(Collection<? extends Callable<T>> tasks,
    660                                long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
    661             throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException, TimeoutException {
    662             return e.invokeAny(tasks, timeout, unit);
    663         }
    664     }
    665 
    666     static class FinalizableDelegatedExecutorService
    667         extends DelegatedExecutorService {
    668         FinalizableDelegatedExecutorService(ExecutorService executor) {
    669             super(executor);
    670         }
    671         protected void finalize() {
    672             super.shutdown();
    673         }
    674     }
    675 
    676     /**
    677      * A wrapper class that exposes only the ScheduledExecutorService
    678      * methods of a ScheduledExecutorService implementation.
    679      */
    680     static class DelegatedScheduledExecutorService
    681             extends DelegatedExecutorService
    682             implements ScheduledExecutorService {
    683         private final ScheduledExecutorService e;
    684         DelegatedScheduledExecutorService(ScheduledExecutorService executor) {
    685             super(executor);
    686             e = executor;
    687         }
    688         public ScheduledFuture<?> schedule(Runnable command, long delay,  TimeUnit unit) {
    689             return e.schedule(command, delay, unit);
    690         }
    691         public <V> ScheduledFuture<V> schedule(Callable<V> callable, long delay, TimeUnit unit) {
    692             return e.schedule(callable, delay, unit);
    693         }
    694         public ScheduledFuture<?> scheduleAtFixedRate(Runnable command, long initialDelay,  long period, TimeUnit unit) {
    695             return e.scheduleAtFixedRate(command, initialDelay, period, unit);
    696         }
    697         public ScheduledFuture<?> scheduleWithFixedDelay(Runnable command, long initialDelay,  long delay, TimeUnit unit) {
    698             return e.scheduleWithFixedDelay(command, initialDelay, delay, unit);
    699         }
    700     }
    701 
    702 
    703     /** Cannot instantiate. */
    704     private Executors() {}
    705 }
    View Code

    ThreadPoolExecutor完整源码

       1 /*
       2  * ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
       3  *
       4  *
       5  *
       6  *
       7  *
       8  *
       9  *
      10  *
      11  *
      12  *
      13  *
      14  *
      15  *
      16  *
      17  *
      18  *
      19  *
      20  *
      21  *
      22  *
      23  */
      24 
      25 /*
      26  *
      27  *
      28  *
      29  *
      30  *
      31  * Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166
      32  * Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at
      33  * http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
      34  */
      35 
      36 package java.util.concurrent;
      37 import java.util.concurrent.locks.AbstractQueuedSynchronizer;
      38 import java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition;
      39 import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock;
      40 import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicInteger;
      41 import java.util.*;
      42 
      43 /**
      44  * An {@link ExecutorService} that executes each submitted task using
      45  * one of possibly several pooled threads, normally configured
      46  * using {@link Executors} factory methods.
      47  *
      48  * <p>Thread pools address two different problems: they usually
      49  * provide improved performance when executing large numbers of
      50  * asynchronous tasks, due to reduced per-task invocation overhead,
      51  * and they provide a means of bounding and managing the resources,
      52  * including threads, consumed when executing a collection of tasks.
      53  * Each {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} also maintains some basic
      54  * statistics, such as the number of completed tasks.
      55  *
      56  * <p>To be useful across a wide range of contexts, this class
      57  * provides many adjustable parameters and extensibility
      58  * hooks. However, programmers are urged to use the more convenient
      59  * {@link Executors} factory methods {@link
      60  * Executors#newCachedThreadPool} (unbounded thread pool, with
      61  * automatic thread reclamation), {@link Executors#newFixedThreadPool}
      62  * (fixed size thread pool) and {@link
      63  * Executors#newSingleThreadExecutor} (single background thread), that
      64  * preconfigure settings for the most common usage
      65  * scenarios. Otherwise, use the following guide when manually
      66  * configuring and tuning this class:
      67  *
      68  * <dl>
      69  *
      70  * <dt>Core and maximum pool sizes</dt>
      71  *
      72  * <dd>A {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} will automatically adjust the
      73  * pool size (see {@link #getPoolSize})
      74  * according to the bounds set by
      75  * corePoolSize (see {@link #getCorePoolSize}) and
      76  * maximumPoolSize (see {@link #getMaximumPoolSize}).
      77  *
      78  * When a new task is submitted in method {@link #execute}, and fewer
      79  * than corePoolSize threads are running, a new thread is created to
      80  * handle the request, even if other worker threads are idle.  If
      81  * there are more than corePoolSize but less than maximumPoolSize
      82  * threads running, a new thread will be created only if the queue is
      83  * full.  By setting corePoolSize and maximumPoolSize the same, you
      84  * create a fixed-size thread pool. By setting maximumPoolSize to an
      85  * essentially unbounded value such as {@code Integer.MAX_VALUE}, you
      86  * allow the pool to accommodate an arbitrary number of concurrent
      87  * tasks. Most typically, core and maximum pool sizes are set only
      88  * upon construction, but they may also be changed dynamically using
      89  * {@link #setCorePoolSize} and {@link #setMaximumPoolSize}. </dd>
      90  *
      91  * <dt>On-demand construction</dt>
      92  *
      93  * <dd> By default, even core threads are initially created and
      94  * started only when new tasks arrive, but this can be overridden
      95  * dynamically using method {@link #prestartCoreThread} or {@link
      96  * #prestartAllCoreThreads}.  You probably want to prestart threads if
      97  * you construct the pool with a non-empty queue. </dd>
      98  *
      99  * <dt>Creating new threads</dt>
     100  *
     101  * <dd>New threads are created using a {@link ThreadFactory}.  If not
     102  * otherwise specified, a {@link Executors#defaultThreadFactory} is
     103  * used, that creates threads to all be in the same {@link
     104  * ThreadGroup} and with the same {@code NORM_PRIORITY} priority and
     105  * non-daemon status. By supplying a different ThreadFactory, you can
     106  * alter the thread's name, thread group, priority, daemon status,
     107  * etc. If a {@code ThreadFactory} fails to create a thread when asked
     108  * by returning null from {@code newThread}, the executor will
     109  * continue, but might not be able to execute any tasks. Threads
     110  * should possess the "modifyThread" {@code RuntimePermission}. If
     111  * worker threads or other threads using the pool do not possess this
     112  * permission, service may be degraded: configuration changes may not
     113  * take effect in a timely manner, and a shutdown pool may remain in a
     114  * state in which termination is possible but not completed.</dd>
     115  *
     116  * <dt>Keep-alive times</dt>
     117  *
     118  * <dd>If the pool currently has more than corePoolSize threads,
     119  * excess threads will be terminated if they have been idle for more
     120  * than the keepAliveTime (see {@link #getKeepAliveTime}). This
     121  * provides a means of reducing resource consumption when the pool is
     122  * not being actively used. If the pool becomes more active later, new
     123  * threads will be constructed. This parameter can also be changed
     124  * dynamically using method {@link #setKeepAliveTime}. Using a value
     125  * of {@code Long.MAX_VALUE} {@link TimeUnit#NANOSECONDS} effectively
     126  * disables idle threads from ever terminating prior to shut down. By
     127  * default, the keep-alive policy applies only when there are more
     128  * than corePoolSizeThreads. But method {@link
     129  * #allowCoreThreadTimeOut(boolean)} can be used to apply this
     130  * time-out policy to core threads as well, so long as the
     131  * keepAliveTime value is non-zero. </dd>
     132  *
     133  * <dt>Queuing</dt>
     134  *
     135  * <dd>Any {@link BlockingQueue} may be used to transfer and hold
     136  * submitted tasks.  The use of this queue interacts with pool sizing:
     137  *
     138  * <ul>
     139  *
     140  * <li> If fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, the Executor
     141  * always prefers adding a new thread
     142  * rather than queuing.</li>
     143  *
     144  * <li> If corePoolSize or more threads are running, the Executor
     145  * always prefers queuing a request rather than adding a new
     146  * thread.</li>
     147  *
     148  * <li> If a request cannot be queued, a new thread is created unless
     149  * this would exceed maximumPoolSize, in which case, the task will be
     150  * rejected.</li>
     151  *
     152  * </ul>
     153  *
     154  * There are three general strategies for queuing:
     155  * <ol>
     156  *
     157  * <li> <em> Direct handoffs.</em> A good default choice for a work
     158  * queue is a {@link SynchronousQueue} that hands off tasks to threads
     159  * without otherwise holding them. Here, an attempt to queue a task
     160  * will fail if no threads are immediately available to run it, so a
     161  * new thread will be constructed. This policy avoids lockups when
     162  * handling sets of requests that might have internal dependencies.
     163  * Direct handoffs generally require unbounded maximumPoolSizes to
     164  * avoid rejection of new submitted tasks. This in turn admits the
     165  * possibility of unbounded thread growth when commands continue to
     166  * arrive on average faster than they can be processed.  </li>
     167  *
     168  * <li><em> Unbounded queues.</em> Using an unbounded queue (for
     169  * example a {@link LinkedBlockingQueue} without a predefined
     170  * capacity) will cause new tasks to wait in the queue when all
     171  * corePoolSize threads are busy. Thus, no more than corePoolSize
     172  * threads will ever be created. (And the value of the maximumPoolSize
     173  * therefore doesn't have any effect.)  This may be appropriate when
     174  * each task is completely independent of others, so tasks cannot
     175  * affect each others execution; for example, in a web page server.
     176  * While this style of queuing can be useful in smoothing out
     177  * transient bursts of requests, it admits the possibility of
     178  * unbounded work queue growth when commands continue to arrive on
     179  * average faster than they can be processed.  </li>
     180  *
     181  * <li><em>Bounded queues.</em> A bounded queue (for example, an
     182  * {@link ArrayBlockingQueue}) helps prevent resource exhaustion when
     183  * used with finite maximumPoolSizes, but can be more difficult to
     184  * tune and control.  Queue sizes and maximum pool sizes may be traded
     185  * off for each other: Using large queues and small pools minimizes
     186  * CPU usage, OS resources, and context-switching overhead, but can
     187  * lead to artificially low throughput.  If tasks frequently block (for
     188  * example if they are I/O bound), a system may be able to schedule
     189  * time for more threads than you otherwise allow. Use of small queues
     190  * generally requires larger pool sizes, which keeps CPUs busier but
     191  * may encounter unacceptable scheduling overhead, which also
     192  * decreases throughput.  </li>
     193  *
     194  * </ol>
     195  *
     196  * </dd>
     197  *
     198  * <dt>Rejected tasks</dt>
     199  *
     200  * <dd> New tasks submitted in method {@link #execute} will be
     201  * <em>rejected</em> when the Executor has been shut down, and also
     202  * when the Executor uses finite bounds for both maximum threads and
     203  * work queue capacity, and is saturated.  In either case, the {@code
     204  * execute} method invokes the {@link
     205  * RejectedExecutionHandler#rejectedExecution} method of its {@link
     206  * RejectedExecutionHandler}.  Four predefined handler policies are
     207  * provided:
     208  *
     209  * <ol>
     210  *
     211  * <li> In the default {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.AbortPolicy}, the
     212  * handler throws a runtime {@link RejectedExecutionException} upon
     213  * rejection. </li>
     214  *
     215  * <li> In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.CallerRunsPolicy}, the thread
     216  * that invokes {@code execute} itself runs the task. This provides a
     217  * simple feedback control mechanism that will slow down the rate that
     218  * new tasks are submitted. </li>
     219  *
     220  * <li> In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardPolicy}, a task that
     221  * cannot be executed is simply dropped.  </li>
     222  *
     223  * <li>In {@link ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardOldestPolicy}, if the
     224  * executor is not shut down, the task at the head of the work queue
     225  * is dropped, and then execution is retried (which can fail again,
     226  * causing this to be repeated.) </li>
     227  *
     228  * </ol>
     229  *
     230  * It is possible to define and use other kinds of {@link
     231  * RejectedExecutionHandler} classes. Doing so requires some care
     232  * especially when policies are designed to work only under particular
     233  * capacity or queuing policies. </dd>
     234  *
     235  * <dt>Hook methods</dt>
     236  *
     237  * <dd>This class provides {@code protected} overridable {@link
     238  * #beforeExecute} and {@link #afterExecute} methods that are called
     239  * before and after execution of each task.  These can be used to
     240  * manipulate the execution environment; for example, reinitializing
     241  * ThreadLocals, gathering statistics, or adding log
     242  * entries. Additionally, method {@link #terminated} can be overridden
     243  * to perform any special processing that needs to be done once the
     244  * Executor has fully terminated.
     245  *
     246  * <p>If hook or callback methods throw exceptions, internal worker
     247  * threads may in turn fail and abruptly terminate.</dd>
     248  *
     249  * <dt>Queue maintenance</dt>
     250  *
     251  * <dd> Method {@link #getQueue} allows access to the work queue for
     252  * purposes of monitoring and debugging.  Use of this method for any
     253  * other purpose is strongly discouraged.  Two supplied methods,
     254  * {@link #remove} and {@link #purge} are available to assist in
     255  * storage reclamation when large numbers of queued tasks become
     256  * cancelled.</dd>
     257  *
     258  * <dt>Finalization</dt>
     259  *
     260  * <dd> A pool that is no longer referenced in a program <em>AND</em>
     261  * has no remaining threads will be {@code shutdown} automatically. If
     262  * you would like to ensure that unreferenced pools are reclaimed even
     263  * if users forget to call {@link #shutdown}, then you must arrange
     264  * that unused threads eventually die, by setting appropriate
     265  * keep-alive times, using a lower bound of zero core threads and/or
     266  * setting {@link #allowCoreThreadTimeOut(boolean)}.  </dd>
     267  *
     268  * </dl>
     269  *
     270  * <p> <b>Extension example</b>. Most extensions of this class
     271  * override one or more of the protected hook methods. For example,
     272  * here is a subclass that adds a simple pause/resume feature:
     273  *
     274  *  <pre> {@code
     275  * class PausableThreadPoolExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor {
     276  *   private boolean isPaused;
     277  *   private ReentrantLock pauseLock = new ReentrantLock();
     278  *   private Condition unpaused = pauseLock.newCondition();
     279  *
     280  *   public PausableThreadPoolExecutor(...) { super(...); }
     281  *
     282  *   protected void beforeExecute(Thread t, Runnable r) {
     283  *     super.beforeExecute(t, r);
     284  *     pauseLock.lock();
     285  *     try {
     286  *       while (isPaused) unpaused.await();
     287  *     } catch (InterruptedException ie) {
     288  *       t.interrupt();
     289  *     } finally {
     290  *       pauseLock.unlock();
     291  *     }
     292  *   }
     293  *
     294  *   public void pause() {
     295  *     pauseLock.lock();
     296  *     try {
     297  *       isPaused = true;
     298  *     } finally {
     299  *       pauseLock.unlock();
     300  *     }
     301  *   }
     302  *
     303  *   public void resume() {
     304  *     pauseLock.lock();
     305  *     try {
     306  *       isPaused = false;
     307  *       unpaused.signalAll();
     308  *     } finally {
     309  *       pauseLock.unlock();
     310  *     }
     311  *   }
     312  * }}</pre>
     313  *
     314  * @since 1.5
     315  * @author Doug Lea
     316  */
     317 public class ThreadPoolExecutor extends AbstractExecutorService {
     318     /**
     319      * The main pool control state, ctl, is an atomic integer packing
     320      * two conceptual fields
     321      *   workerCount, indicating the effective number of threads
     322      *   runState,    indicating whether running, shutting down etc
     323      *
     324      * In order to pack them into one int, we limit workerCount to
     325      * (2^29)-1 (about 500 million) threads rather than (2^31)-1 (2
     326      * billion) otherwise representable. If this is ever an issue in
     327      * the future, the variable can be changed to be an AtomicLong,
     328      * and the shift/mask constants below adjusted. But until the need
     329      * arises, this code is a bit faster and simpler using an int.
     330      *
     331      * The workerCount is the number of workers that have been
     332      * permitted to start and not permitted to stop.  The value may be
     333      * transiently different from the actual number of live threads,
     334      * for example when a ThreadFactory fails to create a thread when
     335      * asked, and when exiting threads are still performing
     336      * bookkeeping before terminating. The user-visible pool size is
     337      * reported as the current size of the workers set.
     338      *
     339      * The runState provides the main lifecyle control, taking on values:
     340      *
     341      *   RUNNING:  Accept new tasks and process queued tasks
     342      *   SHUTDOWN: Don't accept new tasks, but process queued tasks
     343      *   STOP:     Don't accept new tasks, don't process queued tasks,
     344      *             and interrupt in-progress tasks
     345      *   TIDYING:  All tasks have terminated, workerCount is zero,
     346      *             the thread transitioning to state TIDYING
     347      *             will run the terminated() hook method
     348      *   TERMINATED: terminated() has completed
     349      *
     350      * The numerical order among these values matters, to allow
     351      * ordered comparisons. The runState monotonically increases over
     352      * time, but need not hit each state. The transitions are:
     353      *
     354      * RUNNING -> SHUTDOWN
     355      *    On invocation of shutdown(), perhaps implicitly in finalize()
     356      * (RUNNING or SHUTDOWN) -> STOP
     357      *    On invocation of shutdownNow()
     358      * SHUTDOWN -> TIDYING
     359      *    When both queue and pool are empty
     360      * STOP -> TIDYING
     361      *    When pool is empty
     362      * TIDYING -> TERMINATED
     363      *    When the terminated() hook method has completed
     364      *
     365      * Threads waiting in awaitTermination() will return when the
     366      * state reaches TERMINATED.
     367      *
     368      * Detecting the transition from SHUTDOWN to TIDYING is less
     369      * straightforward than you'd like because the queue may become
     370      * empty after non-empty and vice versa during SHUTDOWN state, but
     371      * we can only terminate if, after seeing that it is empty, we see
     372      * that workerCount is 0 (which sometimes entails a recheck -- see
     373      * below).
     374      */
     375     private final AtomicInteger ctl = new AtomicInteger(ctlOf(RUNNING, 0));
     376     private static final int COUNT_BITS = Integer.SIZE - 3;
     377     private static final int CAPACITY   = (1 << COUNT_BITS) - 1;
     378 
     379     // runState is stored in the high-order bits
     380     private static final int RUNNING    = -1 << COUNT_BITS;
     381     private static final int SHUTDOWN   =  0 << COUNT_BITS;
     382     private static final int STOP       =  1 << COUNT_BITS;
     383     private static final int TIDYING    =  2 << COUNT_BITS;
     384     private static final int TERMINATED =  3 << COUNT_BITS;
     385 
     386     // Packing and unpacking ctl
     387     private static int runStateOf(int c)     { return c & ~CAPACITY; }
     388     private static int workerCountOf(int c)  { return c & CAPACITY; }
     389     private static int ctlOf(int rs, int wc) { return rs | wc; }
     390 
     391     /*
     392      * Bit field accessors that don't require unpacking ctl.
     393      * These depend on the bit layout and on workerCount being never negative.
     394      */
     395 
     396     private static boolean runStateLessThan(int c, int s) {
     397         return c < s;
     398     }
     399 
     400     private static boolean runStateAtLeast(int c, int s) {
     401         return c >= s;
     402     }
     403 
     404     private static boolean isRunning(int c) {
     405         return c < SHUTDOWN;
     406     }
     407 
     408     /**
     409      * Attempt to CAS-increment the workerCount field of ctl.
     410      */
     411     private boolean compareAndIncrementWorkerCount(int expect) {
     412         return ctl.compareAndSet(expect, expect + 1);
     413     }
     414 
     415     /**
     416      * Attempt to CAS-decrement the workerCount field of ctl.
     417      */
     418     private boolean compareAndDecrementWorkerCount(int expect) {
     419         return ctl.compareAndSet(expect, expect - 1);
     420     }
     421 
     422     /**
     423      * Decrements the workerCount field of ctl. This is called only on
     424      * abrupt termination of a thread (see processWorkerExit). Other
     425      * decrements are performed within getTask.
     426      */
     427     private void decrementWorkerCount() {
     428         do {} while (! compareAndDecrementWorkerCount(ctl.get()));
     429     }
     430 
     431     /**
     432      * The queue used for holding tasks and handing off to worker
     433      * threads.  We do not require that workQueue.poll() returning
     434      * null necessarily means that workQueue.isEmpty(), so rely
     435      * solely on isEmpty to see if the queue is empty (which we must
     436      * do for example when deciding whether to transition from
     437      * SHUTDOWN to TIDYING).  This accommodates special-purpose
     438      * queues such as DelayQueues for which poll() is allowed to
     439      * return null even if it may later return non-null when delays
     440      * expire.
     441      */
     442     private final BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue;
     443 
     444     /**
     445      * Lock held on access to workers set and related bookkeeping.
     446      * While we could use a concurrent set of some sort, it turns out
     447      * to be generally preferable to use a lock. Among the reasons is
     448      * that this serializes interruptIdleWorkers, which avoids
     449      * unnecessary interrupt storms, especially during shutdown.
     450      * Otherwise exiting threads would concurrently interrupt those
     451      * that have not yet interrupted. It also simplifies some of the
     452      * associated statistics bookkeeping of largestPoolSize etc. We
     453      * also hold mainLock on shutdown and shutdownNow, for the sake of
     454      * ensuring workers set is stable while separately checking
     455      * permission to interrupt and actually interrupting.
     456      */
     457     private final ReentrantLock mainLock = new ReentrantLock();
     458 
     459     /**
     460      * Set containing all worker threads in pool. Accessed only when
     461      * holding mainLock.
     462      */
     463     private final HashSet<Worker> workers = new HashSet<Worker>();
     464 
     465     /**
     466      * Wait condition to support awaitTermination
     467      */
     468     private final Condition termination = mainLock.newCondition();
     469 
     470     /**
     471      * Tracks largest attained pool size. Accessed only under
     472      * mainLock.
     473      */
     474     private int largestPoolSize;
     475 
     476     /**
     477      * Counter for completed tasks. Updated only on termination of
     478      * worker threads. Accessed only under mainLock.
     479      */
     480     private long completedTaskCount;
     481 
     482     /*
     483      * All user control parameters are declared as volatiles so that
     484      * ongoing actions are based on freshest values, but without need
     485      * for locking, since no internal invariants depend on them
     486      * changing synchronously with respect to other actions.
     487      */
     488 
     489     /**
     490      * Factory for new threads. All threads are created using this
     491      * factory (via method addWorker).  All callers must be prepared
     492      * for addWorker to fail, which may reflect a system or user's
     493      * policy limiting the number of threads.  Even though it is not
     494      * treated as an error, failure to create threads may result in
     495      * new tasks being rejected or existing ones remaining stuck in
     496      * the queue.
     497      *
     498      * We go further and preserve pool invariants even in the face of
     499      * errors such as OutOfMemoryError, that might be thrown while
     500      * trying to create threads.  Such errors are rather common due to
     501      * the need to allocate a native stack in Thread#start, and users
     502      * will want to perform clean pool shutdown to clean up.  There
     503      * will likely be enough memory available for the cleanup code to
     504      * complete without encountering yet another OutOfMemoryError.
     505      */
     506     private volatile ThreadFactory threadFactory;
     507 
     508     /**
     509      * Handler called when saturated or shutdown in execute.
     510      */
     511     private volatile RejectedExecutionHandler handler;
     512 
     513     /**
     514      * Timeout in nanoseconds for idle threads waiting for work.
     515      * Threads use this timeout when there are more than corePoolSize
     516      * present or if allowCoreThreadTimeOut. Otherwise they wait
     517      * forever for new work.
     518      */
     519     private volatile long keepAliveTime;
     520 
     521     /**
     522      * If false (default), core threads stay alive even when idle.
     523      * If true, core threads use keepAliveTime to time out waiting
     524      * for work.
     525      */
     526     private volatile boolean allowCoreThreadTimeOut;
     527 
     528     /**
     529      * Core pool size is the minimum number of workers to keep alive
     530      * (and not allow to time out etc) unless allowCoreThreadTimeOut
     531      * is set, in which case the minimum is zero.
     532      */
     533     private volatile int corePoolSize;
     534 
     535     /**
     536      * Maximum pool size. Note that the actual maximum is internally
     537      * bounded by CAPACITY.
     538      */
     539     private volatile int maximumPoolSize;
     540 
     541     /**
     542      * The default rejected execution handler
     543      */
     544     private static final RejectedExecutionHandler defaultHandler =
     545         new AbortPolicy();
     546 
     547     /**
     548      * Permission required for callers of shutdown and shutdownNow.
     549      * We additionally require (see checkShutdownAccess) that callers
     550      * have permission to actually interrupt threads in the worker set
     551      * (as governed by Thread.interrupt, which relies on
     552      * ThreadGroup.checkAccess, which in turn relies on
     553      * SecurityManager.checkAccess). Shutdowns are attempted only if
     554      * these checks pass.
     555      *
     556      * All actual invocations of Thread.interrupt (see
     557      * interruptIdleWorkers and interruptWorkers) ignore
     558      * SecurityExceptions, meaning that the attempted interrupts
     559      * silently fail. In the case of shutdown, they should not fail
     560      * unless the SecurityManager has inconsistent policies, sometimes
     561      * allowing access to a thread and sometimes not. In such cases,
     562      * failure to actually interrupt threads may disable or delay full
     563      * termination. Other uses of interruptIdleWorkers are advisory,
     564      * and failure to actually interrupt will merely delay response to
     565      * configuration changes so is not handled exceptionally.
     566      */
     567     private static final RuntimePermission shutdownPerm =
     568         new RuntimePermission("modifyThread");
     569 
     570     /**
     571      * Class Worker mainly maintains interrupt control state for
     572      * threads running tasks, along with other minor bookkeeping.
     573      * This class opportunistically extends AbstractQueuedSynchronizer
     574      * to simplify acquiring and releasing a lock surrounding each
     575      * task execution.  This protects against interrupts that are
     576      * intended to wake up a worker thread waiting for a task from
     577      * instead interrupting a task being run.  We implement a simple
     578      * non-reentrant mutual exclusion lock rather than use
     579      * ReentrantLock because we do not want worker tasks to be able to
     580      * reacquire the lock when they invoke pool control methods like
     581      * setCorePoolSize.  Additionally, to suppress interrupts until
     582      * the thread actually starts running tasks, we initialize lock
     583      * state to a negative value, and clear it upon start (in
     584      * runWorker).
     585      */
     586     private final class Worker
     587         extends AbstractQueuedSynchronizer
     588         implements Runnable
     589     {
     590         /**
     591          * This class will never be serialized, but we provide a
     592          * serialVersionUID to suppress a javac warning.
     593          */
     594         private static final long serialVersionUID = 6138294804551838833L;
     595 
     596         /** Thread this worker is running in.  Null if factory fails. */
     597         final Thread thread;
     598         /** Initial task to run.  Possibly null. */
     599         Runnable firstTask;
     600         /** Per-thread task counter */
     601         volatile long completedTasks;
     602 
     603         /**
     604          * Creates with given first task and thread from ThreadFactory.
     605          * @param firstTask the first task (null if none)
     606          */
     607         Worker(Runnable firstTask) {
     608             setState(-1); // inhibit interrupts until runWorker
     609             this.firstTask = firstTask;
     610             this.thread = getThreadFactory().newThread(this);
     611         }
     612 
     613         /** Delegates main run loop to outer runWorker  */
     614         public void run() {
     615             runWorker(this);
     616         }
     617 
     618         // Lock methods
     619         //
     620         // The value 0 represents the unlocked state.
     621         // The value 1 represents the locked state.
     622 
     623         protected boolean isHeldExclusively() {
     624             return getState() != 0;
     625         }
     626 
     627         protected boolean tryAcquire(int unused) {
     628             if (compareAndSetState(0, 1)) {
     629                 setExclusiveOwnerThread(Thread.currentThread());
     630                 return true;
     631             }
     632             return false;
     633         }
     634 
     635         protected boolean tryRelease(int unused) {
     636             setExclusiveOwnerThread(null);
     637             setState(0);
     638             return true;
     639         }
     640 
     641         public void lock()        { acquire(1); }
     642         public boolean tryLock()  { return tryAcquire(1); }
     643         public void unlock()      { release(1); }
     644         public boolean isLocked() { return isHeldExclusively(); }
     645 
     646         void interruptIfStarted() {
     647             Thread t;
     648             if (getState() >= 0 && (t = thread) != null && !t.isInterrupted()) {
     649                 try {
     650                     t.interrupt();
     651                 } catch (SecurityException ignore) {
     652                 }
     653             }
     654         }
     655     }
     656 
     657     /*
     658      * Methods for setting control state
     659      */
     660 
     661     /**
     662      * Transitions runState to given target, or leaves it alone if
     663      * already at least the given target.
     664      *
     665      * @param targetState the desired state, either SHUTDOWN or STOP
     666      *        (but not TIDYING or TERMINATED -- use tryTerminate for that)
     667      */
     668     private void advanceRunState(int targetState) {
     669         for (;;) {
     670             int c = ctl.get();
     671             if (runStateAtLeast(c, targetState) ||
     672                 ctl.compareAndSet(c, ctlOf(targetState, workerCountOf(c))))
     673                 break;
     674         }
     675     }
     676 
     677     /**
     678      * Transitions to TERMINATED state if either (SHUTDOWN and pool
     679      * and queue empty) or (STOP and pool empty).  If otherwise
     680      * eligible to terminate but workerCount is nonzero, interrupts an
     681      * idle worker to ensure that shutdown signals propagate. This
     682      * method must be called following any action that might make
     683      * termination possible -- reducing worker count or removing tasks
     684      * from the queue during shutdown. The method is non-private to
     685      * allow access from ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.
     686      */
     687     final void tryTerminate() {
     688         for (;;) {
     689             int c = ctl.get();
     690             if (isRunning(c) ||
     691                 runStateAtLeast(c, TIDYING) ||
     692                 (runStateOf(c) == SHUTDOWN && ! workQueue.isEmpty()))
     693                 return;
     694             if (workerCountOf(c) != 0) { // Eligible to terminate
     695                 interruptIdleWorkers(ONLY_ONE);
     696                 return;
     697             }
     698 
     699             final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     700             mainLock.lock();
     701             try {
     702                 if (ctl.compareAndSet(c, ctlOf(TIDYING, 0))) {
     703                     try {
     704                         terminated();
     705                     } finally {
     706                         ctl.set(ctlOf(TERMINATED, 0));
     707                         termination.signalAll();
     708                     }
     709                     return;
     710                 }
     711             } finally {
     712                 mainLock.unlock();
     713             }
     714             // else retry on failed CAS
     715         }
     716     }
     717 
     718     /*
     719      * Methods for controlling interrupts to worker threads.
     720      */
     721 
     722     /**
     723      * If there is a security manager, makes sure caller has
     724      * permission to shut down threads in general (see shutdownPerm).
     725      * If this passes, additionally makes sure the caller is allowed
     726      * to interrupt each worker thread. This might not be true even if
     727      * first check passed, if the SecurityManager treats some threads
     728      * specially.
     729      */
     730     private void checkShutdownAccess() {
     731         SecurityManager security = System.getSecurityManager();
     732         if (security != null) {
     733             security.checkPermission(shutdownPerm);
     734             final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     735             mainLock.lock();
     736             try {
     737                 for (Worker w : workers)
     738                     security.checkAccess(w.thread);
     739             } finally {
     740                 mainLock.unlock();
     741             }
     742         }
     743     }
     744 
     745     /**
     746      * Interrupts all threads, even if active. Ignores SecurityExceptions
     747      * (in which case some threads may remain uninterrupted).
     748      */
     749     private void interruptWorkers() {
     750         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     751         mainLock.lock();
     752         try {
     753             for (Worker w : workers)
     754                 w.interruptIfStarted();
     755         } finally {
     756             mainLock.unlock();
     757         }
     758     }
     759 
     760     /**
     761      * Interrupts threads that might be waiting for tasks (as
     762      * indicated by not being locked) so they can check for
     763      * termination or configuration changes. Ignores
     764      * SecurityExceptions (in which case some threads may remain
     765      * uninterrupted).
     766      *
     767      * @param onlyOne If true, interrupt at most one worker. This is
     768      * called only from tryTerminate when termination is otherwise
     769      * enabled but there are still other workers.  In this case, at
     770      * most one waiting worker is interrupted to propagate shutdown
     771      * signals in case all threads are currently waiting.
     772      * Interrupting any arbitrary thread ensures that newly arriving
     773      * workers since shutdown began will also eventually exit.
     774      * To guarantee eventual termination, it suffices to always
     775      * interrupt only one idle worker, but shutdown() interrupts all
     776      * idle workers so that redundant workers exit promptly, not
     777      * waiting for a straggler task to finish.
     778      */
     779     private void interruptIdleWorkers(boolean onlyOne) {
     780         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     781         mainLock.lock();
     782         try {
     783             for (Worker w : workers) {
     784                 Thread t = w.thread;
     785                 if (!t.isInterrupted() && w.tryLock()) {
     786                     try {
     787                         t.interrupt();
     788                     } catch (SecurityException ignore) {
     789                     } finally {
     790                         w.unlock();
     791                     }
     792                 }
     793                 if (onlyOne)
     794                     break;
     795             }
     796         } finally {
     797             mainLock.unlock();
     798         }
     799     }
     800 
     801     /**
     802      * Common form of interruptIdleWorkers, to avoid having to
     803      * remember what the boolean argument means.
     804      */
     805     private void interruptIdleWorkers() {
     806         interruptIdleWorkers(false);
     807     }
     808 
     809     private static final boolean ONLY_ONE = true;
     810 
     811     /*
     812      * Misc utilities, most of which are also exported to
     813      * ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
     814      */
     815 
     816     /**
     817      * Invokes the rejected execution handler for the given command.
     818      * Package-protected for use by ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.
     819      */
     820     final void reject(Runnable command) {
     821         handler.rejectedExecution(command, this);
     822     }
     823 
     824     /**
     825      * Performs any further cleanup following run state transition on
     826      * invocation of shutdown.  A no-op here, but used by
     827      * ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor to cancel delayed tasks.
     828      */
     829     void onShutdown() {
     830     }
     831 
     832     /**
     833      * State check needed by ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor to
     834      * enable running tasks during shutdown.
     835      *
     836      * @param shutdownOK true if should return true if SHUTDOWN
     837      */
     838     final boolean isRunningOrShutdown(boolean shutdownOK) {
     839         int rs = runStateOf(ctl.get());
     840         return rs == RUNNING || (rs == SHUTDOWN && shutdownOK);
     841     }
     842 
     843     /**
     844      * Drains the task queue into a new list, normally using
     845      * drainTo. But if the queue is a DelayQueue or any other kind of
     846      * queue for which poll or drainTo may fail to remove some
     847      * elements, it deletes them one by one.
     848      */
     849     private List<Runnable> drainQueue() {
     850         BlockingQueue<Runnable> q = workQueue;
     851         List<Runnable> taskList = new ArrayList<Runnable>();
     852         q.drainTo(taskList);
     853         if (!q.isEmpty()) {
     854             for (Runnable r : q.toArray(new Runnable[0])) {
     855                 if (q.remove(r))
     856                     taskList.add(r);
     857             }
     858         }
     859         return taskList;
     860     }
     861 
     862     /*
     863      * Methods for creating, running and cleaning up after workers
     864      */
     865 
     866     /**
     867      * Checks if a new worker can be added with respect to current
     868      * pool state and the given bound (either core or maximum). If so,
     869      * the worker count is adjusted accordingly, and, if possible, a
     870      * new worker is created and started, running firstTask as its
     871      * first task. This method returns false if the pool is stopped or
     872      * eligible to shut down. It also returns false if the thread
     873      * factory fails to create a thread when asked.  If the thread
     874      * creation fails, either due to the thread factory returning
     875      * null, or due to an exception (typically OutOfMemoryError in
     876      * Thread#start), we roll back cleanly.
     877      *
     878      * @param firstTask the task the new thread should run first (or
     879      * null if none). Workers are created with an initial first task
     880      * (in method execute()) to bypass queuing when there are fewer
     881      * than corePoolSize threads (in which case we always start one),
     882      * or when the queue is full (in which case we must bypass queue).
     883      * Initially idle threads are usually created via
     884      * prestartCoreThread or to replace other dying workers.
     885      *
     886      * @param core if true use corePoolSize as bound, else
     887      * maximumPoolSize. (A boolean indicator is used here rather than a
     888      * value to ensure reads of fresh values after checking other pool
     889      * state).
     890      * @return true if successful
     891      */
     892     private boolean addWorker(Runnable firstTask, boolean core) {
     893         retry:
     894         for (;;) {
     895             int c = ctl.get();
     896             int rs = runStateOf(c);
     897 
     898             // Check if queue empty only if necessary.
     899             if (rs >= SHUTDOWN &&
     900                 ! (rs == SHUTDOWN &&
     901                    firstTask == null &&
     902                    ! workQueue.isEmpty()))
     903                 return false;
     904 
     905             for (;;) {
     906                 int wc = workerCountOf(c);
     907                 if (wc >= CAPACITY ||
     908                     wc >= (core ? corePoolSize : maximumPoolSize))
     909                     return false;
     910                 if (compareAndIncrementWorkerCount(c))
     911                     break retry;
     912                 c = ctl.get();  // Re-read ctl
     913                 if (runStateOf(c) != rs)
     914                     continue retry;
     915                 // else CAS failed due to workerCount change; retry inner loop
     916             }
     917         }
     918 
     919         boolean workerStarted = false;
     920         boolean workerAdded = false;
     921         Worker w = null;
     922         try {
     923             final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     924             w = new Worker(firstTask);
     925             final Thread t = w.thread;
     926             if (t != null) {
     927                 mainLock.lock();
     928                 try {
     929                     // Recheck while holding lock.
     930                     // Back out on ThreadFactory failure or if
     931                     // shut down before lock acquired.
     932                     int c = ctl.get();
     933                     int rs = runStateOf(c);
     934 
     935                     if (rs < SHUTDOWN ||
     936                         (rs == SHUTDOWN && firstTask == null)) {
     937                         if (t.isAlive()) // precheck that t is startable
     938                             throw new IllegalThreadStateException();
     939                         workers.add(w);
     940                         int s = workers.size();
     941                         if (s > largestPoolSize)
     942                             largestPoolSize = s;
     943                         workerAdded = true;
     944                     }
     945                 } finally {
     946                     mainLock.unlock();
     947                 }
     948                 if (workerAdded) {
     949                     t.start();
     950                     workerStarted = true;
     951                 }
     952             }
     953         } finally {
     954             if (! workerStarted)
     955                 addWorkerFailed(w);
     956         }
     957         return workerStarted;
     958     }
     959 
     960     /**
     961      * Rolls back the worker thread creation.
     962      * - removes worker from workers, if present
     963      * - decrements worker count
     964      * - rechecks for termination, in case the existence of this
     965      *   worker was holding up termination
     966      */
     967     private void addWorkerFailed(Worker w) {
     968         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     969         mainLock.lock();
     970         try {
     971             if (w != null)
     972                 workers.remove(w);
     973             decrementWorkerCount();
     974             tryTerminate();
     975         } finally {
     976             mainLock.unlock();
     977         }
     978     }
     979 
     980     /**
     981      * Performs cleanup and bookkeeping for a dying worker. Called
     982      * only from worker threads. Unless completedAbruptly is set,
     983      * assumes that workerCount has already been adjusted to account
     984      * for exit.  This method removes thread from worker set, and
     985      * possibly terminates the pool or replaces the worker if either
     986      * it exited due to user task exception or if fewer than
     987      * corePoolSize workers are running or queue is non-empty but
     988      * there are no workers.
     989      *
     990      * @param w the worker
     991      * @param completedAbruptly if the worker died due to user exception
     992      */
     993     private void processWorkerExit(Worker w, boolean completedAbruptly) {
     994         if (completedAbruptly) // If abrupt, then workerCount wasn't adjusted
     995             decrementWorkerCount();
     996 
     997         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
     998         mainLock.lock();
     999         try {
    1000             completedTaskCount += w.completedTasks;
    1001             workers.remove(w);
    1002         } finally {
    1003             mainLock.unlock();
    1004         }
    1005 
    1006         tryTerminate();
    1007 
    1008         int c = ctl.get();
    1009         if (runStateLessThan(c, STOP)) {
    1010             if (!completedAbruptly) {
    1011                 int min = allowCoreThreadTimeOut ? 0 : corePoolSize;
    1012                 if (min == 0 && ! workQueue.isEmpty())
    1013                     min = 1;
    1014                 if (workerCountOf(c) >= min)
    1015                     return; // replacement not needed
    1016             }
    1017             addWorker(null, false);
    1018         }
    1019     }
    1020 
    1021     /**
    1022      * Performs blocking or timed wait for a task, depending on
    1023      * current configuration settings, or returns null if this worker
    1024      * must exit because of any of:
    1025      * 1. There are more than maximumPoolSize workers (due to
    1026      *    a call to setMaximumPoolSize).
    1027      * 2. The pool is stopped.
    1028      * 3. The pool is shutdown and the queue is empty.
    1029      * 4. This worker timed out waiting for a task, and timed-out
    1030      *    workers are subject to termination (that is,
    1031      *    {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut || workerCount > corePoolSize})
    1032      *    both before and after the timed wait.
    1033      *
    1034      * @return task, or null if the worker must exit, in which case
    1035      *         workerCount is decremented
    1036      */
    1037     private Runnable getTask() {
    1038         boolean timedOut = false; // Did the last poll() time out?
    1039 
    1040         retry:
    1041         for (;;) {
    1042             int c = ctl.get();
    1043             int rs = runStateOf(c);
    1044 
    1045             // Check if queue empty only if necessary.
    1046             if (rs >= SHUTDOWN && (rs >= STOP || workQueue.isEmpty())) {
    1047                 decrementWorkerCount();
    1048                 return null;
    1049             }
    1050 
    1051             boolean timed;      // Are workers subject to culling?
    1052 
    1053             for (;;) {
    1054                 int wc = workerCountOf(c);
    1055                 timed = allowCoreThreadTimeOut || wc > corePoolSize;
    1056 
    1057                 if (wc <= maximumPoolSize && ! (timedOut && timed))
    1058                     break;
    1059                 if (compareAndDecrementWorkerCount(c))
    1060                     return null;
    1061                 c = ctl.get();  // Re-read ctl
    1062                 if (runStateOf(c) != rs)
    1063                     continue retry;
    1064                 // else CAS failed due to workerCount change; retry inner loop
    1065             }
    1066 
    1067             try {
    1068                 Runnable r = timed ?
    1069                     workQueue.poll(keepAliveTime, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS) :
    1070                     workQueue.take();
    1071                 if (r != null)
    1072                     return r;
    1073                 timedOut = true;
    1074             } catch (InterruptedException retry) {
    1075                 timedOut = false;
    1076             }
    1077         }
    1078     }
    1079 
    1080     /**
    1081      * Main worker run loop.  Repeatedly gets tasks from queue and
    1082      * executes them, while coping with a number of issues:
    1083      *
    1084      * 1. We may start out with an initial task, in which case we
    1085      * don't need to get the first one. Otherwise, as long as pool is
    1086      * running, we get tasks from getTask. If it returns null then the
    1087      * worker exits due to changed pool state or configuration
    1088      * parameters.  Other exits result from exception throws in
    1089      * external code, in which case completedAbruptly holds, which
    1090      * usually leads processWorkerExit to replace this thread.
    1091      *
    1092      * 2. Before running any task, the lock is acquired to prevent
    1093      * other pool interrupts while the task is executing, and
    1094      * clearInterruptsForTaskRun called to ensure that unless pool is
    1095      * stopping, this thread does not have its interrupt set.
    1096      *
    1097      * 3. Each task run is preceded by a call to beforeExecute, which
    1098      * might throw an exception, in which case we cause thread to die
    1099      * (breaking loop with completedAbruptly true) without processing
    1100      * the task.
    1101      *
    1102      * 4. Assuming beforeExecute completes normally, we run the task,
    1103      * gathering any of its thrown exceptions to send to
    1104      * afterExecute. We separately handle RuntimeException, Error
    1105      * (both of which the specs guarantee that we trap) and arbitrary
    1106      * Throwables.  Because we cannot rethrow Throwables within
    1107      * Runnable.run, we wrap them within Errors on the way out (to the
    1108      * thread's UncaughtExceptionHandler).  Any thrown exception also
    1109      * conservatively causes thread to die.
    1110      *
    1111      * 5. After task.run completes, we call afterExecute, which may
    1112      * also throw an exception, which will also cause thread to
    1113      * die. According to JLS Sec 14.20, this exception is the one that
    1114      * will be in effect even if task.run throws.
    1115      *
    1116      * The net effect of the exception mechanics is that afterExecute
    1117      * and the thread's UncaughtExceptionHandler have as accurate
    1118      * information as we can provide about any problems encountered by
    1119      * user code.
    1120      *
    1121      * @param w the worker
    1122      */
    1123     final void runWorker(Worker w) {
    1124         Thread wt = Thread.currentThread();
    1125         Runnable task = w.firstTask;
    1126         w.firstTask = null;
    1127         w.unlock(); // allow interrupts
    1128         boolean completedAbruptly = true;
    1129         try {
    1130             while (task != null || (task = getTask()) != null) {
    1131                 w.lock();
    1132                 // If pool is stopping, ensure thread is interrupted;
    1133                 // if not, ensure thread is not interrupted.  This
    1134                 // requires a recheck in second case to deal with
    1135                 // shutdownNow race while clearing interrupt
    1136                 if ((runStateAtLeast(ctl.get(), STOP) ||
    1137                      (Thread.interrupted() &&
    1138                       runStateAtLeast(ctl.get(), STOP))) &&
    1139                     !wt.isInterrupted())
    1140                     wt.interrupt();
    1141                 try {
    1142                     beforeExecute(wt, task);
    1143                     Throwable thrown = null;
    1144                     try {
    1145                         task.run();
    1146                     } catch (RuntimeException x) {
    1147                         thrown = x; throw x;
    1148                     } catch (Error x) {
    1149                         thrown = x; throw x;
    1150                     } catch (Throwable x) {
    1151                         thrown = x; throw new Error(x);
    1152                     } finally {
    1153                         afterExecute(task, thrown);
    1154                     }
    1155                 } finally {
    1156                     task = null;
    1157                     w.completedTasks++;
    1158                     w.unlock();
    1159                 }
    1160             }
    1161             completedAbruptly = false;
    1162         } finally {
    1163             processWorkerExit(w, completedAbruptly);
    1164         }
    1165     }
    1166 
    1167     // Public constructors and methods
    1168 
    1169     /**
    1170      * Creates a new {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} with the given initial
    1171      * parameters and default thread factory and rejected execution handler.
    1172      * It may be more convenient to use one of the {@link Executors} factory
    1173      * methods instead of this general purpose constructor.
    1174      *
    1175      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even
    1176      *        if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set
    1177      * @param maximumPoolSize the maximum number of threads to allow in the
    1178      *        pool
    1179      * @param keepAliveTime when the number of threads is greater than
    1180      *        the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads
    1181      *        will wait for new tasks before terminating.
    1182      * @param unit the time unit for the {@code keepAliveTime} argument
    1183      * @param workQueue the queue to use for holding tasks before they are
    1184      *        executed.  This queue will hold only the {@code Runnable}
    1185      *        tasks submitted by the {@code execute} method.
    1186      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one of the following holds:<br>
    1187      *         {@code corePoolSize < 0}<br>
    1188      *         {@code keepAliveTime < 0}<br>
    1189      *         {@code maximumPoolSize <= 0}<br>
    1190      *         {@code maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize}
    1191      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code workQueue} is null
    1192      */
    1193     public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
    1194                               int maximumPoolSize,
    1195                               long keepAliveTime,
    1196                               TimeUnit unit,
    1197                               BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
    1198         this(corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue,
    1199              Executors.defaultThreadFactory(), defaultHandler);
    1200     }
    1201 
    1202     /**
    1203      * Creates a new {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} with the given initial
    1204      * parameters and default rejected execution handler.
    1205      *
    1206      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even
    1207      *        if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set
    1208      * @param maximumPoolSize the maximum number of threads to allow in the
    1209      *        pool
    1210      * @param keepAliveTime when the number of threads is greater than
    1211      *        the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads
    1212      *        will wait for new tasks before terminating.
    1213      * @param unit the time unit for the {@code keepAliveTime} argument
    1214      * @param workQueue the queue to use for holding tasks before they are
    1215      *        executed.  This queue will hold only the {@code Runnable}
    1216      *        tasks submitted by the {@code execute} method.
    1217      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when the executor
    1218      *        creates a new thread
    1219      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one of the following holds:<br>
    1220      *         {@code corePoolSize < 0}<br>
    1221      *         {@code keepAliveTime < 0}<br>
    1222      *         {@code maximumPoolSize <= 0}<br>
    1223      *         {@code maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize}
    1224      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code workQueue}
    1225      *         or {@code threadFactory} is null
    1226      */
    1227     public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
    1228                               int maximumPoolSize,
    1229                               long keepAliveTime,
    1230                               TimeUnit unit,
    1231                               BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
    1232                               ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    1233         this(corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue,
    1234              threadFactory, defaultHandler);
    1235     }
    1236 
    1237     /**
    1238      * Creates a new {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} with the given initial
    1239      * parameters and default thread factory.
    1240      *
    1241      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even
    1242      *        if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set
    1243      * @param maximumPoolSize the maximum number of threads to allow in the
    1244      *        pool
    1245      * @param keepAliveTime when the number of threads is greater than
    1246      *        the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads
    1247      *        will wait for new tasks before terminating.
    1248      * @param unit the time unit for the {@code keepAliveTime} argument
    1249      * @param workQueue the queue to use for holding tasks before they are
    1250      *        executed.  This queue will hold only the {@code Runnable}
    1251      *        tasks submitted by the {@code execute} method.
    1252      * @param handler the handler to use when execution is blocked
    1253      *        because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached
    1254      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one of the following holds:<br>
    1255      *         {@code corePoolSize < 0}<br>
    1256      *         {@code keepAliveTime < 0}<br>
    1257      *         {@code maximumPoolSize <= 0}<br>
    1258      *         {@code maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize}
    1259      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code workQueue}
    1260      *         or {@code handler} is null
    1261      */
    1262     public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
    1263                               int maximumPoolSize,
    1264                               long keepAliveTime,
    1265                               TimeUnit unit,
    1266                               BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
    1267                               RejectedExecutionHandler handler) {
    1268         this(corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue,
    1269              Executors.defaultThreadFactory(), handler);
    1270     }
    1271 
    1272     /**
    1273      * Creates a new {@code ThreadPoolExecutor} with the given initial
    1274      * parameters.
    1275      *
    1276      * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even
    1277      *        if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set
    1278      * @param maximumPoolSize the maximum number of threads to allow in the
    1279      *        pool
    1280      * @param keepAliveTime when the number of threads is greater than
    1281      *        the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads
    1282      *        will wait for new tasks before terminating.
    1283      * @param unit the time unit for the {@code keepAliveTime} argument
    1284      * @param workQueue the queue to use for holding tasks before they are
    1285      *        executed.  This queue will hold only the {@code Runnable}
    1286      *        tasks submitted by the {@code execute} method.
    1287      * @param threadFactory the factory to use when the executor
    1288      *        creates a new thread
    1289      * @param handler the handler to use when execution is blocked
    1290      *        because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached
    1291      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one of the following holds:<br>
    1292      *         {@code corePoolSize < 0}<br>
    1293      *         {@code keepAliveTime < 0}<br>
    1294      *         {@code maximumPoolSize <= 0}<br>
    1295      *         {@code maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize}
    1296      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code workQueue}
    1297      *         or {@code threadFactory} or {@code handler} is null
    1298      */
    1299     public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
    1300                               int maximumPoolSize,
    1301                               long keepAliveTime,
    1302                               TimeUnit unit,
    1303                               BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
    1304                               ThreadFactory threadFactory,
    1305                               RejectedExecutionHandler handler) {
    1306         if (corePoolSize < 0 ||
    1307             maximumPoolSize <= 0 ||
    1308             maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize ||
    1309             keepAliveTime < 0)
    1310             throw new IllegalArgumentException();
    1311         if (workQueue == null || threadFactory == null || handler == null)
    1312             throw new NullPointerException();
    1313         this.corePoolSize = corePoolSize;
    1314         this.maximumPoolSize = maximumPoolSize;
    1315         this.workQueue = workQueue;
    1316         this.keepAliveTime = unit.toNanos(keepAliveTime);
    1317         this.threadFactory = threadFactory;
    1318         this.handler = handler;
    1319     }
    1320 
    1321     /**
    1322      * Executes the given task sometime in the future.  The task
    1323      * may execute in a new thread or in an existing pooled thread.
    1324      *
    1325      * If the task cannot be submitted for execution, either because this
    1326      * executor has been shutdown or because its capacity has been reached,
    1327      * the task is handled by the current {@code RejectedExecutionHandler}.
    1328      *
    1329      * @param command the task to execute
    1330      * @throws RejectedExecutionException at discretion of
    1331      *         {@code RejectedExecutionHandler}, if the task
    1332      *         cannot be accepted for execution
    1333      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code command} is null
    1334      */
    1335     public void execute(Runnable command) {
    1336         if (command == null)
    1337             throw new NullPointerException();
    1338         /*
    1339          * Proceed in 3 steps:
    1340          *
    1341          * 1. If fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, try to
    1342          * start a new thread with the given command as its first
    1343          * task.  The call to addWorker atomically checks runState and
    1344          * workerCount, and so prevents false alarms that would add
    1345          * threads when it shouldn't, by returning false.
    1346          *
    1347          * 2. If a task can be successfully queued, then we still need
    1348          * to double-check whether we should have added a thread
    1349          * (because existing ones died since last checking) or that
    1350          * the pool shut down since entry into this method. So we
    1351          * recheck state and if necessary roll back the enqueuing if
    1352          * stopped, or start a new thread if there are none.
    1353          *
    1354          * 3. If we cannot queue task, then we try to add a new
    1355          * thread.  If it fails, we know we are shut down or saturated
    1356          * and so reject the task.
    1357          */
    1358         int c = ctl.get();
    1359         if (workerCountOf(c) < corePoolSize) {
    1360             if (addWorker(command, true))
    1361                 return;
    1362             c = ctl.get();
    1363         }
    1364         if (isRunning(c) && workQueue.offer(command)) {
    1365             int recheck = ctl.get();
    1366             if (! isRunning(recheck) && remove(command))
    1367                 reject(command);
    1368             else if (workerCountOf(recheck) == 0)
    1369                 addWorker(null, false);
    1370         }
    1371         else if (!addWorker(command, false))
    1372             reject(command);
    1373     }
    1374 
    1375     /**
    1376      * Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted
    1377      * tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted.
    1378      * Invocation has no additional effect if already shut down.
    1379      *
    1380      * <p>This method does not wait for previously submitted tasks to
    1381      * complete execution.  Use {@link #awaitTermination awaitTermination}
    1382      * to do that.
    1383      *
    1384      * @throws SecurityException {@inheritDoc}
    1385      */
    1386     public void shutdown() {
    1387         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1388         mainLock.lock();
    1389         try {
    1390             checkShutdownAccess();
    1391             advanceRunState(SHUTDOWN);
    1392             interruptIdleWorkers();
    1393             onShutdown(); // hook for ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
    1394         } finally {
    1395             mainLock.unlock();
    1396         }
    1397         tryTerminate();
    1398     }
    1399 
    1400     /**
    1401      * Attempts to stop all actively executing tasks, halts the
    1402      * processing of waiting tasks, and returns a list of the tasks
    1403      * that were awaiting execution. These tasks are drained (removed)
    1404      * from the task queue upon return from this method.
    1405      *
    1406      * <p>This method does not wait for actively executing tasks to
    1407      * terminate.  Use {@link #awaitTermination awaitTermination} to
    1408      * do that.
    1409      *
    1410      * <p>There are no guarantees beyond best-effort attempts to stop
    1411      * processing actively executing tasks.  This implementation
    1412      * cancels tasks via {@link Thread#interrupt}, so any task that
    1413      * fails to respond to interrupts may never terminate.
    1414      *
    1415      * @throws SecurityException {@inheritDoc}
    1416      */
    1417     public List<Runnable> shutdownNow() {
    1418         List<Runnable> tasks;
    1419         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1420         mainLock.lock();
    1421         try {
    1422             checkShutdownAccess();
    1423             advanceRunState(STOP);
    1424             interruptWorkers();
    1425             tasks = drainQueue();
    1426         } finally {
    1427             mainLock.unlock();
    1428         }
    1429         tryTerminate();
    1430         return tasks;
    1431     }
    1432 
    1433     public boolean isShutdown() {
    1434         return ! isRunning(ctl.get());
    1435     }
    1436 
    1437     /**
    1438      * Returns true if this executor is in the process of terminating
    1439      * after {@link #shutdown} or {@link #shutdownNow} but has not
    1440      * completely terminated.  This method may be useful for
    1441      * debugging. A return of {@code true} reported a sufficient
    1442      * period after shutdown may indicate that submitted tasks have
    1443      * ignored or suppressed interruption, causing this executor not
    1444      * to properly terminate.
    1445      *
    1446      * @return true if terminating but not yet terminated
    1447      */
    1448     public boolean isTerminating() {
    1449         int c = ctl.get();
    1450         return ! isRunning(c) && runStateLessThan(c, TERMINATED);
    1451     }
    1452 
    1453     public boolean isTerminated() {
    1454         return runStateAtLeast(ctl.get(), TERMINATED);
    1455     }
    1456 
    1457     public boolean awaitTermination(long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
    1458         throws InterruptedException {
    1459         long nanos = unit.toNanos(timeout);
    1460         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1461         mainLock.lock();
    1462         try {
    1463             for (;;) {
    1464                 if (runStateAtLeast(ctl.get(), TERMINATED))
    1465                     return true;
    1466                 if (nanos <= 0)
    1467                     return false;
    1468                 nanos = termination.awaitNanos(nanos);
    1469             }
    1470         } finally {
    1471             mainLock.unlock();
    1472         }
    1473     }
    1474 
    1475     /**
    1476      * Invokes {@code shutdown} when this executor is no longer
    1477      * referenced and it has no threads.
    1478      */
    1479     protected void finalize() {
    1480         shutdown();
    1481     }
    1482 
    1483     /**
    1484      * Sets the thread factory used to create new threads.
    1485      *
    1486      * @param threadFactory the new thread factory
    1487      * @throws NullPointerException if threadFactory is null
    1488      * @see #getThreadFactory
    1489      */
    1490     public void setThreadFactory(ThreadFactory threadFactory) {
    1491         if (threadFactory == null)
    1492             throw new NullPointerException();
    1493         this.threadFactory = threadFactory;
    1494     }
    1495 
    1496     /**
    1497      * Returns the thread factory used to create new threads.
    1498      *
    1499      * @return the current thread factory
    1500      * @see #setThreadFactory
    1501      */
    1502     public ThreadFactory getThreadFactory() {
    1503         return threadFactory;
    1504     }
    1505 
    1506     /**
    1507      * Sets a new handler for unexecutable tasks.
    1508      *
    1509      * @param handler the new handler
    1510      * @throws NullPointerException if handler is null
    1511      * @see #getRejectedExecutionHandler
    1512      */
    1513     public void setRejectedExecutionHandler(RejectedExecutionHandler handler) {
    1514         if (handler == null)
    1515             throw new NullPointerException();
    1516         this.handler = handler;
    1517     }
    1518 
    1519     /**
    1520      * Returns the current handler for unexecutable tasks.
    1521      *
    1522      * @return the current handler
    1523      * @see #setRejectedExecutionHandler
    1524      */
    1525     public RejectedExecutionHandler getRejectedExecutionHandler() {
    1526         return handler;
    1527     }
    1528 
    1529     /**
    1530      * Sets the core number of threads.  This overrides any value set
    1531      * in the constructor.  If the new value is smaller than the
    1532      * current value, excess existing threads will be terminated when
    1533      * they next become idle.  If larger, new threads will, if needed,
    1534      * be started to execute any queued tasks.
    1535      *
    1536      * @param corePoolSize the new core size
    1537      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0}
    1538      * @see #getCorePoolSize
    1539      */
    1540     public void setCorePoolSize(int corePoolSize) {
    1541         if (corePoolSize < 0)
    1542             throw new IllegalArgumentException();
    1543         int delta = corePoolSize - this.corePoolSize;
    1544         this.corePoolSize = corePoolSize;
    1545         if (workerCountOf(ctl.get()) > corePoolSize)
    1546             interruptIdleWorkers();
    1547         else if (delta > 0) {
    1548             // We don't really know how many new threads are "needed".
    1549             // As a heuristic, prestart enough new workers (up to new
    1550             // core size) to handle the current number of tasks in
    1551             // queue, but stop if queue becomes empty while doing so.
    1552             int k = Math.min(delta, workQueue.size());
    1553             while (k-- > 0 && addWorker(null, true)) {
    1554                 if (workQueue.isEmpty())
    1555                     break;
    1556             }
    1557         }
    1558     }
    1559 
    1560     /**
    1561      * Returns the core number of threads.
    1562      *
    1563      * @return the core number of threads
    1564      * @see #setCorePoolSize
    1565      */
    1566     public int getCorePoolSize() {
    1567         return corePoolSize;
    1568     }
    1569 
    1570     /**
    1571      * Starts a core thread, causing it to idly wait for work. This
    1572      * overrides the default policy of starting core threads only when
    1573      * new tasks are executed. This method will return {@code false}
    1574      * if all core threads have already been started.
    1575      *
    1576      * @return {@code true} if a thread was started
    1577      */
    1578     public boolean prestartCoreThread() {
    1579         return workerCountOf(ctl.get()) < corePoolSize &&
    1580             addWorker(null, true);
    1581     }
    1582 
    1583     /**
    1584      * Same as prestartCoreThread except arranges that at least one
    1585      * thread is started even if corePoolSize is 0.
    1586      */
    1587     void ensurePrestart() {
    1588         int wc = workerCountOf(ctl.get());
    1589         if (wc < corePoolSize)
    1590             addWorker(null, true);
    1591         else if (wc == 0)
    1592             addWorker(null, false);
    1593     }
    1594 
    1595     /**
    1596      * Starts all core threads, causing them to idly wait for work. This
    1597      * overrides the default policy of starting core threads only when
    1598      * new tasks are executed.
    1599      *
    1600      * @return the number of threads started
    1601      */
    1602     public int prestartAllCoreThreads() {
    1603         int n = 0;
    1604         while (addWorker(null, true))
    1605             ++n;
    1606         return n;
    1607     }
    1608 
    1609     /**
    1610      * Returns true if this pool allows core threads to time out and
    1611      * terminate if no tasks arrive within the keepAlive time, being
    1612      * replaced if needed when new tasks arrive. When true, the same
    1613      * keep-alive policy applying to non-core threads applies also to
    1614      * core threads. When false (the default), core threads are never
    1615      * terminated due to lack of incoming tasks.
    1616      *
    1617      * @return {@code true} if core threads are allowed to time out,
    1618      *         else {@code false}
    1619      *
    1620      * @since 1.6
    1621      */
    1622     public boolean allowsCoreThreadTimeOut() {
    1623         return allowCoreThreadTimeOut;
    1624     }
    1625 
    1626     /**
    1627      * Sets the policy governing whether core threads may time out and
    1628      * terminate if no tasks arrive within the keep-alive time, being
    1629      * replaced if needed when new tasks arrive. When false, core
    1630      * threads are never terminated due to lack of incoming
    1631      * tasks. When true, the same keep-alive policy applying to
    1632      * non-core threads applies also to core threads. To avoid
    1633      * continual thread replacement, the keep-alive time must be
    1634      * greater than zero when setting {@code true}. This method
    1635      * should in general be called before the pool is actively used.
    1636      *
    1637      * @param value {@code true} if should time out, else {@code false}
    1638      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if value is {@code true}
    1639      *         and the current keep-alive time is not greater than zero
    1640      *
    1641      * @since 1.6
    1642      */
    1643     public void allowCoreThreadTimeOut(boolean value) {
    1644         if (value && keepAliveTime <= 0)
    1645             throw new IllegalArgumentException("Core threads must have nonzero keep alive times");
    1646         if (value != allowCoreThreadTimeOut) {
    1647             allowCoreThreadTimeOut = value;
    1648             if (value)
    1649                 interruptIdleWorkers();
    1650         }
    1651     }
    1652 
    1653     /**
    1654      * Sets the maximum allowed number of threads. This overrides any
    1655      * value set in the constructor. If the new value is smaller than
    1656      * the current value, excess existing threads will be
    1657      * terminated when they next become idle.
    1658      *
    1659      * @param maximumPoolSize the new maximum
    1660      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the new maximum is
    1661      *         less than or equal to zero, or
    1662      *         less than the {@linkplain #getCorePoolSize core pool size}
    1663      * @see #getMaximumPoolSize
    1664      */
    1665     public void setMaximumPoolSize(int maximumPoolSize) {
    1666         if (maximumPoolSize <= 0 || maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize)
    1667             throw new IllegalArgumentException();
    1668         this.maximumPoolSize = maximumPoolSize;
    1669         if (workerCountOf(ctl.get()) > maximumPoolSize)
    1670             interruptIdleWorkers();
    1671     }
    1672 
    1673     /**
    1674      * Returns the maximum allowed number of threads.
    1675      *
    1676      * @return the maximum allowed number of threads
    1677      * @see #setMaximumPoolSize
    1678      */
    1679     public int getMaximumPoolSize() {
    1680         return maximumPoolSize;
    1681     }
    1682 
    1683     /**
    1684      * Sets the time limit for which threads may remain idle before
    1685      * being terminated.  If there are more than the core number of
    1686      * threads currently in the pool, after waiting this amount of
    1687      * time without processing a task, excess threads will be
    1688      * terminated.  This overrides any value set in the constructor.
    1689      *
    1690      * @param time the time to wait.  A time value of zero will cause
    1691      *        excess threads to terminate immediately after executing tasks.
    1692      * @param unit the time unit of the {@code time} argument
    1693      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code time} less than zero or
    1694      *         if {@code time} is zero and {@code allowsCoreThreadTimeOut}
    1695      * @see #getKeepAliveTime
    1696      */
    1697     public void setKeepAliveTime(long time, TimeUnit unit) {
    1698         if (time < 0)
    1699             throw new IllegalArgumentException();
    1700         if (time == 0 && allowsCoreThreadTimeOut())
    1701             throw new IllegalArgumentException("Core threads must have nonzero keep alive times");
    1702         long keepAliveTime = unit.toNanos(time);
    1703         long delta = keepAliveTime - this.keepAliveTime;
    1704         this.keepAliveTime = keepAliveTime;
    1705         if (delta < 0)
    1706             interruptIdleWorkers();
    1707     }
    1708 
    1709     /**
    1710      * Returns the thread keep-alive time, which is the amount of time
    1711      * that threads in excess of the core pool size may remain
    1712      * idle before being terminated.
    1713      *
    1714      * @param unit the desired time unit of the result
    1715      * @return the time limit
    1716      * @see #setKeepAliveTime
    1717      */
    1718     public long getKeepAliveTime(TimeUnit unit) {
    1719         return unit.convert(keepAliveTime, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS);
    1720     }
    1721 
    1722     /* User-level queue utilities */
    1723 
    1724     /**
    1725      * Returns the task queue used by this executor. Access to the
    1726      * task queue is intended primarily for debugging and monitoring.
    1727      * This queue may be in active use.  Retrieving the task queue
    1728      * does not prevent queued tasks from executing.
    1729      *
    1730      * @return the task queue
    1731      */
    1732     public BlockingQueue<Runnable> getQueue() {
    1733         return workQueue;
    1734     }
    1735 
    1736     /**
    1737      * Removes this task from the executor's internal queue if it is
    1738      * present, thus causing it not to be run if it has not already
    1739      * started.
    1740      *
    1741      * <p> This method may be useful as one part of a cancellation
    1742      * scheme.  It may fail to remove tasks that have been converted
    1743      * into other forms before being placed on the internal queue. For
    1744      * example, a task entered using {@code submit} might be
    1745      * converted into a form that maintains {@code Future} status.
    1746      * However, in such cases, method {@link #purge} may be used to
    1747      * remove those Futures that have been cancelled.
    1748      *
    1749      * @param task the task to remove
    1750      * @return true if the task was removed
    1751      */
    1752     public boolean remove(Runnable task) {
    1753         boolean removed = workQueue.remove(task);
    1754         tryTerminate(); // In case SHUTDOWN and now empty
    1755         return removed;
    1756     }
    1757 
    1758     /**
    1759      * Tries to remove from the work queue all {@link Future}
    1760      * tasks that have been cancelled. This method can be useful as a
    1761      * storage reclamation operation, that has no other impact on
    1762      * functionality. Cancelled tasks are never executed, but may
    1763      * accumulate in work queues until worker threads can actively
    1764      * remove them. Invoking this method instead tries to remove them now.
    1765      * However, this method may fail to remove tasks in
    1766      * the presence of interference by other threads.
    1767      */
    1768     public void purge() {
    1769         final BlockingQueue<Runnable> q = workQueue;
    1770         try {
    1771             Iterator<Runnable> it = q.iterator();
    1772             while (it.hasNext()) {
    1773                 Runnable r = it.next();
    1774                 if (r instanceof Future<?> && ((Future<?>)r).isCancelled())
    1775                     it.remove();
    1776             }
    1777         } catch (ConcurrentModificationException fallThrough) {
    1778             // Take slow path if we encounter interference during traversal.
    1779             // Make copy for traversal and call remove for cancelled entries.
    1780             // The slow path is more likely to be O(N*N).
    1781             for (Object r : q.toArray())
    1782                 if (r instanceof Future<?> && ((Future<?>)r).isCancelled())
    1783                     q.remove(r);
    1784         }
    1785 
    1786         tryTerminate(); // In case SHUTDOWN and now empty
    1787     }
    1788 
    1789     /* Statistics */
    1790 
    1791     /**
    1792      * Returns the current number of threads in the pool.
    1793      *
    1794      * @return the number of threads
    1795      */
    1796     public int getPoolSize() {
    1797         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1798         mainLock.lock();
    1799         try {
    1800             // Remove rare and surprising possibility of
    1801             // isTerminated() && getPoolSize() > 0
    1802             return runStateAtLeast(ctl.get(), TIDYING) ? 0
    1803                 : workers.size();
    1804         } finally {
    1805             mainLock.unlock();
    1806         }
    1807     }
    1808 
    1809     /**
    1810      * Returns the approximate number of threads that are actively
    1811      * executing tasks.
    1812      *
    1813      * @return the number of threads
    1814      */
    1815     public int getActiveCount() {
    1816         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1817         mainLock.lock();
    1818         try {
    1819             int n = 0;
    1820             for (Worker w : workers)
    1821                 if (w.isLocked())
    1822                     ++n;
    1823             return n;
    1824         } finally {
    1825             mainLock.unlock();
    1826         }
    1827     }
    1828 
    1829     /**
    1830      * Returns the largest number of threads that have ever
    1831      * simultaneously been in the pool.
    1832      *
    1833      * @return the number of threads
    1834      */
    1835     public int getLargestPoolSize() {
    1836         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1837         mainLock.lock();
    1838         try {
    1839             return largestPoolSize;
    1840         } finally {
    1841             mainLock.unlock();
    1842         }
    1843     }
    1844 
    1845     /**
    1846      * Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have ever been
    1847      * scheduled for execution. Because the states of tasks and
    1848      * threads may change dynamically during computation, the returned
    1849      * value is only an approximation.
    1850      *
    1851      * @return the number of tasks
    1852      */
    1853     public long getTaskCount() {
    1854         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1855         mainLock.lock();
    1856         try {
    1857             long n = completedTaskCount;
    1858             for (Worker w : workers) {
    1859                 n += w.completedTasks;
    1860                 if (w.isLocked())
    1861                     ++n;
    1862             }
    1863             return n + workQueue.size();
    1864         } finally {
    1865             mainLock.unlock();
    1866         }
    1867     }
    1868 
    1869     /**
    1870      * Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have
    1871      * completed execution. Because the states of tasks and threads
    1872      * may change dynamically during computation, the returned value
    1873      * is only an approximation, but one that does not ever decrease
    1874      * across successive calls.
    1875      *
    1876      * @return the number of tasks
    1877      */
    1878     public long getCompletedTaskCount() {
    1879         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1880         mainLock.lock();
    1881         try {
    1882             long n = completedTaskCount;
    1883             for (Worker w : workers)
    1884                 n += w.completedTasks;
    1885             return n;
    1886         } finally {
    1887             mainLock.unlock();
    1888         }
    1889     }
    1890 
    1891     /**
    1892      * Returns a string identifying this pool, as well as its state,
    1893      * including indications of run state and estimated worker and
    1894      * task counts.
    1895      *
    1896      * @return a string identifying this pool, as well as its state
    1897      */
    1898     public String toString() {
    1899         long ncompleted;
    1900         int nworkers, nactive;
    1901         final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
    1902         mainLock.lock();
    1903         try {
    1904             ncompleted = completedTaskCount;
    1905             nactive = 0;
    1906             nworkers = workers.size();
    1907             for (Worker w : workers) {
    1908                 ncompleted += w.completedTasks;
    1909                 if (w.isLocked())
    1910                     ++nactive;
    1911             }
    1912         } finally {
    1913             mainLock.unlock();
    1914         }
    1915         int c = ctl.get();
    1916         String rs = (runStateLessThan(c, SHUTDOWN) ? "Running" :
    1917                      (runStateAtLeast(c, TERMINATED) ? "Terminated" :
    1918                       "Shutting down"));
    1919         return super.toString() +
    1920             "[" + rs +
    1921             ", pool size = " + nworkers +
    1922             ", active threads = " + nactive +
    1923             ", queued tasks = " + workQueue.size() +
    1924             ", completed tasks = " + ncompleted +
    1925             "]";
    1926     }
    1927 
    1928     /* Extension hooks */
    1929 
    1930     /**
    1931      * Method invoked prior to executing the given Runnable in the
    1932      * given thread.  This method is invoked by thread {@code t} that
    1933      * will execute task {@code r}, and may be used to re-initialize
    1934      * ThreadLocals, or to perform logging.
    1935      *
    1936      * <p>This implementation does nothing, but may be customized in
    1937      * subclasses. Note: To properly nest multiple overridings, subclasses
    1938      * should generally invoke {@code super.beforeExecute} at the end of
    1939      * this method.
    1940      *
    1941      * @param t the thread that will run task {@code r}
    1942      * @param r the task that will be executed
    1943      */
    1944     protected void beforeExecute(Thread t, Runnable r) { }
    1945 
    1946     /**
    1947      * Method invoked upon completion of execution of the given Runnable.
    1948      * This method is invoked by the thread that executed the task. If
    1949      * non-null, the Throwable is the uncaught {@code RuntimeException}
    1950      * or {@code Error} that caused execution to terminate abruptly.
    1951      *
    1952      * <p>This implementation does nothing, but may be customized in
    1953      * subclasses. Note: To properly nest multiple overridings, subclasses
    1954      * should generally invoke {@code super.afterExecute} at the
    1955      * beginning of this method.
    1956      *
    1957      * <p><b>Note:</b> When actions are enclosed in tasks (such as
    1958      * {@link FutureTask}) either explicitly or via methods such as
    1959      * {@code submit}, these task objects catch and maintain
    1960      * computational exceptions, and so they do not cause abrupt
    1961      * termination, and the internal exceptions are <em>not</em>
    1962      * passed to this method. If you would like to trap both kinds of
    1963      * failures in this method, you can further probe for such cases,
    1964      * as in this sample subclass that prints either the direct cause
    1965      * or the underlying exception if a task has been aborted:
    1966      *
    1967      *  <pre> {@code
    1968      * class ExtendedExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor {
    1969      *   // ...
    1970      *   protected void afterExecute(Runnable r, Throwable t) {
    1971      *     super.afterExecute(r, t);
    1972      *     if (t == null && r instanceof Future<?>) {
    1973      *       try {
    1974      *         Object result = ((Future<?>) r).get();
    1975      *       } catch (CancellationException ce) {
    1976      *           t = ce;
    1977      *       } catch (ExecutionException ee) {
    1978      *           t = ee.getCause();
    1979      *       } catch (InterruptedException ie) {
    1980      *           Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // ignore/reset
    1981      *       }
    1982      *     }
    1983      *     if (t != null)
    1984      *       System.out.println(t);
    1985      *   }
    1986      * }}</pre>
    1987      *
    1988      * @param r the runnable that has completed
    1989      * @param t the exception that caused termination, or null if
    1990      * execution completed normally
    1991      */
    1992     protected void afterExecute(Runnable r, Throwable t) { }
    1993 
    1994     /**
    1995      * Method invoked when the Executor has terminated.  Default
    1996      * implementation does nothing. Note: To properly nest multiple
    1997      * overridings, subclasses should generally invoke
    1998      * {@code super.terminated} within this method.
    1999      */
    2000     protected void terminated() { }
    2001 
    2002     /* Predefined RejectedExecutionHandlers */
    2003 
    2004     /**
    2005      * A handler for rejected tasks that runs the rejected task
    2006      * directly in the calling thread of the {@code execute} method,
    2007      * unless the executor has been shut down, in which case the task
    2008      * is discarded.
    2009      */
    2010     public static class CallerRunsPolicy implements RejectedExecutionHandler {
    2011         /**
    2012          * Creates a {@code CallerRunsPolicy}.
    2013          */
    2014         public CallerRunsPolicy() { }
    2015 
    2016         /**
    2017          * Executes task r in the caller's thread, unless the executor
    2018          * has been shut down, in which case the task is discarded.
    2019          *
    2020          * @param r the runnable task requested to be executed
    2021          * @param e the executor attempting to execute this task
    2022          */
    2023         public void rejectedExecution(Runnable r, ThreadPoolExecutor e) {
    2024             if (!e.isShutdown()) {
    2025                 r.run();
    2026             }
    2027         }
    2028     }
    2029 
    2030     /**
    2031      * A handler for rejected tasks that throws a
    2032      * {@code RejectedExecutionException}.
    2033      */
    2034     public static class AbortPolicy implements RejectedExecutionHandler {
    2035         /**
    2036          * Creates an {@code AbortPolicy}.
    2037          */
    2038         public AbortPolicy() { }
    2039 
    2040         /**
    2041          * Always throws RejectedExecutionException.
    2042          *
    2043          * @param r the runnable task requested to be executed
    2044          * @param e the executor attempting to execute this task
    2045          * @throws RejectedExecutionException always.
    2046          */
    2047         public void rejectedExecution(Runnable r, ThreadPoolExecutor e) {
    2048             throw new RejectedExecutionException("Task " + r.toString() +
    2049                                                  " rejected from " +
    2050                                                  e.toString());
    2051         }
    2052     }
    2053 
    2054     /**
    2055      * A handler for rejected tasks that silently discards the
    2056      * rejected task.
    2057      */
    2058     public static class DiscardPolicy implements RejectedExecutionHandler {
    2059         /**
    2060          * Creates a {@code DiscardPolicy}.
    2061          */
    2062         public DiscardPolicy() { }
    2063 
    2064         /**
    2065          * Does nothing, which has the effect of discarding task r.
    2066          *
    2067          * @param r the runnable task requested to be executed
    2068          * @param e the executor attempting to execute this task
    2069          */
    2070         public void rejectedExecution(Runnable r, ThreadPoolExecutor e) {
    2071         }
    2072     }
    2073 
    2074     /**
    2075      * A handler for rejected tasks that discards the oldest unhandled
    2076      * request and then retries {@code execute}, unless the executor
    2077      * is shut down, in which case the task is discarded.
    2078      */
    2079     public static class DiscardOldestPolicy implements RejectedExecutionHandler {
    2080         /**
    2081          * Creates a {@code DiscardOldestPolicy} for the given executor.
    2082          */
    2083         public DiscardOldestPolicy() { }
    2084 
    2085         /**
    2086          * Obtains and ignores the next task that the executor
    2087          * would otherwise execute, if one is immediately available,
    2088          * and then retries execution of task r, unless the executor
    2089          * is shut down, in which case task r is instead discarded.
    2090          *
    2091          * @param r the runnable task requested to be executed
    2092          * @param e the executor attempting to execute this task
    2093          */
    2094         public void rejectedExecution(Runnable r, ThreadPoolExecutor e) {
    2095             if (!e.isShutdown()) {
    2096                 e.getQueue().poll();
    2097                 e.execute(r);
    2098             }
    2099         }
    2100     }
    2101 }
    View Code

    线程池源码分析

    (一) 创建“线程池”

    下面以newFixedThreadPool()介绍线程池的创建过程。

    1. newFixedThreadPool()

    newFixedThreadPool()在Executors.java中定义,源码如下:

    public static ExecutorService newFixedThreadPool(int nThreads) {
        return new ThreadPoolExecutor(nThreads, nThreads,
                                      0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
                                      new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>());
    }

    说明:newFixedThreadPool(int nThreads)的作用是创建一个线程池,线程池的容量是nThreads。
             newFixedThreadPool()在调用ThreadPoolExecutor()时,会传递一个LinkedBlockingQueue()对象,而LinkedBlockingQueue是单向链表实现的阻塞队列。在线程池中,就是通过该阻塞队列来实现"当线程池中任务数量超过允许的任务数量时,部分任务会阻塞等待"。
    关于LinkedBlockingQueue的实现细节,读者可以参考"Java多线程系列--“JUC集合”08之 LinkedBlockingQueue"。

    2. ThreadPoolExecutor()

    ThreadPoolExecutor()在ThreadPoolExecutor.java中定义,源码如下:

    public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
                              int maximumPoolSize,
                              long keepAliveTime,
                              TimeUnit unit,
                              BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
        this(corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue,
             Executors.defaultThreadFactory(), defaultHandler);
    }

    说明:该函数实际上是调用ThreadPoolExecutor的另外一个构造函数。该函数的源码如下:

    public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
                              int maximumPoolSize,
                              long keepAliveTime,
                              TimeUnit unit,
                              BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
                              ThreadFactory threadFactory,
                              RejectedExecutionHandler handler) {
        if (corePoolSize < 0 ||
            maximumPoolSize <= 0 ||
            maximumPoolSize < corePoolSize ||
            keepAliveTime < 0)
            throw new IllegalArgumentException();
        if (workQueue == null || threadFactory == null || handler == null)
            throw new NullPointerException();
        // 核心池大小
        this.corePoolSize = corePoolSize;
        // 最大池大小
        this.maximumPoolSize = maximumPoolSize;
        // 线程池的等待队列
        this.workQueue = workQueue;
        this.keepAliveTime = unit.toNanos(keepAliveTime);
        // 线程工厂对象
        this.threadFactory = threadFactory;
        // 拒绝策略的句柄
        this.handler = handler;
    }

    说明:在ThreadPoolExecutor()的构造函数中,进行的是初始化工作。
    corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, unit, keepAliveTime和workQueue这些变量的值是已知的,它们都是通过newFixedThreadPool()传递而来。下面看看threadFactory和handler对象。

    2.1 ThreadFactory

    线程池中的ThreadFactory是一个线程工厂,线程池创建线程都是通过线程工厂对象(threadFactory)来完成的。
    上面所说的threadFactory对象,是通过 Executors.defaultThreadFactory()返回的。Executors.java中的defaultThreadFactory()源码如下:

    public static ThreadFactory defaultThreadFactory() {
        return new DefaultThreadFactory();
    }

    defaultThreadFactory()返回DefaultThreadFactory对象。Executors.java中的DefaultThreadFactory()源码如下:

    static class DefaultThreadFactory implements ThreadFactory {
        private static final AtomicInteger poolNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
        private final ThreadGroup group;
        private final AtomicInteger threadNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
        private final String namePrefix;
    
        DefaultThreadFactory() {
            SecurityManager s = System.getSecurityManager();
            group = (s != null) ? s.getThreadGroup() :
                                  Thread.currentThread().getThreadGroup();
            namePrefix = "pool-" +
                          poolNumber.getAndIncrement() +
                         "-thread-";
        }
    
        // 提供创建线程的API。
        public Thread newThread(Runnable r) {
            // 线程对应的任务是Runnable对象r
            Thread t = new Thread(group, r,
                                  namePrefix + threadNumber.getAndIncrement(),
                                  0);
            // 设为“非守护线程”
            if (t.isDaemon())
                t.setDaemon(false);
            // 将优先级设为“Thread.NORM_PRIORITY”
            if (t.getPriority() != Thread.NORM_PRIORITY)
                t.setPriority(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY);
            return t;
        }
    }

    说明:ThreadFactory的作用就是提供创建线程的功能的线程工厂。
             它是通过newThread()提供创建线程功能的,下面简单说说newThread()。newThread()创建的线程对应的任务是Runnable对象,它创建的线程都是“非守护线程”而且“线程优先级都是Thread.NORM_PRIORITY”。

    2.2 RejectedExecutionHandler

    handler是ThreadPoolExecutor中拒绝策略的处理句柄。所谓拒绝策略,是指将任务添加到线程池中时,线程池拒绝该任务所采取的相应策略。
    线程池默认会采用的是defaultHandler策略,即AbortPolicy策略。在AbortPolicy策略中,线程池拒绝任务时会抛出异常!
    defaultHandler的定义如下:

    private static final RejectedExecutionHandler defaultHandler = new AbortPolicy();

    AbortPolicy的源码如下:

    public static class AbortPolicy implements RejectedExecutionHandler {
        public AbortPolicy() { }
    
        // 抛出异常
        public void rejectedExecution(Runnable r, ThreadPoolExecutor e) {
            throw new RejectedExecutionException("Task " + r.toString() +
                                                 " rejected from " +
                                                 e.toString());
        }
    }

     

    (二) 添加任务到“线程池”

    1. execute()

    execute()定义在ThreadPoolExecutor.java中,源码如下:

    public void execute(Runnable command) {
        // 如果任务为null,则抛出异常。
        if (command == null)
            throw new NullPointerException();
        // 获取ctl对应的int值。该int值保存了"线程池中任务的数量"和"线程池状态"信息
        int c = ctl.get();
        // 当线程池中的任务数量 < "核心池大小"时,即线程池中少于corePoolSize个任务。
        // 则通过addWorker(command, true)新建一个线程,并将任务(command)添加到该线程中;然后,启动该线程从而执行任务。
        if (workerCountOf(c) < corePoolSize) {
            if (addWorker(command, true))
                return;
            c = ctl.get();
        }
        // 当线程池中的任务数量 >= "核心池大小"时,
        // 而且,"线程池处于允许状态"时,则尝试将任务添加到阻塞队列中。
        if (isRunning(c) && workQueue.offer(command)) {
            // 再次确认“线程池状态”,若线程池异常终止了,则删除任务;然后通过reject()执行相应的拒绝策略的内容。
            int recheck = ctl.get();
            if (! isRunning(recheck) && remove(command))
                reject(command);
            // 否则,如果"线程池中任务数量"为0,则通过addWorker(null, false)尝试新建一个线程,新建线程对应的任务为null。
            else if (workerCountOf(recheck) == 0)
                addWorker(null, false);
        }
        // 通过addWorker(command, false)新建一个线程,并将任务(command)添加到该线程中;然后,启动该线程从而执行任务。
        // 如果addWorker(command, false)执行失败,则通过reject()执行相应的拒绝策略的内容。
        else if (!addWorker(command, false))
            reject(command);
    }

    说明:execute()的作用是将任务添加到线程池中执行。它会分为3种情况进行处理:
            情况1 -- 如果"线程池中任务数量" < "核心池大小"时,即线程池中少于corePoolSize个任务;此时就新建一个线程,并将该任务添加到线程中进行执行。
            情况2 -- 如果"线程池中任务数量" >= "核心池大小",并且"线程池是允许状态";此时,则将任务添加到阻塞队列中阻塞等待。在该情况下,会再次确认"线程池的状态",如果"第2次读到的线程池状态"和"第1次读到的线程池状态"不同,则从阻塞队列中删除该任务。
            情况3 -- 非以上两种情况。在这种情况下,尝试新建一个线程,并将该任务添加到线程中进行执行。如果执行失败,则通过reject()拒绝该任务。

    2. addWorker()

    addWorker()的源码如下:

    private boolean addWorker(Runnable firstTask, boolean core) {
        retry:
        // 更新"线程池状态和计数"标记,即更新ctl。
        for (;;) {
            // 获取ctl对应的int值。该int值保存了"线程池中任务的数量"和"线程池状态"信息
            int c = ctl.get();
            // 获取线程池状态。
            int rs = runStateOf(c);
    
            // 有效性检查
            if (rs >= SHUTDOWN &&
                ! (rs == SHUTDOWN &&
                   firstTask == null &&
                   ! workQueue.isEmpty()))
                return false;
    
            for (;;) {
                // 获取线程池中任务的数量。
                int wc = workerCountOf(c);
                // 如果"线程池中任务的数量"超过限制,则返回false。
                if (wc >= CAPACITY ||
                    wc >= (core ? corePoolSize : maximumPoolSize))
                    return false;
                // 通过CAS函数将c的值+1。操作失败的话,则退出循环。
                if (compareAndIncrementWorkerCount(c))
                    break retry;
                c = ctl.get();  // Re-read ctl
                // 检查"线程池状态",如果与之前的状态不同,则从retry重新开始。
                if (runStateOf(c) != rs)
                    continue retry;
                // else CAS failed due to workerCount change; retry inner loop
            }
        }
    
        boolean workerStarted = false;
        boolean workerAdded = false;
        Worker w = null;
        // 添加任务到线程池,并启动任务所在的线程。
        try {
            final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
            // 新建Worker,并且指定firstTask为Worker的第一个任务。
            w = new Worker(firstTask);
            // 获取Worker对应的线程。
            final Thread t = w.thread;
            if (t != null) {
                // 获取锁
                mainLock.lock();
                try {
                    int c = ctl.get();
                    int rs = runStateOf(c);
    
                    // 再次确认"线程池状态"
                    if (rs < SHUTDOWN ||
                        (rs == SHUTDOWN && firstTask == null)) {
                        if (t.isAlive()) // precheck that t is startable
                            throw new IllegalThreadStateException();
                        // 将Worker对象(w)添加到"线程池的Worker集合(workers)"中
                        workers.add(w);
                        // 更新largestPoolSize
                        int s = workers.size();
                        if (s > largestPoolSize)
                            largestPoolSize = s;
                        workerAdded = true;
                    }
                } finally {
                    // 释放锁
                    mainLock.unlock();
                }
                // 如果"成功将任务添加到线程池"中,则启动任务所在的线程。 
                if (workerAdded) {
                    t.start();
                    workerStarted = true;
                }
            }
        } finally {
            if (! workerStarted)
                addWorkerFailed(w);
        }
        // 返回任务是否启动。
        return workerStarted;
    }

    说明
        addWorker(Runnable firstTask, boolean core) 的作用是将任务(firstTask)添加到线程池中,并启动该任务。
        core为true的话,则以corePoolSize为界限,若"线程池中已有任务数量>=corePoolSize",则返回false;core为false的话,则以maximumPoolSize为界限,若"线程池中已有任务数量>=maximumPoolSize",则返回false。
        addWorker()会先通过for循环不断尝试更新ctl状态,ctl记录了"线程池中任务数量和线程池状态"。
        更新成功之后,再通过try模块来将任务添加到线程池中,并启动任务所在的线程。

        从addWorker()中,我们能清晰的发现:线程池在添加任务时,会创建任务对应的Worker对象;而一个Workder对象包含一个Thread对象。(01) 通过将Worker对象添加到"线程的workers集合"中,从而实现将任务添加到线程池中。 (02) 通过启动Worker对应的Thread线程,则执行该任务。

    3. submit()

    补充说明一点,submit()实际上也是通过调用execute()实现的,源码如下:

    public Future<?> submit(Runnable task) {
        if (task == null) throw new NullPointerException();
        RunnableFuture<Void> ftask = newTaskFor(task, null);
        execute(ftask);
        return ftask;
    }

    (三) 关闭“线程池”

    shutdown()的源码如下:

    public void shutdown() {
        final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
        // 获取锁
        mainLock.lock();
        try {
            // 检查终止线程池的“线程”是否有权限。
            checkShutdownAccess();
            // 设置线程池的状态为关闭状态。
            advanceRunState(SHUTDOWN);
            // 中断线程池中空闲的线程。
            interruptIdleWorkers();
            // 钩子函数,在ThreadPoolExecutor中没有任何动作。
            onShutdown(); // hook for ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
        } finally {
            // 释放锁
            mainLock.unlock();
        }
        // 尝试终止线程池
        tryTerminate();
    }

    说明:shutdown()的作用是关闭线程池。


    更多内容

    1. Java多线程系列目录(共xx篇)

    2. Java多线程系列--“JUC线程池”01之 线程池架构

    3. Java多线程系列--“JUC线程池”02之 线程池原理(一)

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/skywang12345/p/3509954.html
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