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jdk.util.concurrent.locks.Condition

Condition factors out the Object monitor methods (wait, notify and notifyAll) into distinct objects to give the effect of having multiple wait-sets per object, by combining them with the use of arbitrary Lock implementations. Where a Lock replaces the use of synchronized methods and statements, a Condition replaces the use of the Object monitor methods.

Conditions (also known as condition queues or condition variables) provide a means for one thread to suspend execution (to "wait") until notified by another thread that some state condition may now be true. Because access to this shared state information occurs in different threads, it must be protected, so a lock of some form is associated with the condition. The key property that waiting for a condition provides is that it atomically releases the associated lock and suspends the current thread, just like Object.wait.

A Condition instance is intrinsically bound to a lock. To obtain a Condition instance for a particular Lock instance use its newCondition() method.

As an example, suppose we have a bounded buffer which supports put and take methods. If a take is attempted on an empty buffer, then the thread will block until an item becomes available; if a put is attempted on a full buffer, then the thread will block until a space becomes available. We would like to keep waiting put threads and take threads in separate wait-sets so that we can use the optimization of only notifying a single thread at a time when items or spaces become available in the buffer. This can be achieved using two Condition instances.

class BoundedBuffer { final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock(); final Condition notFull = lock.newCondition(); final Condition notEmpty = lock.newCondition();

final Object[] items = new Object[100]; int putptr, takeptr, count;

public void put(Object x) throws InterruptedException { lock.lock(); try { while (count == items.length) notFull.await(); items[putptr] = x; if (++putptr == items.length) putptr = 0; +count; notEmpty.signal(); } finally { lock.unlock(); } }

public Object take() throws InterruptedException { lock.lock(); try { while (count == 0) notEmpty.await(); Object x = items[takeptr]; if (++takeptr == items.length) takeptr = 0; --count; notFull.signal(); return x; } finally { lock.unlock(); } } }

(The ArrayBlockingQueue class provides this functionality, so there is no reason to implement this sample usage class.)

A Condition implementation can provide behavior and semantics that is different from that of the Object monitor methods, such as guaranteed ordering for notifications, or not requiring a lock to be held when performing notifications. If an implementation provides such specialized semantics then the implementation must document those semantics.

Note that Condition instances are just normal objects and can themselves be used as the target in a synchronized statement, and can have their own monitor wait and notification methods invoked. Acquiring the monitor lock of a Condition instance, or using its monitor methods, has no specified relationship with acquiring the Lock associated with that Condition or the use of its waiting and signalling methods. It is recommended that to avoid confusion you never use Condition instances in this way, except perhaps within their own implementation.

Except where noted, passing a null value for any parameter will result in a NullPointerException being thrown.

Implementation Considerations

When waiting upon a Condition, a "spurious wakeup" is permitted to occur, in general, as a concession to the underlying platform semantics. This has little practical impact on most application programs as a Condition should always be waited upon in a loop, testing the state predicate that is being waited for. An implementation is free to remove the possibility of spurious wakeups but it is recommended that applications programmers always assume that they can occur and so always wait in a loop.

The three forms of condition waiting (interruptible, non-interruptible, and timed) may differ in their ease of implementation on some platforms and in their performance characteristics. In particular, it may be difficult to provide these features and maintain specific semantics such as ordering guarantees. Further, the ability to interrupt the actual suspension of the thread may not always be feasible to implement on all platforms.

Consequently, an implementation is not required to define exactly the same guarantees or semantics for all three forms of waiting, nor is it required to support interruption of the actual suspension of the thread.

An implementation is required to clearly document the semantics and guarantees provided by each of the waiting methods, and when an implementation does support interruption of thread suspension then it must obey the interruption semantics as defined in this interface.

As interruption generally implies cancellation, and checks for interruption are often infrequent, an implementation can favor responding to an interrupt over normal method return. This is true even if it can be shown that the interrupt occurred after another action that may have unblocked the thread. An implementation should document this behavior.

Condition factors out the Object monitor
methods (wait, notify
and notifyAll) into distinct objects to
give the effect of having multiple wait-sets per object, by
combining them with the use of arbitrary Lock implementations.
Where a Lock replaces the use of synchronized methods
and statements, a Condition replaces the use of the Object
monitor methods.

Conditions (also known as condition queues or
condition variables) provide a means for one thread to
suspend execution (to "wait") until notified by another
thread that some state condition may now be true.  Because access
to this shared state information occurs in different threads, it
must be protected, so a lock of some form is associated with the
condition. The key property that waiting for a condition provides
is that it atomically releases the associated lock and
suspends the current thread, just like Object.wait.

A Condition instance is intrinsically bound to a lock.
To obtain a Condition instance for a particular Lock
instance use its newCondition() method.

As an example, suppose we have a bounded buffer which supports
put and take methods.  If a
take is attempted on an empty buffer, then the thread will block
until an item becomes available; if a put is attempted on a
full buffer, then the thread will block until a space becomes available.
We would like to keep waiting put threads and take
threads in separate wait-sets so that we can use the optimization of
only notifying a single thread at a time when items or spaces become
available in the buffer. This can be achieved using two
Condition instances.


class BoundedBuffer {
  final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock();
  final Condition notFull  = lock.newCondition();
  final Condition notEmpty = lock.newCondition();

  final Object[] items = new Object[100];
  int putptr, takeptr, count;

  public void put(Object x) throws InterruptedException {
    lock.lock();
    try {
      while (count == items.length)
        notFull.await();
      items[putptr] = x;
      if (++putptr == items.length) putptr = 0;
      +count;
      notEmpty.signal();
    } finally {
      lock.unlock();
    }
  }

  public Object take() throws InterruptedException {
    lock.lock();
    try {
      while (count == 0)
        notEmpty.await();
      Object x = items[takeptr];
      if (++takeptr == items.length) takeptr = 0;
      --count;
      notFull.signal();
      return x;
    } finally {
      lock.unlock();
    }
  }
}

(The ArrayBlockingQueue class provides
this functionality, so there is no reason to implement this
sample usage class.)

A Condition implementation can provide behavior and semantics
that is
different from that of the Object monitor methods, such as
guaranteed ordering for notifications, or not requiring a lock to be held
when performing notifications.
If an implementation provides such specialized semantics then the
implementation must document those semantics.

Note that Condition instances are just normal objects and can
themselves be used as the target in a synchronized statement,
and can have their own monitor wait and
notification methods invoked.
Acquiring the monitor lock of a Condition instance, or using its
monitor methods, has no specified relationship with acquiring the
Lock associated with that Condition or the use of its
waiting and signalling methods.
It is recommended that to avoid confusion you never use Condition
instances in this way, except perhaps within their own implementation.

Except where noted, passing a null value for any parameter
will result in a NullPointerException being thrown.

Implementation Considerations

When waiting upon a Condition, a "spurious
wakeup" is permitted to occur, in
general, as a concession to the underlying platform semantics.
This has little practical impact on most application programs as a
Condition should always be waited upon in a loop, testing
the state predicate that is being waited for.  An implementation is
free to remove the possibility of spurious wakeups but it is
recommended that applications programmers always assume that they can
occur and so always wait in a loop.

The three forms of condition waiting
(interruptible, non-interruptible, and timed) may differ in their ease of
implementation on some platforms and in their performance characteristics.
In particular, it may be difficult to provide these features and maintain
specific semantics such as ordering guarantees.
Further, the ability to interrupt the actual suspension of the thread may
not always be feasible to implement on all platforms.

Consequently, an implementation is not required to define exactly the
same guarantees or semantics for all three forms of waiting, nor is it
required to support interruption of the actual suspension of the thread.

An implementation is required to
clearly document the semantics and guarantees provided by each of the
waiting methods, and when an implementation does support interruption of
thread suspension then it must obey the interruption semantics as defined
in this interface.

As interruption generally implies cancellation, and checks for
interruption are often infrequent, an implementation can favor responding
to an interrupt over normal method return. This is true even if it can be
shown that the interrupt occurred after another action that may have
unblocked the thread. An implementation should document this behavior.
raw docstring

awaitclj

(await this)
(await this time unit)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted, or the specified waiting time elapses. This method is behaviorally equivalent to:

awaitNanos(unit.toNanos(time)) > 0

time - the maximum time to wait - long unit - the time unit of the time argument - java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit

returns: false if the waiting time detectably elapsed before return from the method, else true - boolean

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted,
 or the specified waiting time elapses. This method is behaviorally
 equivalent to:


  awaitNanos(unit.toNanos(time)) > 0

time - the maximum time to wait - `long`
unit - the time unit of the time argument - `java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit`

returns: false if the waiting time detectably elapsed
         before return from the method, else true - `boolean`

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)
raw docstring

await-nanosclj

(await-nanos this nanos-timeout)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted, or the specified waiting time elapses.

The lock associated with this condition is atomically released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling purposes and lies dormant until one of five things happens:

Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the thread to be awakened; or Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this Condition; or Some other thread interrupts the current thread, and interruption of thread suspension is supported; or The specified waiting time elapses; or A "spurious wakeup" occurs.

In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.

If the current thread:

has its interrupted status set on entry to this method; or is interrupted while waiting and interruption of thread suspension is supported,

then InterruptedException is thrown and the current thread's interrupted status is cleared. It is not specified, in the first case, whether or not the test for interruption occurs before the lock is released.

The method returns an estimate of the number of nanoseconds remaining to wait given the supplied nanosTimeout value upon return, or a value less than or equal to zero if it timed out. This value can be used to determine whether and how long to re-wait in cases where the wait returns but an awaited condition still does not hold. Typical uses of this method take the following form:

boolean aMethod(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) { long nanos = unit.toNanos(timeout); lock.lock(); try { while (!conditionBeingWaitedFor()) { if (nanos <= 0L) return false; nanos = theCondition.awaitNanos(nanos); } // ... } finally { lock.unlock(); } }

Design note: This method requires a nanosecond argument so as to avoid truncation errors in reporting remaining times. Such precision loss would make it difficult for programmers to ensure that total waiting times are not systematically shorter than specified when re-waits occur.

Implementation Considerations

The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. It is up to the implementation to determine if this is the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the implementation must document that fact.

An implementation can favor responding to an interrupt over normal method return in response to a signal, or over indicating the elapse of the specified waiting time. In either case the implementation must ensure that the signal is redirected to another waiting thread, if there is one.

nanos-timeout - the maximum time to wait, in nanoseconds - long

returns: an estimate of the nanosTimeout value minus the time spent waiting upon return from this method. A positive value may be used as the argument to a subsequent call to this method to finish waiting out the desired time. A value less than or equal to zero indicates that no time remains. - long

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted,
 or the specified waiting time elapses.

 The lock associated with this condition is atomically
 released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling
 purposes and lies dormant until one of five things happens:

 Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this
 Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the
 thread to be awakened; or
 Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this
 Condition; or
 Some other thread interrupts the
 current thread, and interruption of thread suspension is supported; or
 The specified waiting time elapses; or
 A "spurious wakeup" occurs.


 In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must
 re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the
 thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.

 If the current thread:

 has its interrupted status set on entry to this method; or
 is interrupted while waiting
 and interruption of thread suspension is supported,

 then InterruptedException is thrown and the current thread's
 interrupted status is cleared. It is not specified, in the first
 case, whether or not the test for interruption occurs before the lock
 is released.

 The method returns an estimate of the number of nanoseconds
 remaining to wait given the supplied nanosTimeout
 value upon return, or a value less than or equal to zero if it
 timed out. This value can be used to determine whether and how
 long to re-wait in cases where the wait returns but an awaited
 condition still does not hold. Typical uses of this method take
 the following form:



 boolean aMethod(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) {
   long nanos = unit.toNanos(timeout);
   lock.lock();
   try {
     while (!conditionBeingWaitedFor()) {
       if (nanos <= 0L)
         return false;
       nanos = theCondition.awaitNanos(nanos);
     }
     // ...
   } finally {
     lock.unlock();
   }
 }

 Design note: This method requires a nanosecond argument so
 as to avoid truncation errors in reporting remaining times.
 Such precision loss would make it difficult for programmers to
 ensure that total waiting times are not systematically shorter
 than specified when re-waits occur.

 Implementation Considerations

 The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this
 Condition when this method is called.
 It is up to the implementation to determine if this is
 the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be
 thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the
 implementation must document that fact.

 An implementation can favor responding to an interrupt over normal
 method return in response to a signal, or over indicating the elapse
 of the specified waiting time. In either case the implementation
 must ensure that the signal is redirected to another waiting thread, if
 there is one.

nanos-timeout - the maximum time to wait, in nanoseconds - `long`

returns: an estimate of the nanosTimeout value minus
         the time spent waiting upon return from this method.
         A positive value may be used as the argument to a
         subsequent call to this method to finish waiting out
         the desired time.  A value less than or equal to zero
         indicates that no time remains. - `long`

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)
raw docstring

await-uninterruptiblyclj

(await-uninterruptibly this)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled.

The lock associated with this condition is atomically released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling purposes and lies dormant until one of three things happens:

Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the thread to be awakened; or Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this Condition; or A "spurious wakeup" occurs.

In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.

If the current thread's interrupted status is set when it enters this method, or it is interrupted while waiting, it will continue to wait until signalled. When it finally returns from this method its interrupted status will still be set.

Implementation Considerations

The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. It is up to the implementation to determine if this is the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the implementation must document that fact.

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled.

The lock associated with this condition is atomically
released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling
purposes and lies dormant until one of three things happens:

Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this
Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the
thread to be awakened; or
Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this
Condition; or
A "spurious wakeup" occurs.


In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must
re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the
thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.

If the current thread's interrupted status is set when it enters
this method, or it is interrupted
while waiting, it will continue to wait until signalled. When it finally
returns from this method its interrupted status will still
be set.

Implementation Considerations

The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this
Condition when this method is called.
It is up to the implementation to determine if this is
the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be
thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the
implementation must document that fact.
raw docstring

await-untilclj

(await-until this deadline)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted, or the specified deadline elapses.

The lock associated with this condition is atomically released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling purposes and lies dormant until one of five things happens:

Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the thread to be awakened; or Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this Condition; or Some other thread interrupts the current thread, and interruption of thread suspension is supported; or The specified deadline elapses; or A "spurious wakeup" occurs.

In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.

If the current thread:

has its interrupted status set on entry to this method; or is interrupted while waiting and interruption of thread suspension is supported,

then InterruptedException is thrown and the current thread's interrupted status is cleared. It is not specified, in the first case, whether or not the test for interruption occurs before the lock is released.

The return value indicates whether the deadline has elapsed, which can be used as follows:

boolean aMethod(Date deadline) { boolean stillWaiting = true; lock.lock(); try { while (!conditionBeingWaitedFor()) { if (!stillWaiting) return false; stillWaiting = theCondition.awaitUntil(deadline); } // ... } finally { lock.unlock(); } }

Implementation Considerations

The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. It is up to the implementation to determine if this is the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the implementation must document that fact.

An implementation can favor responding to an interrupt over normal method return in response to a signal, or over indicating the passing of the specified deadline. In either case the implementation must ensure that the signal is redirected to another waiting thread, if there is one.

deadline - the absolute time to wait until - java.util.Date

returns: false if the deadline has elapsed upon return, else true - boolean

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)

Causes the current thread to wait until it is signalled or interrupted,
 or the specified deadline elapses.

 The lock associated with this condition is atomically
 released and the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling
 purposes and lies dormant until one of five things happens:

 Some other thread invokes the signal() method for this
 Condition and the current thread happens to be chosen as the
 thread to be awakened; or
 Some other thread invokes the signalAll() method for this
 Condition; or
 Some other thread interrupts the
 current thread, and interruption of thread suspension is supported; or
 The specified deadline elapses; or
 A "spurious wakeup" occurs.


 In all cases, before this method can return the current thread must
 re-acquire the lock associated with this condition. When the
 thread returns it is guaranteed to hold this lock.


 If the current thread:

 has its interrupted status set on entry to this method; or
 is interrupted while waiting
 and interruption of thread suspension is supported,

 then InterruptedException is thrown and the current thread's
 interrupted status is cleared. It is not specified, in the first
 case, whether or not the test for interruption occurs before the lock
 is released.


 The return value indicates whether the deadline has elapsed,
 which can be used as follows:


 boolean aMethod(Date deadline) {
   boolean stillWaiting = true;
   lock.lock();
   try {
     while (!conditionBeingWaitedFor()) {
       if (!stillWaiting)
         return false;
       stillWaiting = theCondition.awaitUntil(deadline);
     }
     // ...
   } finally {
     lock.unlock();
   }
 }

 Implementation Considerations

 The current thread is assumed to hold the lock associated with this
 Condition when this method is called.
 It is up to the implementation to determine if this is
 the case and if not, how to respond. Typically, an exception will be
 thrown (such as IllegalMonitorStateException) and the
 implementation must document that fact.

 An implementation can favor responding to an interrupt over normal
 method return in response to a signal, or over indicating the passing
 of the specified deadline. In either case the implementation
 must ensure that the signal is redirected to another waiting thread, if
 there is one.

deadline - the absolute time to wait until - `java.util.Date`

returns: false if the deadline has elapsed upon return, else
         true - `boolean`

throws: java.lang.InterruptedException - if the current thread is interrupted (and interruption of thread suspension is supported)
raw docstring

signalclj

(signal this)

Wakes up one waiting thread.

If any threads are waiting on this condition then one is selected for waking up. That thread must then re-acquire the lock before returning from await.

Implementation Considerations

An implementation may (and typically does) require that the current thread hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. Implementations must document this precondition and any actions taken if the lock is not held. Typically, an exception such as IllegalMonitorStateException will be thrown.

Wakes up one waiting thread.

If any threads are waiting on this condition then one
is selected for waking up. That thread must then re-acquire the
lock before returning from await.

Implementation Considerations

An implementation may (and typically does) require that the
current thread hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. Implementations must
document this precondition and any actions taken if the lock is
not held. Typically, an exception such as IllegalMonitorStateException will be thrown.
raw docstring

signal-allclj

(signal-all this)

Wakes up all waiting threads.

If any threads are waiting on this condition then they are all woken up. Each thread must re-acquire the lock before it can return from await.

Implementation Considerations

An implementation may (and typically does) require that the current thread hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. Implementations must document this precondition and any actions taken if the lock is not held. Typically, an exception such as IllegalMonitorStateException will be thrown.

Wakes up all waiting threads.

If any threads are waiting on this condition then they are
all woken up. Each thread must re-acquire the lock before it can
return from await.

Implementation Considerations

An implementation may (and typically does) require that the
current thread hold the lock associated with this Condition when this method is called. Implementations must
document this precondition and any actions taken if the lock is
not held. Typically, an exception such as IllegalMonitorStateException will be thrown.
raw docstring

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