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java.util.concurrent
Class ThreadPoolExecutor
java.lang.Object
java.util.concurrent.AbstractExecutorService
java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor
-
All Implemented Interfaces:
-
Executor
,
ExecutorService
-
Direct Known Subclasses:
-
ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
-
public class ThreadPoolExecutor
- extends AbstractExecutorService
An
ExecutorService
that executes each submitted task using one of possibly several pooled threads, normally configured using
Executors
factory methods.
Thread pools address two different problems: they usually provide improved performance when executing large numbers of asynchronous tasks, due to reduced per-task invocation overhead, and they provide a means of bounding and managing the resources, including threads, consumed when executing a collection of tasks. Each
ThreadPoolExecutor
also maintains some basic statistics, such as the number of completed tasks.
To be useful across a wide range of contexts, this class provides many adjustable parameters and extensibility hooks. However, programmers are urged to use the more convenient
Executors
factory methods
Executors.newCachedThreadPool()
(unbounded thread pool, with automatic thread reclamation),
Executors.newFixedThreadPool(int)
(fixed size thread pool) and
Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor()
(single background thread), that preconfigure settings for the most common usage scenarios. Otherwise, use the following guide when manually configuring and tuning this class:
-
Core and maximum pool sizes
-
A
ThreadPoolExecutor
will automatically adjust the pool size (see
getPoolSize()
) according to the bounds set by corePoolSize (see
getCorePoolSize()
) and maximumPoolSize (see
getMaximumPoolSize()
). When a new task is submitted in method
execute(java.lang.Runnable)
, and fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, a new thread is created to handle the request, even if other worker threads are idle. If there are more than corePoolSize but less than maximumPoolSize threads running, a new thread will be created only if the queue is full. By setting corePoolSize and maximumPoolSize the same, you create a fixed-size thread pool. By setting maximumPoolSize to an essentially unbounded value such as
Integer.MAX_VALUE
, you allow the pool to accommodate an arbitrary number of concurrent tasks. Most typically, core and maximum pool sizes are set only upon construction, but they may also be changed dynamically using
setCorePoolSize(int)
and
setMaximumPoolSize(int)
.
-
-
On-demand construction
-
By default, even core threads are initially created and started only when
needed by
new
tasks arrive,
tasks,
but this can be overridden dynamically using method
prestartCoreThread()
or
prestartAllCoreThreads()
.
You probably want to prestart threads if you construct the pool with a non-empty queue.
-
Creating new threads
-
New threads are created using a
ThreadFactory
. If not otherwise specified, a
Executors.defaultThreadFactory()
is used, that creates threads to all be in the same
ThreadGroup
and with the same
NORM_PRIORITY
priority and non-daemon status. By supplying a different ThreadFactory, you can alter the thread's name, thread group, priority, daemon status, etc. If a
ThreadFactory
fails to create a thread when asked by returning null from
newThread
, the executor will continue, but might not be able to execute any tasks.
-
Keep-alive times
-
If the pool currently has more than corePoolSize threads, excess threads will be terminated if they have been idle for more than the keepAliveTime (see
getKeepAliveTime(java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit)
). This provides a means of reducing resource consumption when the pool is not being actively used. If the pool becomes more active later, new threads will be constructed. This parameter can also be changed dynamically using method
setKeepAliveTime(long, java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit)
. Using a value of
Long.MAX_VALUE
TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS
effectively disables idle threads from ever terminating prior to shut down.
By default, the keep-alive policy applies only when there are more than corePoolSizeThreads. But method
allowCoreThreadTimeOut
can be used to apply this time-out policy to core threads as well, so long as the keepAliveTime value is non-zero.
-
Queuing
-
Any
BlockingQueue
may be used to transfer and hold submitted tasks. The use of this queue interacts with pool sizing:
-
If fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, the Executor always prefers adding a new thread rather than queuing.
-
If corePoolSize or more threads are running, the Executor always prefers queuing a request rather than adding a new thread.
-
If a request cannot be queued, a new thread is created unless this would exceed maximumPoolSize, in which case, the task will be rejected.
There are three general strategies for queuing:
-
Direct handoffs. A good default choice for a work queue is a
SynchronousQueue
that hands off tasks to threads without otherwise holding them. Here, an attempt to queue a task will fail if no threads are immediately available to run it, so a new thread will be constructed. This policy avoids lockups when handling sets of requests that might have internal dependencies. Direct handoffs generally require unbounded maximumPoolSizes to avoid rejection of new submitted tasks. This in turn admits the possibility of unbounded thread growth when commands continue to arrive on average faster than they can be processed.
-
Unbounded queues. Using an unbounded queue (for example a
LinkedBlockingQueue
-
Bounded queues. A bounded queue (for example, an
ArrayBlockingQueue
) helps prevent resource exhaustion when used with finite maximumPoolSizes, but can be more difficult to tune and control. Queue sizes and maximum pool sizes may be traded off for each other: Using large queues and small pools minimizes CPU usage, OS resources, and context-switching overhead, but can lead to artificially low throughput. If tasks frequently block (for example if they are I/O bound), a system may be able to schedule time for more threads than you otherwise allow. Use of small queues generally requires larger pool sizes, which keeps CPUs busier but may encounter unacceptable scheduling overhead, which also decreases throughput.
-
Rejected tasks
-
New tasks submitted in method
execute(java.lang.Runnable)
will be rejected when the Executor has been shut down, and also when the Executor uses finite bounds for both maximum threads and work queue capacity, and is saturated. In either case, the
execute
method invokes the
RejectedExecutionHandler.rejectedExecution(java.lang.Runnable, java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor)
method of its
RejectedExecutionHandler
. Four predefined handler policies are provided:
-
In the default
ThreadPoolExecutor.AbortPolicy
, the handler throws a runtime
RejectedExecutionException
upon rejection.
-
In
ThreadPoolExecutor.CallerRunsPolicy
, the thread that invokes
execute
itself runs the task. This provides a simple feedback control mechanism that will slow down the rate that new tasks are submitted.
-
In
ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardPolicy
, a task that cannot be executed is simply dropped.
-
In
ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardOldestPolicy
, if the executor is not shut down, the task at the head of the work queue is dropped, and then execution is retried (which can fail again, causing this to be repeated.)
It is possible to define and use other kinds of
RejectedExecutionHandler
classes. Doing so requires some care especially when policies are designed to work only under particular capacity or queuing policies.
-
Hook methods
-
This class provides
protected
overridable
beforeExecute(java.lang.Thread, java.lang.Runnable)
and
afterExecute(java.lang.Runnable, java.lang.Throwable)
methods that are called before and after execution of each task. These can be used to manipulate the execution environment; for example, reinitializing ThreadLocals, gathering statistics, or adding log entries. Additionally, method
terminated()
can be overridden to perform any special processing that needs to be done once the Executor has fully terminated.
If hook or callback methods throw exceptions, internal worker threads may in turn fail and abruptly terminate.
-
Queue maintenance
-
Method
getQueue()
allows access to the work queue for purposes of monitoring and debugging. Use of this method for any other purpose is strongly discouraged. Two supplied methods,
remove(java.lang.Runnable)
and
purge()
are available to assist in storage reclamation when large numbers of queued tasks become cancelled.
Extension example
. Most extensions of this class override one or more of the protected hook methods. For example, here is a subclass that adds a simple pause/resume feature:
class PausableThreadPoolExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor {
private boolean isPaused;
private ReentrantLock pauseLock = new ReentrantLock();
private Condition unpaused = pauseLock.newCondition();
public PausableThreadPoolExecutor(...) { super(...); }
protected void beforeExecute(Thread t, Runnable r) {
super.beforeExecute(t, r);
pauseLock.lock();
try {
while (isPaused) unpaused.await();
}
catch (InterruptedException 
catch(InterruptedException ie) {
t.interrupt();
} finally {
pauseLock.unlock();
}
}
public void pause() {
pauseLock.lock();
try {
isPaused = true;
} finally {
pauseLock.unlock();
}
}
public void resume() {
pauseLock.lock();
try {
isPaused = false;
unpaused.signalAll();
} finally {
pauseLock.unlock();
}
}
}
-
Since:
-
1.5
Nested Class Summary
|
static class |
ThreadPoolExecutor.AbortPolicy
A handler for rejected tasks that throws a
RejectedExecutionException
. |
static class |
ThreadPoolExecutor.CallerRunsPolicy
A handler for rejected tasks that runs the rejected task directly in the calling thread of the
execute
method, unless the executor has been shut down, in which case the task is discarded. |
static class |
ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardOldestPolicy
A handler for rejected tasks that discards the oldest unhandled request and then retries
execute
, unless the executor is shut down, in which case the task is discarded. |
static class |
ThreadPoolExecutor.DiscardPolicy
A handler for rejected tasks that silently discards the rejected task. |
Constructor Summary
|
ThreadPoolExecutor
(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit
unit,
BlockingQueue
<
Runnable
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial parameters and default thread factory and
rejected execution
handler. |
ThreadPoolExecutor
(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit
unit,
BlockingQueue
<
Runnable
> workQueue,
RejectedExecutionHandler
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial
parameters and default thread factory.
parameters.
|
ThreadPoolExecutor
(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit
unit,
BlockingQueue
<
Runnable
> workQueue,
ThreadFactory
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial
parameters and default rejected execution handler.
parameters.
|
ThreadPoolExecutor
(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit
unit,
BlockingQueue
<
Runnable
> workQueue,
ThreadFactory
threadFactory,
RejectedExecutionHandler
handler)
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial parameters. |
Method Summary
|
protected void |
afterExecute
(
Runnable
r,
Throwable
t)
Method invoked upon completion of execution of the given Runnable. |
void
|
allowCoreThreadTimeOut
(boolean value)
Sets the policy governing whether core threads may time out and terminate if no tasks arrive within the keep-alive time, being replaced if needed when new tasks arrive.
|
boolean
|
allowsCoreThreadTimeOut
()
Returns true if this pool allows core threads to time out and terminate if no tasks arrive within the keepAlive time, being replaced if needed when new tasks arrive.
|
boolean |
awaitTermination
(long timeout,
TimeUnit
unit)
Blocks until all tasks have completed execution after a shutdown request, or the timeout occurs, or the current thread is interrupted, whichever happens first. |
protected void |
beforeExecute
(
Thread
t,
Runnable
r)
Method invoked prior to executing the given Runnable in the given thread. |
void |
execute
(
Runnable
command)
Executes the given task sometime in the future. |
protected void |
finalize
()
Invokes
shutdown
when this executor is no longer referenced. |
int |
getActiveCount
()
Returns the approximate number of threads that are actively executing tasks. |
long |
getCompletedTaskCount
()
Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have completed execution. |
int |
getCorePoolSize
()
Returns the core number of threads. |
long |
getKeepAliveTime
(
TimeUnit
unit)
Returns the thread keep-alive time, which is the amount of time which threads in excess of the core pool size may remain idle before being terminated. |
int |
getLargestPoolSize
()
Returns the largest number of threads that have ever simultaneously been in the pool. |
int |
getMaximumPoolSize
()
Returns the maximum allowed number of threads. |
int |
getPoolSize
()
Returns the current number of threads in the pool. |
BlockingQueue
<
Runnable
> |
getQueue
()
Returns the task queue used by this executor. |
RejectedExecutionHandler
|
getRejectedExecutionHandler
()
Returns the current handler for unexecutable tasks. |
long |
getTaskCount
()
Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have been scheduled for execution. |
ThreadFactory
|
getThreadFactory
()
Returns the thread factory used to create new threads. |
boolean |
isShutdown
()
Returns
true
if this executor has been shut down. |
boolean |
isTerminated
()
Returns
true
if all tasks have completed following shut down. |
boolean |
isTerminating
()
Returns true if this executor is in the process of terminating after
shutdown
or
shutdownNow
but has not completely terminated. |
int |
prestartAllCoreThreads
()
Starts all core threads, causing them to idly wait for work. |
boolean |
prestartCoreThread
()
Starts a core thread, causing it to idly wait for work. |
void |
purge
()
Tries to remove from the work queue all
Future
tasks that have been cancelled. |
boolean |
remove
(
Runnable
task)
Removes this task from the executor's internal queue if it is present, thus causing it not to be run if it has not already started. |
void |
setCorePoolSize
(int corePoolSize)
Sets the core number of threads. |
void |
setKeepAliveTime
(long time,
TimeUnit
unit)
Sets the time limit for which threads may remain idle before being terminated. |
void |
setMaximumPoolSize
(int maximumPoolSize)
Sets the maximum allowed number of threads. |
void |
setRejectedExecutionHandler
(
RejectedExecutionHandler
handler)
Sets a new handler for unexecutable tasks. |
void |
setThreadFactory
(
ThreadFactory
threadFactory)
Sets the thread factory used to create new threads. |
void |
shutdown
()
Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted. |
List
<
Runnable
> |
shutdownNow
()
Attempts to stop all actively executing tasks, halts the processing of waiting tasks, and returns a list of the tasks that were awaiting execution. |
protected void |
terminated
()
Method invoked when the Executor has terminated. |
ThreadPoolExecutor
public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
int maximumPoolSize,
long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit,
BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue)
-
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial parameters and default thread factory and
rejected execution
handler. It may be more convenient to use one of the
Executors
factory methods instead of this general purpose constructor.
-
Parameters:
-
corePoolSize - the number of threads to keep in the pool, even if they are idle.
-
maximumPoolSize - the maximum number of threads to allow in the pool.
-
keepAliveTime - when the number of threads is greater than the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads will wait for new tasks before terminating.
-
unit - the time unit for the keepAliveTime argument.
-
workQueue - the queue to use for holding tasks before they are executed. This queue will hold only the
Runnable
tasks submitted by the
execute
method.
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if corePoolSize, or keepAliveTime less than zero, or if maximumPoolSize less than or equal to zero, or if corePoolSize greater than maximumPoolSize.
-
NullPointerException
- if
workQueue
is null
ThreadPoolExecutor
public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
int maximumPoolSize,
long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit,
BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
ThreadFactory threadFactory)
-
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial
parameters and default rejected execution handler.
parameters.
-
Parameters:
-
corePoolSize - the number of threads to keep in the pool, even if they are idle.
-
maximumPoolSize - the maximum number of threads to allow in the pool.
-
keepAliveTime - when the number of threads is greater than the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads will wait for new tasks before terminating.
-
unit - the time unit for the keepAliveTime argument.
-
workQueue - the queue to use for holding tasks before they are executed. This queue will hold only the
Runnable
tasks submitted by the
execute
method.
-
threadFactory - the factory to use when the executor creates a new thread.
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if corePoolSize, or keepAliveTime less than zero, or if maximumPoolSize less than or equal to zero, or if corePoolSize greater than maximumPoolSize.
-
NullPointerException
- if
workQueue
or
threadFactory
are null.
ThreadPoolExecutor
public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
int maximumPoolSize,
long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit,
BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
RejectedExecutionHandler handler)
-
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial
parameters and default thread factory.
parameters.
-
Parameters:
-
corePoolSize - the number of threads to keep in the pool, even if they are idle.
-
maximumPoolSize - the maximum number of threads to allow in the pool.
-
keepAliveTime - when the number of threads is greater than the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads will wait for new tasks before terminating.
-
unit - the time unit for the keepAliveTime argument.
-
workQueue - the queue to use for holding tasks before they are executed. This queue will hold only the
Runnable
tasks submitted by the
execute
method.
-
handler - the handler to use when execution is blocked because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached.
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if corePoolSize, or keepAliveTime less than zero, or if maximumPoolSize less than or equal to zero, or if corePoolSize greater than maximumPoolSize.
-
NullPointerException
- if
workQueue
or
handler
are null.
ThreadPoolExecutor
public ThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize,
int maximumPoolSize,
long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit,
BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue,
ThreadFactory threadFactory,
RejectedExecutionHandler handler)
-
Creates a new
ThreadPoolExecutor
with the given initial parameters.
-
Parameters:
-
corePoolSize - the number of threads to keep in the pool, even if they are idle.
-
maximumPoolSize - the maximum number of threads to allow in the pool.
-
keepAliveTime - when the number of threads is greater than the core, this is the maximum time that excess idle threads will wait for new tasks before terminating.
-
unit - the time unit for the keepAliveTime argument.
-
workQueue - the queue to use for holding tasks before they are executed. This queue will hold only the
Runnable
tasks submitted by the
execute
method.
-
threadFactory - the factory to use when the executor creates a new thread.
-
handler - the handler to use when execution is blocked because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached.
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if corePoolSize, or keepAliveTime less than zero, or if maximumPoolSize less than or equal to zero, or if corePoolSize greater than maximumPoolSize.
-
NullPointerException
- if
workQueue
or
threadFactory
or
handler
are null.
execute
public void execute(Runnable command)
-
Executes the given task sometime in the future. The task may execute in a new thread or in an existing pooled thread. If the task cannot be submitted for execution, either because this executor has been shutdown or because its capacity has been reached, the task is handled by the current
RejectedExecutionHandler
.
-
-
Parameters:
-
command - the task to execute
-
Throws:
-
RejectedExecutionException
- at discretion of
RejectedExecutionHandler
, if task cannot be accepted for execution
-
NullPointerException
- if command is null
shutdown
public void shutdown()
-
Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted. Invocation has no additional effect if already shut down.
-
-
Throws:
-
SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and shutting down this ExecutorService may manipulate threads that the caller is not permitted to modify because it does not hold
RuntimePermission
("modifyThread")
, or the security manager's
checkAccess
method denies access.
shutdownNow
public List<Runnable> shutdownNow()
-
Attempts to stop all actively executing tasks, halts the processing of waiting tasks, and returns a list of the tasks that were awaiting execution.
There are no guarantees beyond best-effort attempts to stop processing actively executing tasks.
This implementation cancels tasks via
Thread.interrupt()
, so
if
any
task that fails
tasks mask or fail
to respond to
interrupts
interrupts, they
may never terminate.
-
-
Returns:
-
list of tasks that never commenced execution
-
Throws:
-
SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and shutting down this ExecutorService may manipulate threads that the caller is not permitted to modify because it does not hold
RuntimePermission
("modifyThread")
, or the security manager's
checkAccess
method denies access.
isShutdown
public boolean isShutdown()
-
Description copied from interface:
ExecutorService
-
Returns
true
if this executor has been shut down.
-
-
Returns:
-
true
if this executor has been shut down
isTerminating
public boolean isTerminating()
-
Returns true if this executor is in the process of terminating after
shutdown
or
shutdownNow
but has not completely terminated. This method may be useful for debugging. A return of
true
reported a sufficient period after shutdown may indicate that submitted tasks have ignored or suppressed interruption, causing this executor not to properly terminate.
-
-
Returns:
-
true if terminating but not yet terminated.
isTerminated
public boolean isTerminated()
-
Description copied from interface:
ExecutorService
-
Returns
true
if all tasks have completed following shut down. Note that
isTerminated
is never
true
unless either
shutdown
or
shutdownNow
was called first.
-
-
Returns:
-
true
if all tasks have completed following shut down
awaitTermination
public boolean awaitTermination(long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
throws InterruptedException
-
Description copied from interface:
ExecutorService
-
Blocks until all tasks have completed execution after a shutdown request, or the timeout occurs, or the current thread is interrupted, whichever happens first.
-
-
Parameters:
-
timeout - the maximum time to wait
-
unit - the time unit of the timeout argument
-
Returns:
-
true
if this executor terminated and
false
if the timeout elapsed before termination
-
Throws:
-
InterruptedException
- if interrupted while waiting
finalize
protected void finalize()
-
Invokes
shutdown
when this executor is no longer referenced.
-
-
Overrides:
-
finalize
in class
Object
-
setThreadFactory
public void setThreadFactory(ThreadFactory threadFactory)
-
Sets the thread factory used to create new threads.
-
-
Parameters:
-
threadFactory - the new thread factory
-
Throws:
-
NullPointerException
- if threadFactory is null
-
See Also:
-
getThreadFactory()
getThreadFactory
public ThreadFactory getThreadFactory()
-
Returns the thread factory used to create new threads.
-
-
Returns:
-
the current thread factory
-
See Also:
-
setThreadFactory(java.util.concurrent.ThreadFactory)
setRejectedExecutionHandler
public void setRejectedExecutionHandler(RejectedExecutionHandler handler)
-
Sets a new handler for unexecutable tasks.
-
-
Parameters:
-
handler - the new handler
-
Throws:
-
NullPointerException
- if handler is null
-
See Also:
-
getRejectedExecutionHandler()
getRejectedExecutionHandler
public RejectedExecutionHandler getRejectedExecutionHandler()
-
Returns the current handler for unexecutable tasks.
-
-
Returns:
-
the current handler
-
See Also:
-
setRejectedExecutionHandler(java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionHandler)
getQueue
public BlockingQueue<Runnable> getQueue()
-
Returns the task queue used by this executor. Access to the task queue is intended primarily for debugging and monitoring. This queue may be in active use. Retrieving the task queue does not prevent queued tasks from executing.
-
-
Returns:
-
the task queue
remove
public boolean remove(Runnable task)
-
Removes this task from the executor's internal queue if it is present, thus causing it not to be run if it has not already started.
This method may be useful as one part of a cancellation scheme. It may fail to remove tasks that have been converted into other forms before being placed on the internal queue. For example, a task entered using
submit
might be converted into a form that maintains
Future
status. However, in such cases, method
purge()
may be used to remove those Futures that have been cancelled.
-
-
Parameters:
-
task - the task to remove
-
Returns:
-
true if the task was removed
purge
public void purge()
-
Tries to remove from the work queue all
Future
tasks that have been cancelled. This method can be useful as a storage reclamation operation, that has no other impact on functionality. Cancelled tasks are never executed, but may accumulate in work queues until worker threads can actively remove them. Invoking this method instead tries to remove them now. However, this method may fail to remove tasks in the presence of interference by other threads.
-
setCorePoolSize
public void setCorePoolSize(int corePoolSize)
-
Sets the core number of threads. This overrides any value set in the constructor. If the new value is smaller than the current value, excess existing threads will be terminated when they next become idle. If larger, new threads will, if needed, be started to execute any queued tasks.
-
-
Parameters:
-
corePoolSize - the new core size
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if
corePoolSize
less than zero
-
See Also:
-
getCorePoolSize()
getCorePoolSize
public int getCorePoolSize()
-
Returns the core number of threads.
-
-
Returns:
-
the core number of threads
-
See Also:
-
setCorePoolSize(int)
prestartCoreThread
public boolean prestartCoreThread()
-
Starts a core thread, causing it to idly wait for work. This overrides the default policy of starting core threads only when new tasks are executed. This method will return
false
if all core threads have already been started.
-
-
Returns:
-
true if a thread was started
prestartAllCoreThreads
public int prestartAllCoreThreads()
-
Starts all core threads, causing them to idly wait for work. This overrides the default policy of starting core threads only when new tasks are executed.
-
-
Returns:
-
the number of threads started.
allowsCoreThreadTimeOut
public boolean
allowsCoreThreadTimeOut
()
-
Returns true if this pool allows core threads to time out and terminate if no tasks arrive within the keepAlive time, being replaced if needed when new tasks arrive. When true, the same keep-alive policy applying to non-core threads applies also to core threads. When false (the default), core threads are never terminated due to lack of incoming tasks.
-
-
Returns:
-
true
if core threads are allowed to time out, else
false
-
Since:
-
1.6
allowCoreThreadTimeOut
public void
allowCoreThreadTimeOut
(boolean value)
-
Sets the policy governing whether core threads may time out and terminate if no tasks arrive within the keep-alive time, being replaced if needed when new tasks arrive. When false, core threads are never terminated due to lack of incoming tasks. When true, the same keep-alive policy applying to non-core threads applies also to core threads. To avoid continual thread replacement, the keep-alive time must be greater than zero when setting
true
. This method should in general be called before the pool is actively used.
-
-
Parameters:
-
value -
true
if should time out, else
false
-
Throws:
-
IllegalArgumentException
- if value is
true
and the current keep-alive time is not greater than zero.
-
Since:
-
1.6
setMaximumPoolSize
public void setMaximumPoolSize(int maximumPoolSize)
-
Sets the maximum allowed number of threads. This overrides any value set in the constructor. If the new value is smaller than the current value, excess existing threads will be terminated when they next become idle.
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Parameters:
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maximumPoolSize - the new maximum
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Throws:
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IllegalArgumentException
- if maximumPoolSize less than zero or the
core pool size
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See Also:
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getMaximumPoolSize()
getMaximumPoolSize
public int getMaximumPoolSize()
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Returns the maximum allowed number of threads.
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Returns:
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the maximum allowed number of threads
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See Also:
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setMaximumPoolSize(int)
setKeepAliveTime
public void setKeepAliveTime(long time,
TimeUnit unit)
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Sets the time limit for which threads may remain idle before being terminated. If there are more than the core number of threads currently in the pool, after waiting this amount of time without processing a task, excess threads will be terminated. This overrides any value set in the constructor.
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Parameters:
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time - the time to wait. A time value of zero will cause excess threads to terminate immediately after executing tasks.
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unit - the time unit of the time argument
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Throws:
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IllegalArgumentException
- if time less than zero
or if time is zero and allowsCoreThreadTimeOut
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See Also:
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getKeepAliveTime(java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit)
getKeepAliveTime
public long getKeepAliveTime(TimeUnit unit)
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Returns the thread keep-alive time, which is the amount of time which threads in excess of the core pool size may remain idle before being terminated.
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Parameters:
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unit - the desired time unit of the result
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Returns:
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the time limit
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See Also:
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setKeepAliveTime(long, java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit)
getPoolSize
public int getPoolSize()
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Returns the current number of threads in the pool.
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Returns:
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the number of threads
getActiveCount
public int getActiveCount()
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Returns the approximate number of threads that are actively executing tasks.
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Returns:
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the number of threads
getLargestPoolSize
public int getLargestPoolSize()
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Returns the largest number of threads that have ever simultaneously been in the pool.
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Returns:
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the number of threads
getTaskCount
public long getTaskCount()
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Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have been scheduled for execution. Because the states of tasks and threads may change dynamically during computation, the returned value is only an approximation, but one that does not ever decrease across successive calls.
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Returns:
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the number of tasks
getCompletedTaskCount
public long getCompletedTaskCount()
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Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have completed execution. Because the states of tasks and threads may change dynamically during computation, the returned value is only an approximation, but one that does not ever decrease across successive calls.
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Returns:
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the number of tasks
beforeExecute
protected void beforeExecute(Thread t,
Runnable r)
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Method invoked prior to executing the given Runnable in the given thread. This method is invoked by thread
t
that will execute task
r
, and may be used to re-initialize ThreadLocals, or to perform logging.
This implementation does nothing, but may be customized in subclasses.
Note: To properly nest multiple overridings, subclasses should generally invoke
super.beforeExecute
at the end of this method.
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Parameters:
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t - the thread that will run task r.
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r - the task that will be executed.
afterExecute
protected void afterExecute(Runnable r,
Throwable t)
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Method invoked upon completion of execution of the given Runnable. This method is invoked by the thread that executed the task.
If non-null, the Throwable is the uncaught
RuntimeException
or
Error
that caused execution to terminate abruptly.
Note:
When actions are enclosed in tasks (such as
FutureTask
) either explicitly or via methods such as
submit
, these task objects catch and maintain computational exceptions, and so they do not cause abrupt termination, and the internal exceptions are not passed to this method.
This implementation does nothing, but may be customized in subclasses.
If non-null, the Throwable is the uncaught exception that caused execution to terminate abruptly.
Note: To properly nest multiple overridings, subclasses should generally invoke
super.afterExecute
at the beginning of this method.
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Parameters:
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r - the runnable that has completed.
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t - the exception that caused termination, or null if execution completed normally.
terminated
protected void terminated()
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Method invoked when the Executor has terminated. Default implementation does nothing. Note: To properly nest multiple overridings, subclasses should generally invoke
super.terminated
within this method.
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