Re: Question whether a problem with race conditions exists in this case

From:
Saxo <saxo123@gmx.de>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Thu, 15 Dec 2011 08:40:35 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID:
<50fa931f-4198-4c43-b278-0697944a1a3d@y7g2000vbe.googlegroups.com>
All right, think a found a solution for my initial problem, which was
context switches bewtween lines 1,2,3:

public Object get() {
  synchronized(lock) {
    if(useNewValue.get()) // 1
      return newValue; // 2
    return previousValue; // 3
  }
}

Solution for the new Node class looks like this (hope it works out
well with indentation and line breaks):

package test.switchover;

import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicBoolean;

public class SwitchableValue
{

    private Object lock = new Object();
    private Object switchOverLock = null;
    private Object newValue = null;
    private Object previousValue = null;
    private AtomicBoolean useNewValue = new AtomicBoolean(false);

    public SwitchableValue() {
      super();
    }

    public SwitchableValue(Object currentValue) {
      super();
      this.newValue = currentValue;
    }

    public void set(Object newValue, AtomicBoolean useNewValue, Object
switchOverLock) {
      synchronized (lock) {
        assert useNewValue.get() == false;
        this.switchOverLock = switchOverLock;
        this.useNewValue = useNewValue;
        this.previousValue = this.newValue;
        this.newValue = newValue;
      }
    }

    public Object get() {
        synchronized (lock) {
          if(switchOverLock == null) {
            // optimization to avoid 2 nested synchronized blocks
when
            // not switching over to the new value, which is mostly
the case
            return newValue;
      }
        synchronized (switchOverLock) {
          // do the switch over, the if-then-else block should be
without
          // any problems caused by context switches in between as
done
          // from within the switchOverLock
          if(useNewValue.get()) {
            switchOverLock = null;
            useNewValue = null;
            return newValue;
          }
          return previousValue;
        }
      }
    }
}

Here is some code to run a test case:

package test.switchover;

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicBoolean;

public class SwitchOverTest {

  public static void main(String[] args)
  {
    final int maxValues = 100;
    List<Runnable> pollingRunnables = new ArrayList<Runnable>();
    final List<SwitchableValue> values = new
ArrayList<SwitchableValue>();
    final AtomicBoolean proceed = new AtomicBoolean(true);
    for (int i = 0; i < maxValues; i++) {
      final int j = i;
      values.add(new SwitchableValue(new Integer(i)));
      pollingRunnables.add(new Runnable() {
      int pos = j;
      public void run() {
      while(proceed.get()) {
      System.out.println("Value of runnable " + pos + ": " +
values.get(pos).get());
        try {
          Thread.sleep(1000);
        } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
      }
    });
  }

  Iterator<Runnable> it = pollingRunnables.iterator();
  while(it.hasNext()) {
    new Thread(it.next()).start();
  }

  try {
    Thread.sleep(2000);
  } catch (InterruptedException e) { }

  Object switchOverLock = new Object();
  AtomicBoolean useNewValue = new AtomicBoolean(false);

  for (int i = 0; i < maxValues; i++) {
    values.get(i).set(i + 1, useNewValue, switchOverLock);
  }

  synchronized (switchOverLock) {
    try {
      System.out.println("Now all output to the console is suspended,
because the switchOverLock is held by the commit thread.");
      System.out.println("Waiting for 4 seconds to be able to read the
message...");
      Thread.sleep(4000);
      System.out.println("All output to the console is resumed and the
values are all incremented by 1.");
      System.out.println("Waiting for 4 seconds to be able to read the
message...");
      Thread.sleep(4000);
    } catch (InterruptedException e) { }
    useNewValue.compareAndSet(false, true);
  }

  try {
    Thread.sleep(2000);
  } catch (InterruptedException e) { }

  System.out.println("stopping ...");
  proceed.compareAndSet(true, false);

  try {
    Thread.sleep(1000);
  } catch (InterruptedException e) { }

  System.out.println("done.");
  }
}

Cheers, Oliver

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