A small toolkit of classes that support lock-free thread-safe programming on single variables.
See: Description
Class | Description |
---|---|
AtomicBoolean | A |
AtomicInteger | An |
AtomicIntegerArray | An |
AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater<T> | A reflection-based utility that enables atomic updates to designated |
AtomicLong | A |
AtomicLongArray | A |
AtomicLongFieldUpdater<T> | A reflection-based utility that enables atomic updates to designated |
AtomicMarkableReference<V> | An |
AtomicReference<V> | An object reference that may be updated atomically. |
AtomicReferenceArray<E> | An array of object references in which elements may be updated atomically. |
AtomicReferenceFieldUpdater<T,V> | A reflection-based utility that enables atomic updates to designated |
AtomicStampedReference<V> | An |
DoubleAccumulator | One or more variables that together maintain a running |
DoubleAdder | One or more variables that together maintain an initially zero |
LongAccumulator | One or more variables that together maintain a running |
LongAdder | One or more variables that together maintain an initially zero |
A small toolkit of classes that support lock-free thread-safe programming on single variables. In essence, the classes in this package extend the notion of volatile
values, fields, and array elements to those that also provide an atomic conditional update operation of the form:
boolean compareAndSet(expectedValue, updateValue);
This method (which varies in argument types across different classes) atomically sets a variable to the updateValue
if it currently holds the expectedValue
, reporting true
on success. The classes in this package also contain methods to get and unconditionally set values, as well as a weaker conditional atomic update operation weakCompareAndSet
described below.
The specifications of these methods enable implementations to employ efficient machine-level atomic instructions that are available on contemporary processors. However on some platforms, support may entail some form of internal locking. Thus the methods are not strictly guaranteed to be non-blocking -- a thread may block transiently before performing the operation.
Instances of classes AtomicBoolean
, AtomicInteger
, AtomicLong
, and AtomicReference
each provide access and updates to a single variable of the corresponding type. Each class also provides appropriate utility methods for that type. For example, classes AtomicLong
and AtomicInteger
provide atomic increment methods. One application is to generate sequence numbers, as in:
class Sequencer { private final AtomicLong sequenceNumber = new AtomicLong(0); public long next() { return sequenceNumber.getAndIncrement(); } }
It is straightforward to define new utility functions that, like getAndIncrement
, apply a function to a value atomically. For example, given some transformation
long transform(long input)write your utility method as follows:
long getAndTransform(AtomicLong var) { long prev, next; do { prev = var.get(); next = transform(prev); } while (!var.compareAndSet(prev, next)); return prev; // return next; for transformAndGet }
The memory effects for accesses and updates of atomics generally follow the rules for volatiles, as stated in The Java Language Specification (17.4 Memory Model):
get
has the memory effects of reading a volatile
variable. set
has the memory effects of writing (assigning) a volatile
variable. lazySet
has the memory effects of writing (assigning) a volatile
variable except that it permits reorderings with subsequent (but not previous) memory actions that do not themselves impose reordering constraints with ordinary non-volatile
writes. Among other usage contexts, lazySet
may apply when nulling out, for the sake of garbage collection, a reference that is never accessed again. weakCompareAndSet
atomically reads and conditionally writes a variable but does not create any happens-before orderings, so provides no guarantees with respect to previous or subsequent reads and writes of any variables other than the target of the weakCompareAndSet
. compareAndSet
and all other read-and-update operations such as getAndIncrement
have the memory effects of both reading and writing volatile
variables. In addition to classes representing single values, this package contains Updater classes that can be used to obtain compareAndSet
operations on any selected volatile
field of any selected class. AtomicReferenceFieldUpdater
, AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater
, and AtomicLongFieldUpdater
are reflection-based utilities that provide access to the associated field types. These are mainly of use in atomic data structures in which several volatile
fields of the same node (for example, the links of a tree node) are independently subject to atomic updates. These classes enable greater flexibility in how and when to use atomic updates, at the expense of more awkward reflection-based setup, less convenient usage, and weaker guarantees.
The AtomicIntegerArray
, AtomicLongArray
, and AtomicReferenceArray
classes further extend atomic operation support to arrays of these types. These classes are also notable in providing volatile
access semantics for their array elements, which is not supported for ordinary arrays.
The atomic classes also support method weakCompareAndSet
, which has limited applicability. On some platforms, the weak version may be more efficient than compareAndSet
in the normal case, but differs in that any given invocation of the weakCompareAndSet
method may return false
spuriously (that is, for no apparent reason). A false
return means only that the operation may be retried if desired, relying on the guarantee that repeated invocation when the variable holds expectedValue
and no other thread is also attempting to set the variable will eventually succeed. (Such spurious failures may for example be due to memory contention effects that are unrelated to whether the expected and current values are equal.) Additionally weakCompareAndSet
does not provide ordering guarantees that are usually needed for synchronization control. However, the method may be useful for updating counters and statistics when such updates are unrelated to the other happens-before orderings of a program. When a thread sees an update to an atomic variable caused by a weakCompareAndSet
, it does not necessarily see updates to any other variables that occurred before the weakCompareAndSet
. This may be acceptable when, for example, updating performance statistics, but rarely otherwise.
The AtomicMarkableReference
class associates a single boolean with a reference. For example, this bit might be used inside a data structure to mean that the object being referenced has logically been deleted. The AtomicStampedReference
class associates an integer value with a reference. This may be used for example, to represent version numbers corresponding to series of updates.
Atomic classes are designed primarily as building blocks for implementing non-blocking data structures and related infrastructure classes. The compareAndSet
method is not a general replacement for locking. It applies only when critical updates for an object are confined to a single variable.
Atomic classes are not general purpose replacements for java.lang.Integer
and related classes. They do not define methods such as equals
, hashCode
and compareTo
. (Because atomic variables are expected to be mutated, they are poor choices for hash table keys.) Additionally, classes are provided only for those types that are commonly useful in intended applications. For example, there is no atomic class for representing byte
. In those infrequent cases where you would like to do so, you can use an AtomicInteger
to hold byte
values, and cast appropriately. You can also hold floats using Float.floatToRawIntBits(float)
and Float.intBitsToFloat(int)
conversions, and doubles using Double.doubleToRawLongBits(double)
and Double.longBitsToDouble(long)
conversions.
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Documentation extracted from Debian's OpenJDK Development Kit package.
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