Is the following code considered thread-safe, ie: is the write to list guaranteed to happen-before the read to list? I've been trying to understand whether this would be considered safe in the Java memory model, but it's unclear.
Through basic flow analysis, it looks like it is guaranteed that all possible threads will have to pass through the synchronized
initializer block before hitting the for
loop below, but will iteration over that list be deterministic and thread-safe? I'm not sure that initialization is guaranteed to happen-before the use of list below.
Assume that this is the only method in the class. I know that moving iteration inside the synchronized block would guarantee thread-safety, but I'm more interested in knowing whether this construct is safe.
Also, assume that the list never escapes the class.
The Java Memory Model is explained in the JLS here: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se7/html/jls-17.html#jls-17.4
private List<Foo> list;
private final Object monitor = new Object();
public void bar() {
synchronized (monitor) {
if (list == null) {
list = new ArrayList<>();
list.add(...); // expensive operation
list.add(...); // expensive operation
list.add(...); // expensive operation
}
}
for (Foo foo : list) {
// do something with foo
}
}
monitor
final
.