No, this construct is not thread-safe.
Assume that thread writer
is putting something into the map, and the map, being too small, must be resized. This is done inside the synchronized
block, so you may think you are fine.
During the resizing, nothing in the map is guaranteed.
Now, at the very same time, assume that a thread reader
calls getStuff
for an existing element. This thread may access the map directly, since it doesn't hit the synchronized
block for the first call to containsKey
and get
. It will find the map at an undefined state, and although it only reads, it accesses data whose contents is undefined. Among probable results are:
getStuff
returns null
when it shouldn't.
getStuff
returns the intended Stuff
.
getStuff
returns some internal object that is used by the HashMap
implementation during resizing.
getStuff
returns some other Stuff
, unrelated to the name.
getStuff
gets caught in an infinite loop.
This is just the obvious case that should be easy to understand. So no, don't take shortcuts when there are well-designed classes like ConcurrentHashMap
or Guava's MapMaker
.
By the way: Calling containsKey
first and then get
with the same key is rather inefficient. Just call get
, save the result and compare it to null
. You will save one searching operation in the map.