I find myself repeating this pattern and have often wondered if it is idiomatic in Java or there is a better way of achieving this behaviour.
Problem: Given a producer/consumer setup, the consumer wants to process batches of items, so it uses drainTo()
, however drainTo()
will poll for existing items and possibly fail to get any items, to avoid this I prefix the drain with a take()
to ensure it blocks until at least one item is available.
One problem I get, with a particular dataset, is with many use cases that the batch size is often irregular alternating between (1, N, 1, N). In general is this a common way to solve this problem:
Example:
ArrayBlockingQueue<Foo> queue;
function void produce() {
while(true) {
queue.put(createFoo());
}
}
function void consumeBatchSpin() {
while(true) {
List<Foo> batch = Lists.newLinkedList();
queue.drainTo(batch);
doSomething(batch);
//the problem here is that if nothing is being produced, this loop will spin
}
}
function void consumeBatchTake() {
while(true) {
List<Foo> batch = Lists.newLinkedList();
batch.add(queue.take()); //force at least one item to be there
queue.drainTo(batch);
doSomething(batch);
}
}