In work today, I came across the volatile keyword in Java. Not being very familiar with it, I found this explaination: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-jtp06197

Given the detail in which that article explains the keyword in question, do you ever use it or could you ever see a case in which you could use this keyword in the correct manner?

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volatile has semantics for memory visibility. Basically, the value of a volatile field becomes visible to all readers (other threads in particular) after a write operation completes on it. Without volatile, readers could see some non-updated value.

To answer your question: Yes, I use a volatile variable to control whether some code continues a loop. The loop tests the volatile value and continues if it is true. The condition can be set to false by calling a "stop" method. The loop sees false and terminates when it tests the value after the stop method completes execution.

The book "Java Concurrency in Practice," which I highly recommend, gives a good explanation of volatile. This book is written by the same person who wrote the IBM article that is referenced in the question (in fact, he cites his book at the bottom of that article). My use of volatile is what his article calls the "pattern 1 status flag."

If you want to learn more about how volatile works under the hood, read up on the Java memory model. If you want to go beyond that level, check out a good computer architecture book like Hennessy & Patterson and read about cache coherence and cache consistency.

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I concur - I've used volatile for the exact same reason - tracking when to end a loop in a multi-threaded application. – Darren Greaves Jun 3 '09 at 10:13
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“… the volatile modifier guarantees that any thread that reads a field will see the most recently written value.” - Josh Bloch

If you are thinking about using volatile, read up on the package java.util.concurrent which deals with atomic behaviour.

The Wikipedia post on a Singleton Pattern shows volatile in use.

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One common example for using volatile is to use a volatile boolean variable as a flag to terminate a thread. If you've started a thread, and you want to be able to safely interrupt it from a different thread, you can have the thread periodically check a flag. To stop it, set the flag to true. By making the flag volatile, you can ensure that the thread that is checking it will see it has been set the next time it checks it without having to even use a synchronized block.

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volatile is very useful to stop threads.

Not that you should be writing your own threads, Java 1.6 has a lot of nice thread pools. But if you are sure you need a thread, you'll need to know how to stop it.

The pattern I use for threads is:

public class Foo extends Thread {
  private volatile boolean close = false;
  public void run() {
    while(!close) {
      // do work
    }
  }
  public void close() {
    close = true;
    // interrupt here if needed
  }
}

Notice how there's no need for synchronization

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Here's a good article on the topic.

http://pitfalls.wordpress.com/2008/05/25/javavolatile/

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Yes, volatile must be used whenever you want a mutable variable to be accessed by multiple threads. It is not very common usecase because typically you need to perform more than a single atomic operation (e.g. check the variable state before modifying it), in which case you would use a synchronized block instead.

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Yes, I use it quite a lot - it can be very useful for multi-threaded code. The article you pointed to is a good one. Though there are two important things to bear in mind:

  1. You should only use volatile if you completely understand what it does and how it differs to synchronized. In many situations volatile appears, on the surface, to be a simpler more performant alternative to synchronized, when often a better understanding of volatile would make clear that synchronized is the only option that would work.
  2. volatile doesn't actually work in a lot of older JVMs, although synchronized does. I remember seeing a document that referenced the various levels of support in different JVMs but unfortunately I can't find it now. Definitely look into it if you're using Java pre 1.5 or if you don't have control over the JVMs that your program will be running on.
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You'll need to use 'volatile' keyword, or 'synchronized' and any other concurrency control tools and techniques you might have at your disposal if you are developing a multithreaded application. Example of such application is desktop apps.

If you are developing an application that would be deployed to application server (Tomcat, JBoss AS, Glassfish, etc) you don't have to handle concurrency control yourself as it already addressed by the application server. In fact, if I remembered correctly the J2EE standard prohibit any concurrency control in servlets and EJBs, since it is part of the 'infrastructure' layer which you supposed to be freed from handling it. You only do concurrency control in such app if you're implementing singleton objects. This even already addressed if you knit your components using frameworkd like Spring.

So, in most cases of Java development where the application is a web application and using IoC framework like Spring or EJB, you wouldn't need to use 'volatile'.

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One common example for using volatile is to use a volatile boolean variable as a flag to terminate a thread. If you've started a thread, and you want to be able to safely interrupt it from a different thread, you can have the thread periodically check a flag. To stop it, set the flag to true. By making the flag volatile, you can ensure that the thread that is checking it will see it has been set the next time it checks it without having to even use a synchronized block.

"interrupt from a different thread", then how would you answer, why you need 'volatile' field to hold the cancellation state when the same thread starts the thread and invokes cancel?

package net.jcip.examples;

import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.SECONDS;
import java.math.BigInteger;
import java.util.*;
import java.util.concurrent.*;

import net.jcip.annotations.*;

/**
 * PrimeGenerator
 * <p/>
 * Using a volatile field to hold cancellation state
 *
 * @author Brian Goetz and Tim Peierls
 */
@ThreadSafe
public class PrimeGenerator implements Runnable {
    private static ExecutorService exec = Executors.newCachedThreadPool();

    @GuardedBy("this") private final List<BigInteger> primes
            = new ArrayList<BigInteger>();
    private volatile boolean cancelled;

    public void run() {
        BigInteger p = BigInteger.ONE;
        while (!cancelled) {
            p = p.nextProbablePrime();
            synchronized (this) {
                primes.add(p);
            }
        }
    }

    public void cancel() {
        cancelled = true;
    }

    public synchronized List<BigInteger> get() {
        return new ArrayList<BigInteger>(primes);
    }

    static List<BigInteger> aSecondOfPrimes() throws InterruptedException {
        PrimeGenerator generator = new PrimeGenerator();
        exec.execute(generator);
        try {
            SECONDS.sleep(1);
        } finally {
            generator.cancel();
        }
        return generator.get();
    }
}
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Absolutely, yes. (And not just in Java, but also in C#.) There are times when you need to get or set a value that is guaranteed to be an atomic operation on your given platform, an int or boolean, for example, but do not require the overhead of thread locking. The volatile keyword allows you to ensure that when you read the value that you get the current value and not a cached value that was just made obsolete by a write on another thread.

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Corrected. Thanks! – dgvid Jan 6 at 14:29
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