Java's Thread.suspend()
probably (depends on the JVM but I doubt that anybody would implement it like that) won't work, but I also wouldn't recommend it. You could use the operating system's SuspendThread
function, but I wouldn't recommend this either. Suspending a thread is bad:
Thread.suspend is inherently deadlock-prone. If the target thread holds a lock on the monitor protecting a critical system resource when it is suspended, no thread can access this resource until the target thread is resumed. If the thread that would resume the target thread attempts to lock this monitor prior to calling resume, deadlock results. Such deadlocks typically manifest themselves as "frozen" processes.
Source: Why are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?
And the windows SuspendThread
function is primarily designed for use by debuggers (for similar reasons), according to the documentation. So basically the answer is that you shouldn't pause the execution of any code, including your C code.
But you can solve your problem with an exclusive lock/mutex and a global variable: In every iteration of the loop, check if a global volatile bool
variable is still true
. If it isn't, acquire a lock, set it back to true
, release the lock and then continue iterating.
Your suspend()
function will look like this: Acquire the lock and set the variable to false
.
Your resume()
function will look like this: Release the lock.
You can invoke those functions via JNI.
Example: The native method is iterating (thread A). Now a thread B calls suspend()
. It acquires the lock and changes the variable. Now thread A notices that and, in the process of acquiring the lock, waits until thread B releases it. Finally thread B calls resume()
and releases the lock. Now thread A acquires it, changes the value, releases it and continues iterating.
signal(SIGURS1, pid)
which when handled wouldsleep(some_predefined_time)