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Long time ago, I saved a sentence from a Java reference book: "Java has no mechanism to handle deadlock. it won't even know deadlock occurred." (Head First Java 2nd Edition, p.516)

So, what is about it? Is there a way to catch deadlock case in Java? I mean, is there a way that our code understands a deadlock case occurred?

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Is Java different from other languages in this regard? – Michael Burr Oct 19 '08 at 22:58
it's not impossible to detect a deadlock - it's just quite difficult – 1800 INFORMATION Oct 19 '08 at 23:00
for example - most databases will detect deadlocks – 1800 INFORMATION Oct 19 '08 at 23:01

11 Answers

vote up 10 vote down

Since JDK 1.5 there are very useful methods in the java.lang.management package to find and inspect deadlocks that occurs. See the findMonitorDeadlockedThreads() and findDeadlockedThreads() method of the ThreadMXBean class.

A possible way to use this is to have a separate watchdog thread (or periodic task) that does this.

Sample code:

  ThreadMXBean tmx = ManagementFactory.getThreadMXBean();
  long[] ids = tmx.findDeadlockedThreads();
  if (ids != null) {
     ThreadInfo[] infos = tmx.getThreadInfo(ids, true, true);
     System.out.println("The following threads are deadlocked:");
     for (ThreadInfo ti : infos) {
        System.out.println(ti);
     }
  }
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vote up 6 vote down

In general java does not offer deadlock detection. The synchronized keyword and built in monitors make it somewhat more difficult to reason about deadlock than in languages with explicit locking.

I would suggest migrating to using java.util.concurrent.Lock locks and the like in order to make your locking schemes easier to reason about. In fact you could easily make your own implementation of the lock interface with deadlock detection. The algorithm is to basically traverse the lock dependency graph and look for a cycle.

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The locks in java.util.concurrent.Lock have deadlock detection built in as of JDK 1.6. See java.lang.management.ThreadMXBean. – staffan Oct 20 '08 at 9:56
vote up 3 vote down

JConsole is able to detect deadlocks in a running application.

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vote up 3 vote down

JDK 5 and 6 will dump held lock information in a full thread dump (obtained with kill -3, jstack, jconsole, etc). JDK 6 even contains information about ReentrantLock and ReentrantReadWriteLock. It is possible from this information to diagnose a deadlock by finding a lock cycle: Thread A holds lock 1, Thread B holds lock 2, and either A is requesting 2 or B is requesting 1. From my experience, this is usually pretty obvious.

Other analysis tools can actually find potential deadlocks even if they don't occur. Thread tools from vendors like OptimizeIt, JProbe, Coverity, etc are good places to look.

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vote up 1 vote down

Not exactly what you asked, but when a deadlock does occur, you can do a "kill -3" on the process id and it dumps a thread dump to stdout. Also, the 1.6 jvm has some tools to do the same thing in a gui manner.

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vote up 1 vote down

If you are running from the command-line and you suspect that you are deadlocked, try ctrl+break in windows (ctrl+\ in unix) to get a thread dump. See http://java.sun.com/javase/6/webnotes/trouble/TSG-VM/html/gbmps.html

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vote up 1 vote down

Dr. Heinz Kabutz of JavaSpecialists has written an entertaining and informative newsletter issue on Java deadlocks and describes something called a ThreadMXBean in another newsletter issue. Between those, you should get a good idea of the issues and some pointers to doing your own instrumentation.

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vote up 1 vote down

Deadlocks can be avoided if you follow a simple rule: have all threads claim and release their locks in the same order. In this way, you never get into a situation where a deadlock can occur.

Even the dining philosophers problem can be seen as a violation of this rule as it uses relative concepts of left and right spoon which result in different threads using different allocation orders of the spoons.

In my opinion, prevention is better than cure.

This is one of the two guidelines I like to follow to ensure threads work properly. The other is ensuring each thread is solely responsible for its own execution as it's the only one fully aware of what it's doing at any point in time.

So that means no Thread.stop calls, use a global flag (or message queue or something like that) to tell another thread you want action taken. Then let that thread do the actual work.

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While this is the canonical answer, it's not always possible. There are other ways to avoid deadlock as well. For example, you can use timed tryLocks (with a ReentrantLock) to do back-out. – Alex Miller Oct 21 '08 at 12:47
vote up 1 vote down

If you are on Java 5 you can call the method findMonitorDeadlockedThreads() on the ThreadMXBean which you can get through a call of java.lang.management.ManagementFactory.getThreadMXBean(). This will find deadlocks caused by object monitors only. On Java 6 there's findDeadlockedThreads() which will also find deadlocks caused by "ownable synchronizers (for example ReentrandLock and ReentrantReadWriteLock).

Be aware that it will probably be expensive to call these methods, so they should be used for troubleshooting purposes only.

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vote up 0 vote down

If you're debugging in eclipse, you can pause the application (select the app in the debug view and the little || button on the debug toolbar) and then it can report deadlocks.

See http://runnerwhocodes.blogspot.com/2007/10/deadlock-detection-with-eclipse.html for an example.

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vote up 0 vote down

Note that there is a type of deadlock using the concurrent package that is very hard to debug. That is where you have a ReentrantReadWriteLock and one thread grabs the read lock and then (say) tries to enter a monitor held by some other thread that is also waiting to grab the write lock. What makes it especially hard to debug is that there is no record of who has entered a read lock. It is simply a count. The thread might even have thrown an exception and died leaving the read count non-zero.

Here is a sample deadlock that the findDeadlockedThreads method mentioned earlier won't get:

import java.util.concurrent.locks.*;
import java.lang.management.*;

public class LockTest {

    static ReentrantReadWriteLock lock = new ReentrantReadWriteLock();

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        Reader reader = new Reader();
        Writer writer = new Writer();
        sleep(10);
        System.out.println("finding deadlocked threads");
        ThreadMXBean tmx = ManagementFactory.getThreadMXBean();
        long[] ids = tmx.findDeadlockedThreads();
        if (ids != null) {
            ThreadInfo[] infos = tmx.getThreadInfo(ids, true, true);
            System.out.println("the following threads are deadlocked:");
            for (ThreadInfo ti : infos) {
                System.out.println(ti);
            }
        }
        System.out.println("finished finding deadlocked threads");
    }

    static void sleep(int seconds) {
        try {
            Thread.currentThread().sleep(seconds*1000);
        } catch (InterruptedException e) {}
    }

    static class Reader implements Runnable {
        Reader() {
            new Thread(this).start();
        }
        public void run() {
            sleep(2);
            System.out.println("reader thread getting lock");
            lock.readLock().lock();
            System.out.println("reader thread got lock");
            synchronized (lock) {
                System.out.println("reader thread inside monitor!");
                lock.readLock().unlock();
            }
        }
    }

    static class Writer implements Runnable {
        Writer() {
            new Thread(this).start();
        }
        public void run() {
            synchronized (lock) {
                sleep(4);
                System.out.println("writer thread getting lock");
                lock.writeLock().lock();
                System.out.println("writer thread got lock!");
            }
        }
    }
}
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