By referring to http://www.javamex.com/tutorials/synchronization_volatile.shtml, I am not sure whether I need to use volatile keyword in the following case, due to additional rule 3.
- A primitive static variable will be write by Thread A.
- The same primitive static variable will be read by Thread B.
- Thread B will only run, after Thread A is "dead". ("dead" means, the last statement of Thread A's void run is finished)
Will the new value written by Thread A, will always committed to main memory, after it "dead"? If yes, does it mean I need not volatile keyword if the above 3 conditions are meet?
I am doubt that volatile is being required in this case. As it is required, then ArrayList may broken. As one thread may perform insert and update size member variable. Later, another thread (not-concurrently) may read the ArrayList's size. If you look at ArrayList source code, size is not being declared as volatile.
In JavaDoc of ArrayList, then only mention that ArrayList is not safe to be used for multiple threads access an ArrayList instance concurrently, but not for multiple threads access an ArrayList instance at different timing.
Let me use the following code to issulate this problem
public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
// Create and start the thread
final ArrayList<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
Thread writeThread = new Thread(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
list.add("hello");
}
});
writeThread.join();
Thread readThread = new Thread(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
// Does it guarantee that list.size will always return 1, as this list
// is manipulated by different thread?
// Take note that, within implementation of ArrayList, member
// variable size is not marked as volatile.
assert(1 == list.size());
}
});
readThread.join();
}