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Let's say I have an application that utilizes the Executor framework as such

Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor().submit(new Runnable(){
    @Override
    public void run(){
        // do stuff
    }
}

When I run this application in the debugger, a thread is created with the following (default) name: Thread[pool-1-thread-1]. As you can see, this isn't terribly useful and as far as I can tell, the Executor framework does not provide an easy way to name the created threads or thread-pools.

So, how does one go about providing names for the threads/thread-pools? For instance, Thread[FooPool-FooThread].

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4 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

You could supply a ThreadFactory to newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor(ThreadFactory threadFactory). The factory will be responsibe for creating threads, and will be able to name them.

To quote the Javadoc:

Creating new threads

New threads are created using a ThreadFactory. If not otherwise specified, a Executors.defaultThreadFactory() is used, that creates threads to all be in the same ThreadGroup and with the same NORM_PRIORITY priority and non-daemon status. By supplying a different ThreadFactory, you can alter the thread's name, thread group, priority, daemon status, etc. If a ThreadFactory fails to create a thread when asked by returning null from newThread, the executor will continue, but might not be able to execute any tasks.

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You can try to provide your own thread factory, which will create thread with appropriate names.

class YourThreadFactory implements ThreadFactory {
   public Thread newThread(Runnable r) {
     return new Thread(r, "Your name");
   }
 }

Executors.newSingleThreadedExecutor(new YourThreadFactory()).submit(someRunnable);
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Guava almost always has what you need.

ThreadFactory namedThreadFactory = new ThreadFactoryBuilder().setNameFormat("my-sad-thread-%d").build()

and pass it off to your ExecutorService.

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The BasicThreadFactory from commons-lang is also useful to provide the naming behavior. Instead of writing an anonymous inner class, you can use the Builder to name the threads as you want. Here's the example from the javadocs:

 // Create a factory that produces daemon threads with a naming pattern and
 // a priority
 BasicThreadFactory factory = new BasicThreadFactory.Builder()
     .namingPattern("workerthread-%d")
     .daemon(true)
     .priority(Thread.MAX_PRIORITY)
     .build();
 // Create an executor service for single-threaded execution
 ExecutorService exec = Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor(factory);
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