196

This is a poll of sorts about common concurrency problems in Java. An example might be the classic deadlock or race condition or perhaps EDT threading bugs in Swing. I'm interested both in a breadth of possible issues but also in what issues are most common. So, please leave one specific answer of a Java concurrency bug per comment and vote up if you see one you've encountered.

4
  • 19
    Why is this closed? This is useful both for other programmers begging concurrency in Java, and to have an idea of what classes of concurrency defects are being observed the most by other Java developers. Mar 31, 2013 at 1:56
  • @Longpoke The closure message explains why it's closed. This isn't a question with a specific "correct" answer, it's more of a poll/list question. And Stack Overflow does not intend to host these sort of questions. If you disagree with that policy, you may want to discuss it on meta. May 28, 2013 at 10:56
  • 8
    I guess the community disagrees as this article's getting 100+ views/day! I've found it very useful as I'm involved with the development of a static analysis tool specifically designed to fix concurrency issues contemplateltd.com/threadsafe. Having a bank of commonly encountered concurrency problems has been great for testing and improving ThreadSafe. Mar 4, 2014 at 16:35
  • Code review checklist for Java Concurrency digests most of the pitfalls mentioned in the answers to this question in a form convenient for day-to-day code reviews.
    – leventov
    Sep 1, 2019 at 16:28

49 Answers 49

183

My #1 most painful concurrency problem ever occurred when two different open source libraries did something like this:

private static final String LOCK = "LOCK";  // use matching strings 
                                            // in two different libraries

public doSomestuff() {
   synchronized(LOCK) {
       this.work();
   }
}

At first glance, this looks like a pretty trivial synchronization example. However; because Strings are interned in Java, the literal string "LOCK" turns out to be the same instance of java.lang.String (even though they are declared completely disparately from each other.) The result is obviously bad.

14
  • 63
    This is one of the reasons why I prefer private static final Object LOCK = new Object(); Jan 21, 2009 at 9:59
  • 17
    I love it - oh, this is nasty :) Jan 21, 2009 at 16:40
  • 7
    That's a good one for Java Puzzlers 2. Jan 29, 2009 at 18:30
  • 12
    Actually...it really makes me want the compiler to refuse to allow you to synchronize on a String. Given String interning, there is no case where that would be a "good thing(tm)".
    – Jared
    Feb 4, 2009 at 15:30
  • 3
    @Jared: "until the string is interned" makes no sense. Strings don't magically "become" interned. String.intern() returns a different object, unless you already have the canonical instance of the specified String. Also, all literal strings and string-valued constant expressions are interned. Always. See the docs for String.intern() and §3.10.5 of the JLS. Aug 6, 2009 at 4:21
126

The most common concurrency problem I've seen, is not realizing that a field written by one thread is not guaranteed to be seen by a different thread. A common application of this:

class MyThread extends Thread {
  private boolean stop = false;
  
  public void run() {
    while(!stop) {
      doSomeWork();
    }
  }
  
  public void setStop() {
    this.stop = true;
  }
}

As long as stop is not volatile or setStop and run are not synchronized this is not guaranteed to work. This mistake is especially devilish as in 99.999% it won't matter in practice as the reader thread will eventually see the change - but we don't know how soon he saw it.

16
  • 9
    A great solution to this is to make the stop instance variable an AtomicBoolean. It solves all the problems of the non-volatile, while shielding you from the JMM issues.
    – Kirk Wylie
    Jan 20, 2009 at 23:59
  • 39
    It's worse than 'for several minutes' -- you might NEVER see it. Under the Memory Model, the JVM is allowed to optimize while(!stop) into while(true) and then you're hosed. This may only happen on some VMs, only in server mode, only when the JVM recompiles after x iterations of the loop, etc. Ouch!
    – Cowan
    Feb 11, 2009 at 6:15
  • 2
    Why would you want to use AtomicBoolean over volatile boolean? I'm developing for version 1.4+, so are there any pitfalls with just declaring volatile?
    – Pool
    Mar 29, 2009 at 23:26
  • 2
    Nick, I think it's because atomic CAS is usually even faster than volatile. If you're developing for 1.4 your only safe option IMHO is to use synchronized as volatile in 1.4 hasn't got the strong memory barrier guarantees as it has in Java 5.
    – Kutzi
    Apr 5, 2009 at 13:04
  • 5
    @Thomas: that's because of the Java memory model. You should read about it, if you want to know it in detail (Java Concurrency in Practice by Brian Goetz explains it good e.g.). In short: unless you use memory synchronization keywords/constructs (like volatile, synchronized, AtomicXyz, but also when a Thread is finished) one Thread has NO guarantee whatsoever to see the changes made to any field done by a different thread
    – Kutzi
    Aug 24, 2010 at 14:03
65

One classic problem is changing the object you're synchronizing on while synchronizing on it:

synchronized(foo) {
  foo = ...
}

Other concurrent threads are then synchronizing on a different object and this block does not provide the mutual exclusion you expect.

10
  • 19
    There is an IDEA inspection for this called "Synchronization on non-final field unlikely to have useful semantics". Very nice.
    – Jen S.
    Jan 20, 2009 at 16:28
  • 8
    Ha...now that's a tortured description. "unlikely to have useful semantics" could better be described as "most likely broken". :) Jan 20, 2009 at 16:45
  • I think it was Bitter Java that had this in its ReadWriteLock. Fortunately we now have java.util.concurrency.locks, and Doug is a bit more on the ball. Jan 20, 2009 at 16:55
  • I also have seen this problem often. Only sync on final objects, for that matter. FindBugs et al. help, yes.
    – gimpf
    Jan 23, 2009 at 15:20
  • is this only a problem during assignment? (see @Alex Miller's example below with a Map) Would that map example have this same problem as well? Jan 26, 2009 at 14:07
50

A common problem is using classes like Calendar and SimpleDateFormat from multiple threads (often by caching them in a static variable) without synchronization. These classes are not thread-safe so multi-threaded access will ultimately cause strange problems with inconsistent state.

1
  • Do you know of any open source project containing this bug in some version of it? I'm looking for concrete examples of this bug in real world software. Sep 7, 2010 at 15:44
47

Double-Checked Locking. By and large.

The paradigm, which I started learning the problems of when I was working at BEA, is that people will check a singleton in the following way:

public Class MySingleton {
  private static MySingleton s_instance;
  public static MySingleton getInstance() {
    if(s_instance == null) {
      synchronized(MySingleton.class) { s_instance = new MySingleton(); }
    }
    return s_instance;
  }
}

This never works, because another thread might have gotten into the synchronized block and s_instance is no longer null. So the natural change is then to make it:

  public static MySingleton getInstance() {
    if(s_instance == null) {
      synchronized(MySingleton.class) {
        if(s_instance == null) s_instance = new MySingleton();
      }
    }
    return s_instance;
  }

That doesn't work either, because the Java Memory Model doesn't support it. You need to declare s_instance as volatile to make it work, and even then it only works on Java 5.

People that aren't familiar with the intricacies of the Java Memory Model mess this up all the time.

10
  • 7
    The enum singleton pattern solves all of these problems (see Josh Bloch's comments on this). The knowledge of its existence should be more widespread among Java programmers.
    – Robin
    Jan 21, 2009 at 8:59
  • I still have yet to run across a single case where lazy initialization of a singleton was actually appropriate. And if it is, just declare the method synchronized. Jan 29, 2009 at 18:32
  • 3
    This is what I use for Lazy initialization of Singleton classes. Also no synchronization required as this is guaranteed by java implicitly. class Foo { static class Holder { static Foo foo = new Foo(); } static Foo getInstance() { return Holder.foo; } } Mar 27, 2009 at 11:17
  • Irfan, that's called Pugh's method, from what I recall
    – Chris R
    May 28, 2009 at 20:52
  • @Robin, isn't it simpler to just use a static initializer? Those are always guaranteed to run synchronized.
    – matt b
    Jun 12, 2009 at 18:54
47

Not properly synchronizing on objects returned by Collections.synchronizedXXX(), especially during iteration or multiple operations:

Map<String, String> map = Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap<String, String>());

...

if(!map.containsKey("foo"))
    map.put("foo", "bar");

That's wrong. Despite single operations being synchronized, state of map between invoking contains and put can be changed by another thread. It should be:

synchronized(map) {
    if(!map.containsKey("foo"))
        map.put("foo", "bar");
}

Or with a ConcurrentMap implementation:

map.putIfAbsent("foo", "bar");
1
37

Though probably not exactly what you are asking for, the most frequent concurrency-related problem I've encountered (probably because it comes up in normal single-threaded code) is a

java.util.ConcurrentModificationException

caused by things like:

List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>(Arrays.asList("a", "b", "c"));
for (String string : list) { list.remove(string); }
1
  • No, that's totally what I'm looking for. Thanks! Jan 20, 2009 at 16:15
31

It can be easy to think synchronized collections grant you more protection than they actually do, and forget to hold the lock between calls. I have seen this mistake a few times:

 List<String> l = Collections.synchronizedList(new ArrayList<String>());
 String[] s = l.toArray(new String[l.size()]);

For example, in the second line above, the toArray() and size() methods are both thread safe in their own right, but the size() is evaluated separately from the toArray(), and the lock on the List is not held between these two calls.

If you run this code with another thread concurrently removing items from the list, sooner or later you will end up with a new String[] returned which is larger than required to hold all the elements in the list, and has null values in the tail. It is easy to think that because the two method calls to the List occur in a single line of code this is somehow an atomic operation, but it is not.

1
  • 5
    good example. I think I'd chalk this up more generally as "composition of atomic operations is not atomic". (See volatile field++ for another simple example) Jan 21, 2009 at 18:40
29

The most common bug we see where I work is programmers perform long operations, like server calls, on the EDT, locking up the GUI for a few seconds and making the app unresponsive.

2
  • one of those answers I wish I could give more than one point for
    – Epaga
    Feb 4, 2009 at 8:45
  • 3
    EDT = Event Dispatch Thread
    – mjj1409
    Jan 14, 2016 at 1:39
28

Forgetting to wait() (or Condition.await()) in a loop, checking that the waiting condition is actually true. Without this, you run into bugs from spurious wait() wakeups. Canonical usage should be:

 synchronized (obj) {
     while (<condition does not hold>) {
         obj.wait();
     }
     // do stuff based on condition being true
 }
26

Another common bug is poor exception handling. When a background thread throws an exception, if you don't handle it properly, you might not see the stack trace at all. Or perhaps your background task stops running and never starts again because you failed to handle the exception.

2
  • Yep, and there are good tools to handle this now with handlers. Jan 20, 2009 at 17:19
  • 3
    Could you post links to any articles or references that explain this in greater detail? Nov 1, 2010 at 12:19
22

Until I took a class with Brian Goetz I didn't realize that the non-synchronized getter of a private field mutated through a synchronized setter is never guaranteed to return the updated value. Only when a variable is protected by synchronized block on both reads AND writes will you get the guarantee of the latest value of the variable.

public class SomeClass{
    private Integer thing = 1;

    public synchronized void setThing(Integer thing)
        this.thing = thing;
    }

    /**
     * This may return 1 forever and ever no matter what is set
     * because the read is not synched
     */
    public Integer getThing(){
        return thing;  
    }
}
3
  • 5
    In the later JVM's (1.5 and forward, I think), the use of volatile will fix that as well. Jan 27, 2009 at 23:18
  • 2
    Not necessarily. volatile gives you the latest value so it prevents the returning of 1 forever, but it does not provide locking. Its close, but not quite the same. Mar 5, 2009 at 21:29
  • 1
    @JohnRussell I thought volatile guarantees a happen-before relationship. isn't that "locking"? "A write to a volatile variable (§8.3.1.4) v synchronizes-with all subsequent reads of v by any thread (where subsequent is defined according to the synchronization order)."
    – Shawn
    Feb 1, 2012 at 18:04
15

Thinking you are writing single-threaded code, but using mutable statics (including singletons). Obviously they will be shared between threads. This happens surprisingly often.

3
  • 3
    Yes, indeed! Mutable statics break thread confinement. Surprisingly, I never found anything about this pitfall in either JCiP or CPJ. Jan 20, 2009 at 17:43
  • I would hope this is obvious to folks doing concurrent programming. Global state should be the first place to check for thread-safety.
    – gtrak
    Jan 10, 2011 at 21:40
  • 1
    @Gary Thing is, they aren't thinking that they are doing concurrent programming. Jan 10, 2011 at 21:52
15

Arbitrary method calls should not be made from within synchronized blocks.

Dave Ray touched on this in his first answer, and in fact I also encountered a deadlock also having to do with invoking methods on listeners from within a synchronized method. I think the more general lesson is that method calls should not be made "into the wild" from within a synchronized block - you have no idea if the call will be long-running, result in deadlock, or whatever.

In this case, and usually in general, the solution was to reduce the scope of the synchronized block to just protect a critical private section of code.

Also, since we were now accessing the Collection of listeners outside of a synchronized block, we changed it to be a copy-on-write Collection. Or we could have simply made a defensive copy of the Collection. The point being, there are usually alternatives to safely access a Collection of unknown objects.

13

The most recent Concurrency-related bug I ran into was an object that in its constructor created an ExecutorService, but when the object was no longer referenced, it had never shutdown the ExecutorService. Thus, over a period of weeks, thousands of threads leaked, eventually causing the system to crash. (Technically, it didn't crash, but it did stop functioning properly, while continuing to run.)

Technically, I suppose this isn't a concurrency problem, but it's a problem relating to use of the java.util.concurrency libraries.

12

Unbalanced synchronization, particularly against Maps seems to be a fairly common problem. Many people believe that synchronizing on puts to a Map (not a ConcurrentMap, but say a HashMap) and not synchronizing on gets is sufficient. This however can lead to an infinite loop during re-hash.

The same problem (partial synchronization) can occur anywhere you have shared state with reads and writes however.

11

I encountered a concurrency problem with Servlets, when there are mutable fields which will be setted by each request. But there is only one servlet-instance for all request, so this worked perfectly in a single user environment but when more than one user requested the servlet unpredictable results occured.

public class MyServlet implements Servlet{
    private Object something;

    public void service(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response)
        throws ServletException, IOException{
        this.something = request.getAttribute("something");
        doSomething();
    }

    private void doSomething(){
        this.something ...
    }
}
10

Not exactly a bug but, the worst sin is providing a library you intend other people to use, but not stating which classes/methods are thread-safe and which ones must only be called from a single thread etc.

More people should make use of the concurrency annotations (e.g. @ThreadSafe, @GuardedBy etc) described in Goetz's book.

9

My biggest problem has always been deadlocks, especially caused by listeners that are fired with a lock held. In these cases, it's really easy to get inverted locking between two threads. In my case, between a simulation running in one thread and a visualization of the simulation running in the UI thread.

EDIT: Moved second part to separate answer.

1
  • Can you split the last one out into a separate answer? Let's keep it 1 per post. These are two really good ones. Jan 20, 2009 at 16:08
9

Starting a thread within the constructor of a class is problematic. If the class is extended, the thread can be started before subclass' constructor is executed.

8

The dumbest mistake I frequently make is forgetting to synchronize before calling notify() or wait() on an object.

2
  • 8
    Unlike most concurrency problems, isn't this one easy to find? At least you get an IllegalMonitorStateException here...
    – Tim Frey
    Jan 26, 2009 at 19:21
  • Thankfully it is very easy to find ... but it's still a dumb mistake that wastes my time more than it should :)
    – Dave Ray
    Jan 27, 2009 at 0:15
8

Mutable classes in shared data structures

Thread1:
    Person p = new Person("John");
    sharedMap.put("Key", p);
    assert(p.getName().equals("John");  // sometimes passes, sometimes fails

Thread2:
    Person p = sharedMap.get("Key");
    p.setName("Alfonso");

When this happens, the code is far more complex that this simplified example. Replicating, finding and fixing the bug is hard. Perhaps it could be avoided if we could mark certain classes as immutable and certain data structures as only holding immutable objects.

8

Synchronizing on a string literal or constant defined by a string literal is (potentially) a problem as the string literal is interned and will be shared by anyone else in the JVM using the same string literal. I know this problem has come up in application servers and other "container" scenarios.

Example:

private static final String SOMETHING = "foo";

synchronized(SOMETHING) {
   //
}

In this case, anyone using the string "foo" to lock on is sharing the same lock.

2
  • Potentially it's locked. The problem is that the semantics on WHEN Strings are interned is undefined (or, IMNSHO, underdefined). A compiler-time constant of "foo" is interned, "foo" coming in from a network interface is only interned if you make it so.
    – Kirk Wylie
    Jan 21, 2009 at 0:02
  • Right, that's why I specifically used a literal string constant, which is guaranteed to be interned. Jan 21, 2009 at 4:48
8

I believe in the future the main problem with Java will be the (lack of) visibility guarantees for constructors. For example, if you create the following class

class MyClass {
    public int a = 1;
}

and then just read the MyClass's property a from another thread, MyClass.a could be either 0 or 1, depending on the JavaVM's implementation and mood. Today the chances for 'a' being 1 are very high. But on future NUMA machines this may be different. Many people are not aware of this and believe that they don't need to care about multi-threading during the initialization phase.

4
  • I find this mildly surprising, but I know you're a smart dude Tim so I'll take it w/o a reference. :) However, if a was final, this would not be a concern, correct? You would then be bound by final freeze semantics during construction? Jan 20, 2009 at 19:49
  • I still find things in the JMM that suprise me, so I wouldn't trust me, but I am pretty sure about this. See also cs.umd.edu/~pugh/java/memoryModel/… . If the field was final it wouldn't be a problem, then it would be visible after the initialization phase.
    – Tim Jansen
    Jan 20, 2009 at 21:59
  • 2
    This is only a problem, if the reference of the freshly created instance is in use already before the constructor has returned/finished. For instance the class registers itself during construction in a public pool and other threads start to access it.
    – ReneS
    Mar 12, 2009 at 2:59
  • 3
    MyClass.a indicates static access, and 'a' is not a static member of MyClass. Other than that, it's as 'ReneS' states, this is only a problem if a reference to the uncompleted object is leaked, like adding 'this' to some external map in the constructor, for instance. Jan 25, 2011 at 7:54
7

Using a local "new Object()" as mutex.

synchronized (new Object())
{
    System.out.println("sdfs");
}

This is useless.

4
  • 2
    This is probably useless, but the act of synchronizing at all does some interesting things... Certainly creating a new Object every time is a complete waste.
    – TREE
    Jan 22, 2009 at 15:59
  • 4
    It's not useless. It's memory barrier without a lock. May 4, 2011 at 14:41
  • 1
    @David: the only problem - jvm could optimize it by removing such lock at all May 11, 2011 at 10:15
  • 1
    @insighter I see your opinion is shared ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-jtp10185/index.html I do agree that it's a silly thing to do, as you don't know when your memoery barrier will synchronize, I was just pointing out that is was doing more that nothing. Jun 2, 2011 at 16:29
7

Another common 'concurrency' issue is to use synchronized code when it is not necessary at all. For example I still see programmers using StringBuffer or even java.util.Vector (as method local variables).

1
  • 1
    This is not a problem, but unnecessary, because it tells the JVM sync the data against the global memory and therefore might run badly on multi-cpus even so, nobody uses the synchronization block in a concurrent fashion.
    – ReneS
    Mar 12, 2009 at 3:01
6

Multiple objects that are lock protected but are commonly accessed in succession. We've run into a couple of cases where the locks are obtained by different code in different orders, resulting in deadlock.

5

Not realising that the this in an inner class is not the this of the outer class. Typically in an anonymous inner class that implements Runnable. The root problem is that because synchronisation is part of all Objects there is effectively no static type checking. I've seen this at least twice on usenet, and it also appears in Brian Goetz'z Java Concurrency in Practice.

BGGA closures don't suffer from this as there is no this for the closure (this references the outer class). If you use non-this objects as locks then it gets around this problem and others.

3

Use of a global object such as a static variable for locking.

This leads to very bad performance because of contention.

2
  • Well, sometimes, sometimes not. If it would just be that easy...
    – gimpf
    Jan 23, 2009 at 15:28
  • Assuming that threading helps at all to increase performance for the problem given, it does always degrade performance as soon as more than one thread accesses code that is protected by the lock.
    – kohlerm
    Jan 28, 2009 at 11:49
3

Honesly? Prior to the advent of java.util.concurrent, the most common problem I routinely ran into was what I call "thread-thrashing": Applications that use threads for concurrency, but spawn too many of them and end up thrashing.

1
  • Are you implying that you run into more problems now that java.util.concurrent is available? Jan 21, 2009 at 10:02

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