I have a WAR file deployed to Tomcat server, one of the class will get called at start up time, then the init() method will schedule a timer to fire every 5 hours to perform some tasks.
My init() code looks like this:
public void init()
{
TimerTask parserTimerTask = new TimerTask() {
@Override
public void run() {
XmlParser.parsePage();
}
};
Timer parserTimer = new Timer();
parserTimer.scheduleAtFixedRate(parserTimerTask, 0, PERIOD);
}
My application runs without problem, but when I shutdown the Tomcat using /etc/init.d/tomcat7 stop, then I check the log (catalina.out) it has a entry like this:
SEVERE: The web application [/MyApplication] appears to have started a thread named [Timer-0] but has failed to stop it. This is very likely to create a memory leak.
I understand this is caused by me schedule the timer, but my question is:
- I didn't set
setDeamon
to true, so shouldn't the timer prevent Tomcat from shutting down, rather than left running? - Can I, in my application, detect Tomcat is going to be shutdown and cancel my timer?
- What are the other solutions I can use to take care of this issue?
Thanks!
UPDATE
I changed my code to the following based on some search and DaveHowes's answer.
Timer parserTimer;
TimerTask parserTimerTask;
public void init()
{
parserTimerTask = new TimerTask() {
@Override
public void run() {
XmlParser.parsePage();
}
};
parserTimer = new Timer();
parserTimer.scheduleAtFixedRate(parserTimerTask, 0, PERIOD);
}
@Override
public void contextDestroyed(ServletContextEvent arg0) {
Logger logger = Logger.getRootLogger();
logger.info("DETECT TOMCAT SERVER IS GOING TO SHUT DOWN");
logger.info("CANCEL TIMER TASK AND TIMER");
otsParserTimerTask.cancel();
otsParserTimer.cancel();
logger.info("CANCELING COMPLETE");
}
@Override
public void contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent arg0) {
}
Now my new question:
- I cancel TimerTask first then Timer, is this correct?
- Are there other thing I should do?
Thanks!
UPDATE
It doesn't work. I put some logging statement in the contextDestroyed() method, after I shutdown Tomcat, the log file only has the following:
PowderGodAppWebService -> [07 Feb 2012 04:09:46 PM] INFO (PowderGodAppWebService.java:45):: DETECT TOMCAT SERVER IS GOING TO SHUT DOWN PowderGodAppWebService -> [07 Feb 2012 04:09:46 PM] INFO (PowderGodAppWebService.java:46):: CANCEL TIMER TASK AND TIMER
CANCELING COMPLETE is not there.
I also checked processes that are running (I'm not a Linux expert so I just use Mac's Activity Monitor.
- Make sure no java process is running
- Start Tomcat, note the PID of that java process
- Stop Tomcat
- Found the Tomcat process is gone
- Start Tomcat, note the PID of that java process
- Deploy my war file
- Sample the process, see [Timer-0] thread is there
- Shutdown Tomcat
- Found that the process is still there
- Sample the process
- See [Timer-0] is still there
FIXED
I changed my code to parserTimer = new Timer(true);
so that my timer runs as a daemon thread because the contextDestroyed()
gets called after Tomcat actually shuts down.
"All servlets and filters will have been destroyed before any ServletContextListeners are notified of context destruction."
http://docs.oracle.com/javaee/6/api/javax/servlet/ServletContextListener.html
parserTimer = new Timer(true);
does that mean the parser will continue running as a background process even after Tomcat stops? Or does it mean that it blocks Tomcat from stopping until it is finished? I'm in a very similar situation - hoping to reliably shutdown a thread when Tomcat is being stopped, and I'm not sure what works.