A timed wait is simply a thread which is blocked on some O/S level call which has a timeout specified, such as a simple wait primitive (Object.wait()
) or a socket operation (Socket read()/write()
), a thread queue etc. It's quite normal for any complex program to have several or many of these - I have an application server which routinely has hundreds, even thousands.
Your threads may be backing up on non-responsive connections and may not be misbehaving at all, per se. It may simply be that you need to program them to detect and abort an idle connection.
Click on each of the threads which you are concerned about and analyze their stack trace for how they got there.
Most decent profiling tools (and application containers) will have the option of printing a full stack trace, and more modern ones will do a dead-lock and live-lock analysis for you. The JVisualVM tool distributed with Sun's JDK and available on the net as VisualVM will do this and it's very effective. Most decent profilers will also show lock acquisition in the stack trace (yours, above, is not in that view).
Otherwise, you are looking for two or more threads contending for the same lock or acquiring the same locks in a different order. You may need to do this manually by actually examining the source and annotating your stack trace, but you should be able to whittle down likely candidates if your tool doesn't point right to the conflicting threads.