I have two threads (the main thread and a worker thread).
The worker thread reads input from some socket source (via BufferedInputStream to make it possible to "go back"), packs read data into a data structure and adds the result to a BlockingQueue (which is thread-safe).
At some moment the main thread decides to finish with it and closes the BufferedInputStream.
How can the worker thread find out if the BufferedInputStream is closed?
Normally, mInputStream.read() returns -1 on EOF, but this does not happen when the stream is closed. Instead, an IOException is thrown telling me that the stream is closed.
The worker thread has to wind-up gracefully, but how does it find out that the stream is closed?
It cannot tell the reason from the exception class: the class is just IOException.
It could test if e.getMessage().contains("closed")
, but it is error-prone: on some version of Android the message may happen to be "CLOSED" or "not open", while prose like "unless closed" will result in a false positive.
The best thing that comes to my mind is:
private static boolean _isOpen(InputStream inputStream) {
try {
inputStream.available();
} catch (IOException e) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
This side effect (throwing an exception) is sort of documented, BUT testing if the stream is closed is not the primary functionality of available(); one day somebody will write an implementation that just returns 0.
Any other suggestions?
isOpen
is vulnerable for a race-condition, so that's no good either.worker.setWorking(false)
or something and aif (isWorking) { read(); }
in your worker.read()
when the stream is closed; I could check likecatch(IOException e) { if (isWorking) {...}}