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I'm trying to make sure my Java application takes reasonable steps to be robust, and part of that involves shutting down gracefully. I am reading about shutdown hooks and I don't actually get how to make use of them in practice.

Is there a practical example out there?

Let's say I had a really simple application like this one below, which writes numbers to a file, 10 to a line, in batches of 100, and I want to make sure a given batch finishes if the program is interrupted. I get how to register a shutdown hook but I have no idea how to integrate that into my application. Any suggestions?

package com.example.test.concurrency;

import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.PrintWriter;

public class GracefulShutdownTest1 {
    final private int N;
    final private File f;
    public GracefulShutdownTest1(File f, int N) { this.f=f; this.N = N; }

    public void run()
    {
        PrintWriter pw = null;
        try {
            FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(this.f);
            pw = new PrintWriter(fos);
            for (int i = 0; i < N; ++i)
                writeBatch(pw, i);
        }
        catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        finally
        {
            pw.close();
        }       
    }

    private void writeBatch(PrintWriter pw, int i) {
        for (int j = 0; j < 100; ++j)
        {
            int k = i*100+j;
            pw.write(Integer.toString(k));
            if ((j+1)%10 == 0)
                pw.write('\n');
            else
                pw.write(' ');
        }
    }

    static public void main(String[] args)
    {
        if (args.length < 2)
        {
            System.out.println("args = [file] [N] "
                    +"where file = output filename, N=batch count");
        }
        else
        {
            new GracefulShutdownTest1(
                    new File(args[0]), 
                    Integer.parseInt(args[1])
            ).run();
        }
    }
}
1

1 Answer 1

170

You could do the following:

  • Let the shutdown hook set some AtomicBoolean (or volatile boolean) "keepRunning" to false
  • (Optionally, .interrupt the working threads if they wait for data in some blocking call)
  • Wait for the working threads (executing writeBatch in your case) to finish, by calling the Thread.join() method on the working threads.
  • Terminate the program

Some sketchy code:

  • Add a static volatile boolean keepRunning = true;
  • In run() you change to

    for (int i = 0; i < N && keepRunning; ++i)
        writeBatch(pw, i);
    
  • In main() you add:

    final Thread mainThread = Thread.currentThread();
    Runtime.getRuntime().addShutdownHook(new Thread() {
        public void run() {
            keepRunning = false;
            mainThread.join();
        }
    });
    

That's roughly how I do a graceful "reject all clients upon hitting Control-C" in terminal.


From the docs:

When the virtual machine begins its shutdown sequence it will start all registered shutdown hooks in some unspecified order and let them run concurrently. When all the hooks have finished it will then run all uninvoked finalizers if finalization-on-exit has been enabled. Finally, the virtual machine will halt.

That is, a shutdown hook keeps the JVM running until the hook has terminated (returned from the run()-method.

9
  • 14
    Ah -- so if I understand right, the gist of what you're saying is that the shutdown hook has an opportunity to communicate with other currently-running threads, and to hold off the VM shutdown (e.g. by using Thread.join()) until it is satisfied that a quick cleanup has been completed. That's the point I was missing. thanks!
    – Jason S
    May 27, 2010 at 14:50
  • 2
    Yes. You got it. Updated the answer with a few sentences from the docs.
    – aioobe
    May 27, 2010 at 14:57
  • 1
    Sorry in advance,but shouldnt GracefulShutdownTest1 implement Runnable?
    – Victor
    Jul 18, 2013 at 20:00
  • Will this also work a GUI was started in the main thread? I know it's not the best way to do it (use EDT instead), but I'm working on old code.
    – Agostino
    Mar 10, 2014 at 9:54
  • 1
    @MartynasJusevičius, the JVM terminates when all non-daemon threads have terminated. If the mainThread is a daemon thread, then the join guarantees that we wait for it to finish before letting the JVM shut down.
    – aioobe
    Jun 20, 2019 at 14:56

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