5

If I simply do something like this:

synchronized(taskQueue) { //taskQueue is a BlockingQueue 
  taskQueue.drainTo(tasks); //tasks is a list
}

Am I assured that concurrent calls to taskQueue.put() and taskQueue.take() can not be executed inside the synchronized block?

In other words, am I making the drainTo() method atomic?

Or more generally, how do I make a composition of thread safe operations atomic?

Example:

if(taskQueue.size() == 1) {
   /*Do a lot of things here, but I do not want other threads
     to change the size of the queue here with take or put*/
}
//taskQueue.size() must still be equal to 1

2 Answers 2

3

See below excerpt from Java docs of BlockingQueue

BlockingQueue implementations are thread-safe. All queuing methods achieve their effects atomically using internal locks or other forms of concurrency control. However, the bulk Collection operations addAll, containsAll, retainAll and removeAll are not necessarily performed atomically unless specified otherwise in an implementation. So it is possible, for example, for addAll(c) to fail (throwing an exception) after adding only some of the elements in c.

Also, check the example which shows that a BlockingQueue implementation can safely be used with multiple producers and multiple consumers.

So, if you are not using bulk Collection operations like addAll, containsAll, retainAll and removeAll then you are thread safe.

You even don't need synchronized(taskQueue) { and can directly use taskQueue.drainTo(tasks); because BlockingQueue implementations are thread-safe for non-bulk-collection operations like put, take, drainTo etc.

Hope this helps!

8
  • Thanks. In general how would you synchronize the whole queue for a sequence of thread.safe operations (to make the sequence atomic)? For example, if you want to check if the size of the queue is 0 and do something on the queue without any other concurrent operations on it (like take and put). Is synchronized enough?
    – Kami
    Jun 21, 2015 at 13:03
  • You will need explicit synchronization using synchronized methods and statement (docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/concurrency/…) only if you are not using a Java's thread-safe API. In your case, since you are using BlockingQueue and its implementations are thread safe for non-bulk-collection operations, so you need not to do an explicit synchronization. Check the examples in the link I provided, there put and take methods are used without any explicit synchronization. Jun 21, 2015 at 13:10
  • There are multiple implementations of BlockingQueue like ArrayBlockingQueue, LinkedBlockingQueue, read docs for which one suits your requirement best. Jun 21, 2015 at 13:10
  • I added another example at the end of my question. It is true that the collection is thread safe, but a composition of thread safe operations can not be atomic. Inside the if, what prevents other threads from calling take or put? Thanks!
    – Kami
    Jun 21, 2015 at 13:21
  • 2
    @jameslarge I agree that an there is no explicit contracts between Interface and implementation classes apart from normal inheritance contracts which we are aware of, but in case of BlockingQueue it is explicitly mention in Java docs that - "BlockingQueue implementations are thread-safe." and "bulk Collection operations addAll, containsAll, retainAll and removeAll are not necessarily performed atomically unless specified otherwise in an implementation" So, I don't feel the need to check the API code and verify. OP is concerned about non-bulk collection operations. Jun 21, 2015 at 18:56
3

Take a LinkedBlockingQueue as an example, it has a 'takeLock' and 'putLock' which are its member variables.

So client side synchronization dose not help here, since other 'take' actions are not guarded by this lock, even if this lock comes from the queue itself.

The drainTo() method is guarded by 'takeLock', for any other 'take' operation it's thread safe. But for the 'put' operations, they are guarded by 'putLock', so will not be affected.

So I think nothing is needed here!

3
  • Not sure I understood. I do not want any put to be performed while I am executing the drainTo() method.
    – Kami
    Jun 21, 2015 at 12:48
  • @Kami, if you use LinkedBlockingQueue, then just use drainTo() without synchronization is enough. You can read the source code if still not clear.
    – Harry.Chen
    Jun 21, 2015 at 13:03
  • I added another example at the end of my question. It is true that the collection is thread safe, but a composition of thread safe operations can not be atomic. Inside the if, what prevents other threads from calling take or put? Thanks!
    – Kami
    Jun 21, 2015 at 13:22

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