Now since i have 2 available permits two thread can acquire the lock which defeats the purpose of argument.
It doesn't defeat the purpose of a Semaphore
. The purpose of Semaphore
is to implement the counting semaphore abstraction as described here.
Why Semaphore
doesn't honor the argument provided?
It does honor it. But the argument isn't a bound on the number of permits. Rather it represents the number of permits that initially may be acquire without blocking.
Why does it behave like that?
Because (in the opinion of the Java designers) that is the way that a counting semaphore should behave.
The standard Semaphore
class does not have a way to restrict the number of permits. If you want a lock (or a binary semaphore) you should use a Lock
class ...
But in multi threading app it is possible that release and acquire goes out of sync and it ends up calling release twice.
Yes. That would be a bug in the application.
Now ... if you wanted to detect that, you could extend the Semaphore
class and override the acquire
and release
methods to check that the number of permits stays between prescribed bounds. (You could throw an unchecked exception if the check failed. Or you could silently ignore the request ... though that sounds like a bad idea.)