/* * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ /* * This file is available under and governed by the GNU General Public * License version 2 only, as published by the Free Software Foundation. * However, the following notice accompanied the original version of this * file: * * Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166 * Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at * http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain */ package java.util.concurrent; import java.util.concurrent.atomic.*; import java.util.*; /** * A {@link ThreadPoolExecutor} that can additionally schedule * commands to run after a given delay, or to execute * periodically. This class is preferable to {@link java.util.Timer} * when multiple worker threads are needed, or when the additional * flexibility or capabilities of {@link ThreadPoolExecutor} (which * this class extends) are required. * * <p> Delayed tasks execute no sooner than they are enabled, but * without any real-time guarantees about when, after they are * enabled, they will commence. Tasks scheduled for exactly the same * execution time are enabled in first-in-first-out (FIFO) order of * submission. * * <p>While this class inherits from {@link ThreadPoolExecutor}, a few * of the inherited tuning methods are not useful for it. In * particular, because it acts as a fixed-sized pool using * {@code corePoolSize} threads and an unbounded queue, adjustments * to {@code maximumPoolSize} have no useful effect. Additionally, it * is almost never a good idea to set {@code corePoolSize} to zero or * use {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} because this may leave the pool * without threads to handle tasks once they become eligible to run. * * <p><b>Extension notes:</b> This class overrides the * {@link ThreadPoolExecutor#execute execute} and * {@link AbstractExecutorService#submit(Runnable) submit} * methods to generate internal {@link ScheduledFuture} objects to * control per-task delays and scheduling. To preserve * functionality, any further overrides of these methods in * subclasses must invoke superclass versions, which effectively * disables additional task customization. However, this class * provides alternative protected extension method * {@code decorateTask} (one version each for {@code Runnable} and * {@code Callable}) that can be used to customize the concrete task * types used to execute commands entered via {@code execute}, * {@code submit}, {@code schedule}, {@code scheduleAtFixedRate}, * and {@code scheduleWithFixedDelay}. By default, a * {@code ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor} uses a task type extending * {@link FutureTask}. However, this may be modified or replaced using * subclasses of the form: * * <pre> {@code * public class CustomScheduledExecutor extends ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor { * * static class CustomTask<V> implements RunnableScheduledFuture<V> { ... } * * protected <V> RunnableScheduledFuture<V> decorateTask( * Runnable r, RunnableScheduledFuture<V> task) { * return new CustomTask<V>(r, task); * } * * protected <V> RunnableScheduledFuture<V> decorateTask( * Callable<V> c, RunnableScheduledFuture<V> task) { * return new CustomTask<V>(c, task); * } * // ... add constructors, etc. * }}</pre> * * @since 1.5 * @author Doug Lea */ public class ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor implements ScheduledExecutorService { /* * This class specializes ThreadPoolExecutor implementation by * * 1. Using a custom task type, ScheduledFutureTask for * tasks, even those that don't require scheduling (i.e., * those submitted using ExecutorService execute, not * ScheduledExecutorService methods) which are treated as * delayed tasks with a delay of zero. * * 2. Using a custom queue (DelayedWorkQueue) based on an * unbounded DelayQueue. The lack of capacity constraint and * the fact that corePoolSize and maximumPoolSize are * effectively identical simplifies some execution mechanics * (see delayedExecute) compared to ThreadPoolExecutor * version. * * The DelayedWorkQueue class is defined below for the sake of * ensuring that all elements are instances of * RunnableScheduledFuture. Since DelayQueue otherwise * requires type be Delayed, but not necessarily Runnable, and * the workQueue requires the opposite, we need to explicitly * define a class that requires both to ensure that users don't * add objects that aren't RunnableScheduledFutures via * getQueue().add() etc. * * 3. Supporting optional run-after-shutdown parameters, which * leads to overrides of shutdown methods to remove and cancel * tasks that should NOT be run after shutdown, as well as * different recheck logic when task (re)submission overlaps * with a shutdown. * * 4. Task decoration methods to allow interception and * instrumentation, which are needed because subclasses cannot * otherwise override submit methods to get this effect. These * don't have any impact on pool control logic though. */ /** * False if should cancel/suppress periodic tasks on shutdown. */ private volatile boolean continueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdown; /** * False if should cancel non-periodic tasks on shutdown. */ private volatile boolean executeExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdown = true; /** * Sequence number to break scheduling ties, and in turn to * guarantee FIFO order among tied entries. */ private static final AtomicLong sequencer = new AtomicLong(0); /** * Returns current nanosecond time. */ final long now() { return System.nanoTime(); } private class ScheduledFutureTask<V> extends FutureTask<V> implements RunnableScheduledFuture<V> { /** Sequence number to break ties FIFO */ private final long sequenceNumber; /** The time the task is enabled to execute in nanoTime units */ private long time; /** * Period in nanoseconds for repeating tasks. A positive * value indicates fixed-rate execution. A negative value * indicates fixed-delay execution. A value of 0 indicates a * non-repeating task. */ private final long period; /** The actual task to be re-enqueued by reExecutePeriodic */ RunnableScheduledFuture<V> outerTask = this; /** * Creates a one-shot action with given nanoTime-based trigger time. */ ScheduledFutureTask(Runnable r, V result, long ns) { super(r, result); this.time = ns; this.period = 0; this.sequenceNumber = sequencer.getAndIncrement(); } /** * Creates a periodic action with given nano time and period. */ ScheduledFutureTask(Runnable r, V result, long ns, long period) { super(r, result); this.time = ns; this.period = period; this.sequenceNumber = sequencer.getAndIncrement(); } /** * Creates a one-shot action with given nanoTime-based trigger. */ ScheduledFutureTask(Callable<V> callable, long ns) { super(callable); this.time = ns; this.period = 0; this.sequenceNumber = sequencer.getAndIncrement(); } public long getDelay(TimeUnit unit) { long d = unit.convert(time - now(), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); return d; } public int compareTo(Delayed other) { if (other == this) // compare zero ONLY if same object return 0; if (other instanceof ScheduledFutureTask) { ScheduledFutureTask<?> x = (ScheduledFutureTask<?>)other; long diff = time - x.time; if (diff < 0) return -1; else if (diff > 0) return 1; else if (sequenceNumber < x.sequenceNumber) return -1; else return 1; } long d = (getDelay(TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS) - other.getDelay(TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS)); return (d == 0) ? 0 : ((d < 0) ? -1 : 1); } /** * Returns true if this is a periodic (not a one-shot) action. * * @return true if periodic */ public boolean isPeriodic() { return period != 0; } /** * Sets the next time to run for a periodic task. */ private void setNextRunTime() { long p = period; if (p > 0) time += p; else time = now() - p; } /** * Overrides FutureTask version so as to reset/requeue if periodic. */ public void run() { boolean periodic = isPeriodic(); if (!canRunInCurrentRunState(periodic)) cancel(false); else if (!periodic) ScheduledFutureTask.super.run(); else if (ScheduledFutureTask.super.runAndReset()) { setNextRunTime(); reExecutePeriodic(outerTask); } } } /** * Returns true if can run a task given current run state * and run-after-shutdown parameters. * * @param periodic true if this task periodic, false if delayed */ boolean canRunInCurrentRunState(boolean periodic) { return isRunningOrShutdown(periodic ? continueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdown : executeExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdown); } /** * Main execution method for delayed or periodic tasks. If pool * is shut down, rejects the task. Otherwise adds task to queue * and starts a thread, if necessary, to run it. (We cannot * prestart the thread to run the task because the task (probably) * shouldn't be run yet,) If the pool is shut down while the task * is being added, cancel and remove it if required by state and * run-after-shutdown parameters. * * @param task the task */ private void delayedExecute(RunnableScheduledFuture<?> task) { if (isShutdown()) reject(task); else { super.getQueue().add(task); if (isShutdown() && !canRunInCurrentRunState(task.isPeriodic()) && remove(task)) task.cancel(false); else prestartCoreThread(); } } /** * Requeues a periodic task unless current run state precludes it. * Same idea as delayedExecute except drops task rather than rejecting. * * @param task the task */ void reExecutePeriodic(RunnableScheduledFuture<?> task) { if (canRunInCurrentRunState(true)) { super.getQueue().add(task); if (!canRunInCurrentRunState(true) && remove(task)) task.cancel(false); else prestartCoreThread(); } } /** * Cancels and clears the queue of all tasks that should not be run * due to shutdown policy. Invoked within super.shutdown. */ @Override void onShutdown() { BlockingQueue<Runnable> q = super.getQueue(); boolean keepDelayed = getExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy(); boolean keepPeriodic = getContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy(); if (!keepDelayed && !keepPeriodic) q.clear(); else { // Traverse snapshot to avoid iterator exceptions for (Object e : q.toArray()) { if (e instanceof RunnableScheduledFuture) { RunnableScheduledFuture<?> t = (RunnableScheduledFuture<?>)e; if ((t.isPeriodic() ? !keepPeriodic : !keepDelayed) || t.isCancelled()) { // also remove if already cancelled if (q.remove(t)) t.cancel(false); } } } } tryTerminate(); } /** * Modifies or replaces the task used to execute a runnable. * This method can be used to override the concrete * class used for managing internal tasks. * The default implementation simply returns the given task. * * @param runnable the submitted Runnable * @param task the task created to execute the runnable * @return a task that can execute the runnable * @since 1.6 */ protected <V> RunnableScheduledFuture<V> decorateTask( Runnable runnable, RunnableScheduledFuture<V> task) { return task; } /** * Modifies or replaces the task used to execute a callable. * This method can be used to override the concrete * class used for managing internal tasks. * The default implementation simply returns the given task. * * @param callable the submitted Callable * @param task the task created to execute the callable * @return a task that can execute the callable * @since 1.6 */ protected <V> RunnableScheduledFuture<V> decorateTask( Callable<V> callable, RunnableScheduledFuture<V> task) { return task; } /** * Creates a new {@code ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor} with the * given core pool size. * * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even * if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0} */ public ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize) { super(corePoolSize, Integer.MAX_VALUE, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS, new DelayedWorkQueue()); } /** * Creates a new {@code ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor} with the * given initial parameters. * * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even * if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set * @param threadFactory the factory to use when the executor * creates a new thread * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0} * @throws NullPointerException if {@code threadFactory} is null */ public ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize, ThreadFactory threadFactory) { super(corePoolSize, Integer.MAX_VALUE, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS, new DelayedWorkQueue(), threadFactory); } /** * Creates a new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor with the given * initial parameters. * * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even * if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set * @param handler the handler to use when execution is blocked * because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0} * @throws NullPointerException if {@code handler} is null */ public ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize, RejectedExecutionHandler handler) { super(corePoolSize, Integer.MAX_VALUE, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS, new DelayedWorkQueue(), handler); } /** * Creates a new ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor with the given * initial parameters. * * @param corePoolSize the number of threads to keep in the pool, even * if they are idle, unless {@code allowCoreThreadTimeOut} is set * @param threadFactory the factory to use when the executor * creates a new thread * @param handler the handler to use when execution is blocked * because the thread bounds and queue capacities are reached * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code corePoolSize < 0} * @throws NullPointerException if {@code threadFactory} or * {@code handler} is null */ public ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(int corePoolSize, ThreadFactory threadFactory, RejectedExecutionHandler handler) { super(corePoolSize, Integer.MAX_VALUE, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS, new DelayedWorkQueue(), threadFactory, handler); } public ScheduledFuture<?> schedule(Runnable command, long delay, TimeUnit unit) { if (command == null || unit == null) throw new NullPointerException(); if (delay < 0) delay = 0; long triggerTime = now() + unit.toNanos(delay); RunnableScheduledFuture<?> t = decorateTask(command, new ScheduledFutureTask<Void>(command, null, triggerTime)); delayedExecute(t); return t; } public <V> ScheduledFuture<V> schedule(Callable<V> callable, long delay, TimeUnit unit) { if (callable == null || unit == null) throw new NullPointerException(); if (delay < 0) delay = 0; long triggerTime = now() + unit.toNanos(delay); RunnableScheduledFuture<V> t = decorateTask(callable, new ScheduledFutureTask<V>(callable, triggerTime)); delayedExecute(t); return t; } public ScheduledFuture<?> scheduleAtFixedRate(Runnable command, long initialDelay, long period, TimeUnit unit) { if (command == null || unit == null) throw new NullPointerException(); if (period <= 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException(); if (initialDelay < 0) initialDelay = 0; long triggerTime = now() + unit.toNanos(initialDelay); ScheduledFutureTask<Void> sft = new ScheduledFutureTask<Void>(command, null, triggerTime, unit.toNanos(period)); RunnableScheduledFuture<Void> t = decorateTask(command, sft); sft.outerTask = t; delayedExecute(t); return t; } public ScheduledFuture<?> scheduleWithFixedDelay(Runnable command, long initialDelay, long delay, TimeUnit unit) { if (command == null || unit == null) throw new NullPointerException(); if (delay <= 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException(); if (initialDelay < 0) initialDelay = 0; long triggerTime = now() + unit.toNanos(initialDelay); ScheduledFutureTask<Void> sft = new ScheduledFutureTask<Void>(command, null, triggerTime, unit.toNanos(-delay)); RunnableScheduledFuture<Void> t = decorateTask(command, sft); sft.outerTask = t; delayedExecute(t); return t; } /** * Executes {@code command} with zero required delay. * This has effect equivalent to * {@link #schedule(Runnable,long,TimeUnit) schedule(command, 0, anyUnit)}. * Note that inspections of the queue and of the list returned by * {@code shutdownNow} will access the zero-delayed * {@link ScheduledFuture}, not the {@code command} itself. * * <p>A consequence of the use of {@code ScheduledFuture} objects is * that {@link ThreadPoolExecutor#afterExecute afterExecute} is always * called with a null second {@code Throwable} argument, even if the * {@code command} terminated abruptly. Instead, the {@code Throwable} * thrown by such a task can be obtained via {@link Future#get}. * * @throws RejectedExecutionException at discretion of * {@code RejectedExecutionHandler}, if the task * cannot be accepted for execution because the * executor has been shut down * @throws NullPointerException {@inheritDoc} */ public void execute(Runnable command) { schedule(command, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); } // Override AbstractExecutorService methods public Future<?> submit(Runnable task) { return schedule(task, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); } public <T> Future<T> submit(Runnable task, T result) { return schedule(Executors.callable(task, result), 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); } public <T> Future<T> submit(Callable<T> task) { return schedule(task, 0, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS); } /** * Sets the policy on whether to continue executing existing * periodic tasks even when this executor has been {@code shutdown}. * In this case, these tasks will only terminate upon * {@code shutdownNow} or after setting the policy to * {@code false} when already shutdown. * This value is by default {@code false}. * * @param value if {@code true}, continue after shutdown, else don't. * @see #getContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy */ public void setContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy(boolean value) { continueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdown = value; if (!value && isShutdown()) onShutdown(); } /** * Gets the policy on whether to continue executing existing * periodic tasks even when this executor has been {@code shutdown}. * In this case, these tasks will only terminate upon * {@code shutdownNow} or after setting the policy to * {@code false} when already shutdown. * This value is by default {@code false}. * * @return {@code true} if will continue after shutdown * @see #setContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy */ public boolean getContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy() { return continueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdown; } /** * Sets the policy on whether to execute existing delayed * tasks even when this executor has been {@code shutdown}. * In this case, these tasks will only terminate upon * {@code shutdownNow}, or after setting the policy to * {@code false} when already shutdown. * This value is by default {@code true}. * * @param value if {@code true}, execute after shutdown, else don't. * @see #getExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy */ public void setExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy(boolean value) { executeExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdown = value; if (!value && isShutdown()) onShutdown(); } /** * Gets the policy on whether to execute existing delayed * tasks even when this executor has been {@code shutdown}. * In this case, these tasks will only terminate upon * {@code shutdownNow}, or after setting the policy to * {@code false} when already shutdown. * This value is by default {@code true}. * * @return {@code true} if will execute after shutdown * @see #setExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy */ public boolean getExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy() { return executeExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdown; } /** * Initiates an orderly shutdown in which previously submitted * tasks are executed, but no new tasks will be accepted. If the * {@code ExecuteExistingDelayedTasksAfterShutdownPolicy} has * been set {@code false}, existing delayed tasks whose delays * have not yet elapsed are cancelled. And unless the * {@code ContinueExistingPeriodicTasksAfterShutdownPolicy} has * been set {@code true}, future executions of existing periodic * tasks will be cancelled. */ public void shutdown() { super.shutdown(); } /** * Attempts to stop all actively executing tasks, halts the * processing of waiting tasks, and returns a list of the tasks * that were awaiting execution. * * <p>There are no guarantees beyond best-effort attempts to stop * processing actively executing tasks. This implementation * cancels tasks via {@link Thread#interrupt}, so any task that * fails to respond to interrupts may never terminate. * * @return list of tasks that never commenced execution. * Each element of this list is a {@link ScheduledFuture}, * including those tasks submitted using {@code execute}, * which are for scheduling purposes used as the basis of a * zero-delay {@code ScheduledFuture}. * @throws SecurityException {@inheritDoc} */ public List<Runnable> shutdownNow() { return super.shutdownNow(); } /** * Returns the task queue used by this executor. Each element of * this queue is a {@link ScheduledFuture}, including those * tasks submitted using {@code execute} which are for scheduling * purposes used as the basis of a zero-delay * {@code ScheduledFuture}. Iteration over this queue is * <em>not</em> guaranteed to traverse tasks in the order in * which they will execute. * * @return the task queue */ public BlockingQueue<Runnable> getQueue() { return super.getQueue(); } /** * An annoying wrapper class to convince javac to use a * DelayQueue<RunnableScheduledFuture> as a BlockingQueue<Runnable> */ private static class DelayedWorkQueue extends AbstractCollection<Runnable> implements BlockingQueue<Runnable> { private final DelayQueue<RunnableScheduledFuture> dq = new DelayQueue<RunnableScheduledFuture>(); public Runnable poll() { return dq.poll(); } public Runnable peek() { return dq.peek(); } public Runnable take() throws InterruptedException { return dq.take(); } public Runnable poll(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { return dq.poll(timeout, unit); } public boolean add(Runnable x) { return dq.add((RunnableScheduledFuture)x); } public boolean offer(Runnable x) { return dq.offer((RunnableScheduledFuture)x); } public void put(Runnable x) { dq.put((RunnableScheduledFuture)x); } public boolean offer(Runnable x, long timeout, TimeUnit unit) { return dq.offer((RunnableScheduledFuture)x, timeout, unit); } public Runnable remove() { return dq.remove(); } public Runnable element() { return dq.element(); } public void clear() { dq.clear(); } public int drainTo(Collection<? super Runnable> c) { return dq.drainTo(c); } public int drainTo(Collection<? super Runnable> c, int maxElements) { return dq.drainTo(c, maxElements); } public int remainingCapacity() { return dq.remainingCapacity(); } public boolean remove(Object x) { return dq.remove(x); } public boolean contains(Object x) { return dq.contains(x); } public int size() { return dq.size(); } public boolean isEmpty() { return dq.isEmpty(); } public Object[] toArray() { return dq.toArray(); } public <T> T[] toArray(T[] array) { return dq.toArray(array); } public Iterator<Runnable> iterator() { return new Iterator<Runnable>() { private Iterator<RunnableScheduledFuture> it = dq.iterator(); public boolean hasNext() { return it.hasNext(); } public Runnable next() { return it.next(); } public void remove() { it.remove(); } }; } } }