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A field may be declared volatile, in which case the Java Memory Model ensures that all threads see a consistent value for the variable (§17.4).

This visibility safe publication guarantee applies only to primitive fields and object references. Programmers commonly use imprecise terminology and speak about "member objects." For the purposes of this visibility guarantee, the actual member is the object reference; the objects referred to (hereafter known as the referents) by volatile object references are beyond the scope of the visibility safe publication guarantee. Consequently, declaring an object reference to be volatile is insufficient to guarantee that changes to the members of the referent are visiblepublished to other threads. That is, a thread may fail to observe a recent write from another thread to a member field of such an object referent. Furthermore, when the referent is mutable and lacks thread-safety, other threads might see a partially constructed object or an object in a (temporarily) inconsistent state [Goetz 2007]. However, if when the referent is immutable, declaring the reference volatile suffices to guarantee visibility safe publication of the members of the referent. Consequently, programmers must not use the volatile keyword to guarantee visibility to safe publication of mutable objects; use of the volatile keyword to guarantee visibility only to safe publication of primitive fields, object references, or fields of immutable object referents is permitted.

Noncompliant Code Example (Arrays)

This noncompliant code example declares a volatile reference to an array object.

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Values assigned to an array element by one thread, for example, by calling setFirst(), might be invisible to unseen by another thread calling getFirst(), because the volatile keyword guarantees safe publication only makes for the array reference visible; it fails to affect makes no guarantee regarding the actual data contained within the array.

The root of the problem is that the thread that calls setFirst() and the thread that calls getFirst() lack a happens-before  relationship. A happens-before relationship exists between a thread that writes to a volatile variable and a thread that subsequently reads it. However, setFirst() and getFirst() only read from a volatile variable—the volatile reference to the array; neither method writes to the volatile variable.

Compliant Solution (AtomicIntegerArray)

To ensure that the writes to array elements are atomic and that the resulting values are visible to other threads, this compliant solution uses the AtomicIntegerArray class defined in java.util.concurrent.atomic.

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AtomicIntegerArray guarantees a happens-before relationship between a thread that calls atomicArray.set() and a thread that subsequently calls atomicArray.get().

Compliant Solution (Synchronization)

To ensure visibility, accessor methods may synchronize access while performing operations on nonvolatile elements of an array, whether it is referred to by a volatile or a nonvolatile reference. Note that the code is thread-safe even though the array reference is not volatile.

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Synchronization establishes a happens-before relationship between threads that synchronize on the same lock. In this case, the thread that calls setFirst() and the thread that subsequently calls getFirst() both synchronize on the Foo instance, so visibility safe publication is guaranteed.

Noncompliant Code Example (Mutable Object)

This noncompliant code example declares the Map instance field volatile. The instance of the Map object can be mutated using the put() method; consequently, it is a mutable object.

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The put() method lacks a time-of-check, time-of-use (TOCTOU) vulnerability, despite the presence of the validation logic, because the validation is performed on the immutable value argument rather than on the shared Map instance.

Noncompliant Code Example (Volatile-Read, Synchronized-Write)

This noncompliant code example attempts to use the volatile-read, synchronized-write technique described by Goetz [Goetz 2007]. The map field is declared volatile to synchronize its reads and writes. The put() method is also synchronized to ensure that its statements are executed atomically.

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The volatile-read, synchronized-write technique uses synchronization to preserve atomicity of compound operations, such as increment, and provides faster access times for atomic reads. However, it does not work with fails for mutable objects because the visibility guarantee safe publication  guarantee provided by volatile extends only to the field itself (the primitive value or object reference); the referent (and hence the referent's members) is excluded from the guarantee. Consequently, the write and a subsequent read of the map lack a happens-before relationship.

This technique is also discussed in VNA02-J. Ensure that compound operations on shared variables are atomic.

Compliant Solution (Synchronized)

This compliant solution uses method synchronization to guarantee visibility.

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It is unnecessary to declare the map field volatile because the accessor methods are synchronized. The field is declared final to prevent publication of its reference when the referent is in a partially initialized state (see rule TSM03-J. Do not publish partially initialized objects for more information).

Noncompliant Code Example (Mutable Subobject)

In this noncompliant code example, the volatile format field stores a reference to a mutable object, java.text.DateFormat.

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Because DateFormat is not thread-safe [API 2011] Class DateFormat, the value for Date returned by the parse() method might fail to correspond to the str argument.

Compliant Solution (Instance per Call/Defensive Copying)

This compliant solution creates and returns a new DateFormat instance for each invocation of the parse() method [API 2011] Class DateFormat.

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This solution complies with rule OBJ05-J. Defensively copy private mutable class members before returning their references because the class no longer contains internal mutable state.

Compliant Solution (Synchronization)

This compliant solution makes DateHandler thread-safe by synchronizing statements within the parse() method [API 2011] Class DateFormat.

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
final class DateHandler {
  private static DateFormat format =
    DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.MEDIUM);

  public static java.util.Date parse(String str) throws ParseException {
    synchronized (format) {
      return format.parse(str);
    }
  }
}

Compliant Solution (ThreadLocal Storage)

This compliant solution uses a ThreadLocal object to create a separate DateFormat instance per thread.

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
final class DateHandler {
  private static final ThreadLocal<DateFormat> format = new ThreadLocal<DateFormat>() {
    @Override protected DateFormat initialValue() {
      return DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.MEDIUM);
    }
  };
  // ...
}

Applicability

Incorrectly assuming that declaring a field volatile guarantees the visibility safe publication of a referenced object's members can cause threads to observe stale or inconsistent values.

Technically, strict immutability of the referent is a stronger condition than is fundamentally required for safe visibilitypublication. When it can be determined that a referent is thread-safe by design, the field that holds its reference may be declared volatile. However, this approach to using volatile decreases maintainability and should be avoided.

Bibliography

[API 2011]

Class DateFormat

[Goetz 2007]

Pattern #2: "One-time safe publication"

[JLS 2011]

§8.3.1.4, volatile Fields

[Miller 2009]

Mutable Statics

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