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According to the Java Language Specification, §17.3, "Sleep and Yield" [JLS 2013],

It is important to note that neither Thread.sleep nor Thread.yield have any synchronization semantics. In particular, the compiler does not have to flush writes cached in registers out to shared memory before a call to Thread.sleep or Thread.yield, nor does the compiler have to reload values cached in registers after a call to Thread.sleep or Thread.yield.

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is incorrect and is consequently disallowed. Programs must ensure that communication between threads has proper synchronization, happens-before, and safe publication semantics.

Noncompliant Code Example (sleep())

This noncompliant code attempts to use the nonvolatile primitive Boolean member done as a flag to terminate execution of a thread. A separate thread sets done to true by calling the shutdown() method.

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The compiler, in this case, is free to read the field this.done once and to reuse the cached value in each execution of the loop. Consequently, the while loop might never terminate, even when another thread calls the shutdown() method to change the value of this.done [JLS 2013]. This error could have resulted from the programmer incorrectly assuming that the call to Thread.sleep() causes cached values to be reloaded.

Compliant Solution (Volatile Flag)

This compliant solution declares the flag field volatile to ensure that updates to its value are made visible across multiple threads:

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The volatile keyword establishes a happens-before relationship between this thread and any other thread that sets done.

Compliant Solution (Thread.interrupt())

A better solution for methods that call sleep() is to use thread interruption, which causes the sleeping thread to wake immediately and handle the interruption.

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Note that the interrupting thread must know which thread to interrupt; logic for tracking this relationship has been omitted from this solution.

Noncompliant Code Example (getState())

This noncompliant code example contains a doSomething() method that starts a thread. The thread supports interruption by checking a flag and waits until notified. The stop() method checks to see whether the thread is blocked on the wait; if so, it sets the flag to true and notifies the thread so that the thread can terminate.

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Unfortunately, the stop() method incorrectly uses the Thread.getState() method to check whether the thread is blocked and has not terminated before delivering the notification. Using the Thread.getState() method for synchronization control, such as checking whether a thread is blocked on a wait, is inappropriate. Java Virtual Machines (JVMs) are permitted to implement blocking using spin-waiting; consequently, a thread can be blocked without entering the WAITING or TIMED_WAITING state [Goetz 2006]. Because the thread may never enter the WAITING state, the stop() method might fail to terminate the thread.

If doSomething() and stop() are called from different threads, the stop() method could fail to see the initialized thread, even though doSomething() was called earlier, unless there is a happens-before relationship between the two calls. If the two methods are invoked by the same thread, they automatically have a happens-before relationship and consequently cannot encounter this problem.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution removes the check for determining whether the thread is in the WAITING state. This check is unnecessary because invoking notifyAll() affects only threads that are blocked on an invocation of wait():

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
public class Waiter {
  // ...
  private Thread thread;
  private volatile boolean flag;
  private final Object lock = new Object();

  public boolean stop() {
    if (thread != null) {
      synchronized (lock) {
        flag = true;
        lock.notifyAll();
      }
      return true;
    }
    return false;
  }
}

Applicability

Relying on the Thread class's sleep(), yield(), and getState() methods for synchronization control can cause unexpected behavior.

Bibliography

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