A thread that invokes wait()
expects to wake up and resume execution when its condition predicate becomes true. Waiting threads must test their condition predicates upon receiving notifications and resume waiting if the predicates are false, to be compliant with rule THI03-J. Always invoke wait() and await() methods inside a loop.
The notify()
and notifyAll()
methods of package java.lang.Object
are used to wake up waiting thread(s). These methods must be invoked from code that holds the same object lock as the waiting thread(s). An IllegalMonitorStateException
is thrown if the current thread does not acquire this object's intrinsic lock before invoking these methods. The notifyAll()
method wakes up all threads and allows threads whose condition predicate is true to resume execution. Furthermore, if all the threads whose condition predicate evaluates to true previously held a specific lock before going into the wait state, only one of them will reacquire the lock upon being notified. Presumably, the other threads will resume waiting. The notify()
method wakes up only one thread and makes no guarantees as to which thread is notified. If the thread's condition predicate doesn't allow the thread to proceed, the chosen thread may resume waiting, defeating the purpose of the notification.
The notify()
method may only be invoked if all of the following conditions are met:
- The condition predicate is identical for each waiting thread.
- All threads must perform the same set of operations after waking up. This means that any one thread can be selected to wake up and resume for a single invocation of
notify()
. - Only one thread is required to wake upon the notification.
These conditions are satisfied by threads that are identical and provide a stateless service or utility.
The java.util.concurrent
utilities (Condition
interface) provide the signal()
and signalAll()
methods to awaken threads that are blocked on an await()
call. Condition
objects are required when using Lock
objects. A Lock
object allows the use of wait()
and notify()
methods. However, code that synchronizes using a Lock
object does not use its own intrinsic lock. Instead, one or more Condition
objects are associated with the Lock
object. These objects interact directly with the locking policy enforced by the Lock
object. Consequently, the Condition.await()
, Condition.signal()
, and Condition.signalAll()
methods are used instead of Object.wait()
, Object.notify()
, and Object.notifyAll()
.
The use of the signal()
method is insecure when multiple threads await the same Condition
object unless the following conditions are met:
- The
Condition
object is identical for each waiting thread. - All threads must perform the same set of operations after waking up. This means that any one thread can be selected to wake up and resume for a single invocation of
signal()
. - Only one thread is required to wake upon receiving the signal.
The signal()
method may also be invoked when both of the following conditions are met:
- Each thread uses a unique
Condition
object. - Each
Condition
object is associated with a commonLock
object.
The signal()
method, if used securely, has better performance than signalAll()
.
Noncompliant Code Example (notify()
)
This noncompliant code example shows a complex multistep process being undertaken by several threads. Each thread executes the step identified by the time field. Each thread waits for the time
field to indicate that it is time to perform the corresponding thread's step. After performing the step, each thread increments time
and then notifies the thread that is responsible for the next step.
public final class ProcessStep implements Runnable { private static final Object lock = new Object(); private static int time = 0; private final int step; // Do operations when field time reaches this value public ProcessStep(int step) { this.step = step; } @Override public void run() { try { synchronized (lock) { while (time != step) { lock.wait(); } // Perform operations time++; lock.notify(); } } catch (InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } public static void main(String[] args) { for (int i = 4; i >= 0; i--) { new Thread(new ProcessStep(i)).start(); } } }
This noncompliant code example violates the liveness property. Each thread has a different condition predicate because each requires step
to have a different value before proceeding. The Object.notify()
method wakes up only one thread at a time. Unless it happens to wake up the thread that is required to perform the next step, the program will deadlock.
Compliant Solution (notifyAll()
)
In this compliant solution, each thread completes its step and then calls notifyAll()
to notify the waiting threads. The thread that is ready can then perform its task, while all the threads whose condition predicates are false (loop condition expression is true) promptly resume waiting.
Only the run()
method from the noncompliant code example is modified, as follows:
@Override public void run() { try { synchronized (lock) { while (time != step) { lock.wait(); } // Perform operations time++; lock.notifyAll(); // Use notifyAll() instead of notify() } } catch (InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } }
Noncompliant Code Example (Condition
Interface)
This noncompliant code example is similar to the noncompliant code example for notify()
but uses the Condition
interface for waiting and notification.
public class ProcessStep implements Runnable { private static final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock(); private static final Condition condition = lock.newCondition(); private static int time = 0; private final int step; // Do operations when field time reaches this value public ProcessStep(int step) { this.step = step; } @Override public void run() { lock.lock(); try { while (time != step) { condition.await(); } // Perform operations time++; condition.signal(); } catch (InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } finally { lock.unlock(); } } public static void main(String[] args) { for (int i = 4; i >= 0; i--) { new Thread(new ProcessStep(i)).start(); } } }
As with Object.notify()
, the signal()
method may awaken an arbitrary thread.
Compliant Solution (signalAll()
)
This compliant solution uses the signalAll()
method to notify all waiting threads. Before await()
returns, the current thread reacquires the lock associated with this condition. When the thread returns, it is guaranteed to hold this lock [[API 2006]] The thread that is ready can perform its task, while all the threads whose condition predicates are false resume waiting.
Only the run()
method from the noncompliant code example is modified, as follows:
@Override public void run() { lock.lock(); try { while (time != step) { condition.await(); } // Perform operations time++; condition.signalAll(); } catch (InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } finally { lock.unlock(); } }
Compliant Solution (Unique Condition Per Thread)
This compliant solution assigns each thread its own condition. All the Condition
objects are accessible to all the threads.
// Declare class as final because its constructor throws an exception public final class ProcessStep implements Runnable { private static final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock(); private static int time = 0; private final int step; // Do operations when field time reaches this value private static final int MAX_STEPS = 5; private static final Condition[] conditions = new Condition[MAX_STEPS]; public ProcessStep(int step) { if (step <= MAX_STEPS) { this.step = step; conditions[step] = lock.newCondition(); } else { throw new IllegalArgumentException("Too many threads"); } } @Override public void run() { lock.lock(); try { while (time != step) { conditions[step].await(); } // Perform operations time++; if (step + 1 < conditions.length) { conditions[step + 1].signal(); } } catch (InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } finally { lock.unlock(); } } public static void main(String[] args) { for (int i = MAX_STEPS - 1; i >= 0; i--) { ProcessStep ps = new ProcessStep(i); new Thread(ps).start(); } } }
Even though the signal()
method is used, only the thread whose condition predicate corresponds to the unique Condition
variable will awaken.
This compliant solution is safe only if untrusted code cannot create a thread with an instance of this class.
Risk Assessment
Notifying a single thread instead of all waiting threads can pose a threat to the liveness property of the system.
Guideline |
Severity |
Likelihood |
Remediation Cost |
Priority |
Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
THI04-J |
low |
unlikely |
medium |
P2 |
L3 |
Automated Detection
TODO
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Bibliography
[[API 2006]] java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition
interface
[[JLS 2005]] Chapter 17, Threads and Locks
[[Goetz 2006]] Section 14.2.4, Notification
[[Bloch 2001]] Item 50: Never invoke wait outside a loop