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Main interface for buffers, queues, pipes, conduits, etc.
A Channel represents anything that you can put items into and take them out of. As with the Sync interface, both blocking (put(x), take), and timeouts (offer(x, msecs), poll(msecs)) policies are provided. Using a zero timeout for offer and poll results in a pure balking policy.
To aid in efforts to use Channels in a more typesafe manner, this interface extends Puttable and Takable. You can restrict arguments of instance variables to this type as a way of guaranteeing that producers never try to take, or consumers put. for example:
class Producer implements Runnable { final Puttable chan; Producer(Puttable channel) { chan = channel; } public void run() { try { for(;;) { chan.put(produce()); } } catch (InterruptedException ex) {} } Object produce() { ... } } class Consumer implements Runnable { final Takable chan; Consumer(Takable channel) { chan = channel; } public void run() { try { for(;;) { consume(chan.take()); } } catch (InterruptedException ex) {} } void consume(Object x) { ... } } class Setup { void main() { Channel chan = new SomeChannelImplementation(); Producer p = new Producer(chan); Consumer c = new Consumer(chan); new Thread(p).start(); new Thread(c).start(); } }
A given channel implementation might or might not have bounded capacity or other insertion constraints, so in general, you cannot tell if a given put will block. However, Channels that are designed to have an element capacity (and so always block when full) should implement the BoundedChannel subinterface.
Channels may hold any kind of item. However, insertion of null is not in general supported. Implementations may (all currently do) throw IllegalArgumentExceptions upon attempts to insert null.
By design, the Channel interface does not support any methods to determine the current number of elements being held in the channel. This decision reflects the fact that in concurrent programming, such methods are so rarely useful that including them invites misuse; at best they could provide a snapshot of current state, that could change immediately after being reported. It is better practice to instead use poll and offer to try to take and put elements without blocking. For example, to empty out the current contents of a channel, you could write:
try { for (;;) { Object item = channel.poll(0); if (item != null) process(item); else break; } } catch(InterruptedException ex) { ... }
However, it is possible to determine whether an item
exists in a Channel via peek
, which returns
but does NOT remove the next item that can be taken (or null
if there is no such item). The peek operation has a limited
range of applicability, and must be used with care. Unless it
is known that a given thread is the only possible consumer
of a channel, and that no time-out-based offer
operations
are ever invoked, there is no guarantee that the item returned
by peek will be available for a subsequent take.
When appropriate, you can define an isEmpty method to
return whether peek
returns null.
Also, as a compromise, even though it does not appear in interface,
implementation classes that can readily compute the number
of elements support a size()
method. This allows careful
use, for example in queue length monitors, appropriate to the
particular implementation constraints and properties.
All channels allow multiple producers and/or consumers. They do not support any kind of close method to shut down operation or indicate completion of particular producer or consumer threads. If you need to signal completion, one way to do it is to create a class such as
class EndOfStream { // Application-dependent field/methods }And to have producers put an instance of this class into the channel when they are done. The consumer side can then check this via
Object x = aChannel.take(); if (x instanceof EndOfStream) // special actions; perhaps terminate else // process normally
In time-out based methods (poll(msecs) and offer(x, msecs), time bounds are interpreted in a coarse-grained, best-effort fashion. Since there is no way in Java to escape out of a wait for a synchronized method/block, time bounds can sometimes be exceeded when there is a lot contention for the channel. Additionally, some Channel semantics entail a ``point of no return'' where, once some parts of the operation have completed, others must follow, regardless of time bound.
Interruptions are in general handled as early as possible in all methods. Normally, InterruptionExceptions are thrown in put/take and offer(msec)/poll(msec) if interruption is detected upon entry to the method, as well as in any later context surrounding waits.
If a put returns normally, an offer returns true, or a put or poll returns non-null, the operation completed successfully. In all other cases, the operation fails cleanly -- the element is not put or taken.
As with Sync classes, spinloops are not directly supported, are not particularly recommended for routine use, but are not hard to construct. For example, here is an exponential backoff version:
Object backOffTake(Channel q) throws InterruptedException { long waitTime = 0; for (;;) { Object x = q.poll(0); if (x != null) return x; else { Thread.sleep(waitTime); waitTime = 3 * waitTime / 2 + 1; } }
Sample Usage. Here is a producer/consumer design where the channel is used to hold Runnable commands representing background tasks.
class Service { private final Channel channel = ... some Channel implementation; private void backgroundTask(int taskParam) { ... } public void action(final int arg) { Runnable command = new Runnable() { public void run() { backgroundTask(arg); } }; try { channel.put(command) } catch (InterruptedException ex) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // ignore but propagate } } public Service() { Runnable backgroundLoop = new Runnable() { public void run() { for (;;) { try { Runnable task = (Runnable)(channel.take()); task.run(); } catch (InterruptedException ex) { return; } } } }; new Thread(backgroundLoop).start(); } }
[ Introduction to this package. ]
Sync
,
BoundedChannel
Method Summary | |
boolean |
offer(java.lang.Object item,
long msecs)
Place item in channel only if it can be accepted within msecs milliseconds. |
java.lang.Object |
peek()
Return, but do not remove object at head of Channel, or null if it is empty. |
java.lang.Object |
poll(long msecs)
Return and remove an item from channel only if one is available within msecs milliseconds. |
void |
put(java.lang.Object item)
Place item in the channel, possibly waiting indefinitely until it can be accepted. |
java.lang.Object |
take()
Return and remove an item from channel, possibly waiting indefinitely until such an item exists. |
Method Detail |
public void put(java.lang.Object item) throws java.lang.InterruptedException
put
in interface Puttable
item
- the element to be inserted. Should be non-null.
java.lang.InterruptedException
- if the current thread has
been interrupted at a point at which interruption
is detected, in which case the element is guaranteed not
to be inserted. Otherwise, on normal return, the element is guaranteed
to have been inserted.public boolean offer(java.lang.Object item, long msecs) throws java.lang.InterruptedException
offer
in interface Puttable
item
- the element to be inserted. Should be non-null.msecs
- the number of milliseconds to wait. If less than
or equal to zero, the method does not perform any timed waits,
but might still require
access to a synchronization lock, which can impose unbounded
delay if there is a lot of contention for the channel.
java.lang.InterruptedException
- if the current thread has
been interrupted at a point at which interruption
is detected, in which case the element is guaranteed not
to be inserted (i.e., is equivalent to a false return).public java.lang.Object take() throws java.lang.InterruptedException
take
in interface Takable
java.lang.InterruptedException
- if the current thread has
been interrupted at a point at which interruption
is detected, in which case state of the channel is unchanged.public java.lang.Object poll(long msecs) throws java.lang.InterruptedException
poll
in interface Takable
msecs
- the number of milliseconds to wait. If less than
or equal to zero, the operation does not perform any timed waits,
but might still require
access to a synchronization lock, which can impose unbounded
delay if there is a lot of contention for the channel.
java.lang.InterruptedException
- if the current thread has
been interrupted at a point at which interruption
is detected, in which case state of the channel is unchanged
(i.e., equivalent to a null return).public java.lang.Object peek()
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