Tuesday 18 August 2015

Working of CountDownLatch and Its usage

This class enables a java thread to wait until other set of threads completes their tasks.

CountDownLatch works by having a counter initialized with number of threads, which is decremented each time a thread complete its execution. When count reaches to zero, it means all threads have completed their execution, and thread waiting on latch resume the execution.

A CountDownLatch is initialized with a given count and await() methods block until the current count reaches zero due to invocations of the countDown() method, after which all waiting threads are released and any subsequent invocations of await return immediately.

This is a one-shot phenomenon i.e the count cannot be reset. If you need a version that resets the count, consider using a CyclicBarrier.

Sample usage:

Here is a pair of classes in which a group of worker threads use two countdown latches:

The first is a start signal that prevents any worker from proceeding until the driver is ready for them to proceed.

The second is a completion signal that allows the driver to wait until all workers have completed.

 class Driver { // ...
                void main() throws InterruptedException {
                                CountDownLatch startSignal = new CountDownLatch(1);
                                CountDownLatch doneSignal = new CountDownLatch(N);

                                for (int i = 0; i < N; ++i) // create and start threads
                                                new Thread(new Worker(startSignal, doneSignal)).start();

                                doSomethingElse();            // don't let run yet
                                startSignal.countDown();      // let all threads proceed
                                doSomethingElse();
                                doneSignal.await();           // wait for all to finish
                }
}

class Worker implements Runnable {
                private final CountDownLatch startSignal;
                private final CountDownLatch doneSignal;
                Worker(CountDownLatch startSignal, CountDownLatch doneSignal) {
                                this.startSignal = startSignal;
                                this.doneSignal = doneSignal;
                }
                public void run() {
                                try {
                                                startSignal.await();
                                                doWork();
                                                doneSignal.countDown();
                                } catch (InterruptedException ex) {} // return;
                }

                void doWork() { ... }
}

Another typical usage would be to divide a problem into N parts, describe each part with a Runnable that executes that portion and counts down on the latch, and queue all the Runnables to an Executor.

When all sub-parts are complete, the coordinating thread will be able to pass through await. (When threads must repeatedly count down in this way, instead use a CyclicBarrier).

class Driver2 { // ...
                void main() throws InterruptedException {
                                CountDownLatch doneSignal = new CountDownLatch(N);
                                Executor e = ...

                                for (int i = 0; i < N; ++i) // create and start threads
                                                e.execute(new WorkerRunnable(doneSignal, i));

                                doneSignal.await();           // wait for all to finish
                }
}

class WorkerRunnable implements Runnable {
                private final CountDownLatch doneSignal;
                private final int i;
                WorkerRunnable(CountDownLatch doneSignal, int i) {
                                this.doneSignal = doneSignal;
                                this.i = i;
                }
                public void run() {
                                try {
                                                doWork(i);
                                                doneSignal.countDown();
                                } catch (InterruptedException ex) {} // return;
                }

                void doWork() { ... }
}

Memory consistency effects: Until the count reaches zero, actions in a thread prior to calling countDown() happen-before actions following a successful return from a corresponding await() in another thread.

Working of CountDownLatch

public void CountDownLatch(int count) {...}
Constructs a CountDownLatch initialized with the given count. This count is essentially the number of threads, for which latch should wait.

CountDownLatch.await()
Any thread, usually main thread of application, which calls CountDownLatch.await() will wait until count reaches zero or its interrupted by another Thread.

CountDownLatch.countDown()
Each invocation of method decreases the initial count set in constructor, by 1. So, when all N threads have call this method, count reaches to zero, and main thread is allowed to resume its execution past await() method.

Usages of CountDownLatch in java

1. Achieving Maximum Parallelism: Sometimes we want to start a number of threads at the same time to achieve maximum parallelism.

For example, we want to test a class for being singleton. This can be done easily if we create a CountDownLatch with initial count 1, and make wait all threads to wait of latch. A single call to countDown() method will resume execution for all waiting threads in same time.

2. Wait N threads to complete before start execution: For example an application start-up class wants to ensure that all N external systems are UP and running before handling the user requests.

3. Deadlock detection: A very handy use case in which you can use N threads to access a shared resource with different number of threads in each test phase, and try to create a deadlock.

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