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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2011 The Guava Authors
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except
 * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License
 * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express
 * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
 * the License.
 */

package com.google.common.util.concurrent;

import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;

import com.google.common.annotations.Beta;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible;
import com.google.common.annotations.VisibleForTesting;
import com.google.common.base.MoreObjects;
import com.google.common.base.Preconditions;
import com.google.common.collect.ImmutableSet;
import com.google.common.collect.Lists;
import com.google.common.collect.MapMaker;
import com.google.common.collect.Maps;
import com.google.common.collect.Sets;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import com.google.j2objc.annotations.Weak;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.EnumMap;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Map.Entry;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentMap;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantReadWriteLock;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable;

/**
 * The {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory} creates {@link ReentrantLock} instances and {@link
 * ReentrantReadWriteLock} instances that detect potential deadlock by checking for cycles in lock
 * acquisition order.
 *
 * 

Potential deadlocks detected when calling the {@code lock()}, {@code lockInterruptibly()}, or * {@code tryLock()} methods will result in the execution of the {@link Policy} specified when * creating the factory. The currently available policies are: * *

    *
  • DISABLED *
  • WARN *
  • THROW *
* *

The locks created by a factory instance will detect lock acquisition cycles with locks created * by other {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory} instances (except those with {@code Policy.DISABLED}). * A lock's behavior when a cycle is detected, however, is defined by the {@code Policy} of the * factory that created it. This allows detection of cycles across components while delegating * control over lock behavior to individual components. * *

Applications are encouraged to use a {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory} to create any locks for * which external/unmanaged code is executed while the lock is held. (See caveats under * Performance). * *

Cycle Detection * *

Deadlocks can arise when locks are acquired in an order that forms a cycle. In a simple * example involving two locks and two threads, deadlock occurs when one thread acquires Lock A, and * then Lock B, while another thread acquires Lock B, and then Lock A: * *

 * Thread1: acquire(LockA) --X acquire(LockB)
 * Thread2: acquire(LockB) --X acquire(LockA)
 * 
* *

Neither thread will progress because each is waiting for the other. In more complex * applications, cycles can arise from interactions among more than 2 locks: * *

 * Thread1: acquire(LockA) --X acquire(LockB)
 * Thread2: acquire(LockB) --X acquire(LockC)
 * ...
 * ThreadN: acquire(LockN) --X acquire(LockA)
 * 
* *

The implementation detects cycles by constructing a directed graph in which each lock * represents a node and each edge represents an acquisition ordering between two locks. * *

    *
  • Each lock adds (and removes) itself to/from a ThreadLocal Set of acquired locks when the * Thread acquires its first hold (and releases its last remaining hold). *
  • Before the lock is acquired, the lock is checked against the current set of acquired * locks---to each of the acquired locks, an edge from the soon-to-be-acquired lock is either * verified or created. *
  • If a new edge needs to be created, the outgoing edges of the acquired locks are traversed * to check for a cycle that reaches the lock to be acquired. If no cycle is detected, a new * "safe" edge is created. *
  • If a cycle is detected, an "unsafe" (cyclic) edge is created to represent a potential * deadlock situation, and the appropriate Policy is executed. *
* *

Note that detection of potential deadlock does not necessarily indicate that deadlock will * happen, as it is possible that higher level application logic prevents the cyclic lock * acquisition from occurring. One example of a false positive is: * *

 * LockA -> LockB -> LockC
 * LockA -> LockC -> LockB
 * 
* *

ReadWriteLocks * *

While {@code ReadWriteLock} instances have different properties and can form cycles without * potential deadlock, this class treats {@code ReadWriteLock} instances as equivalent to * traditional exclusive locks. Although this increases the false positives that the locks detect * (i.e. cycles that will not actually result in deadlock), it simplifies the algorithm and * implementation considerably. The assumption is that a user of this factory wishes to eliminate * any cyclic acquisition ordering. * *

Explicit Lock Acquisition Ordering * *

The {@link CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering} class can be used to enforce an * application-specific ordering in addition to performing general cycle detection. * *

Garbage Collection * *

In order to allow proper garbage collection of unused locks, the edges of the lock graph are * weak references. * *

Performance * *

The extra bookkeeping done by cycle detecting locks comes at some cost to performance. * Benchmarks (as of December 2011) show that: * *

    *
  • for an unnested {@code lock()} and {@code unlock()}, a cycle detecting lock takes 38ns as * opposed to the 24ns taken by a plain lock. *
  • for nested locking, the cost increases with the depth of the nesting: *
      *
    • 2 levels: average of 64ns per lock()/unlock() *
    • 3 levels: average of 77ns per lock()/unlock() *
    • 4 levels: average of 99ns per lock()/unlock() *
    • 5 levels: average of 103ns per lock()/unlock() *
    • 10 levels: average of 184ns per lock()/unlock() *
    • 20 levels: average of 393ns per lock()/unlock() *
    *
* *

As such, the CycleDetectingLockFactory may not be suitable for performance-critical * applications which involve tightly-looped or deeply-nested locking algorithms. * * @author Darick Tong * @since 13.0 */ @Beta @CanIgnoreReturnValue // TODO(cpovirk): Consider being more strict. @GwtIncompatible public class CycleDetectingLockFactory { /** * Encapsulates the action to be taken when a potential deadlock is encountered. Clients can use * one of the predefined {@link Policies} or specify a custom implementation. Implementations must * be thread-safe. * * @since 13.0 */ @Beta public interface Policy { /** * Called when a potential deadlock is encountered. Implementations can throw the given {@code * exception} and/or execute other desired logic. * *

Note that the method will be called even upon an invocation of {@code tryLock()}. Although * {@code tryLock()} technically recovers from deadlock by eventually timing out, this behavior * is chosen based on the assumption that it is the application's wish to prohibit any cyclical * lock acquisitions. */ void handlePotentialDeadlock(PotentialDeadlockException exception); } /** * Pre-defined {@link Policy} implementations. * * @since 13.0 */ @Beta public enum Policies implements Policy { /** * When potential deadlock is detected, this policy results in the throwing of the {@code * PotentialDeadlockException} indicating the potential deadlock, which includes stack traces * illustrating the cycle in lock acquisition order. */ THROW { @Override public void handlePotentialDeadlock(PotentialDeadlockException e) { throw e; } }, /** * When potential deadlock is detected, this policy results in the logging of a {@link * Level#SEVERE} message indicating the potential deadlock, which includes stack traces * illustrating the cycle in lock acquisition order. */ WARN { @Override public void handlePotentialDeadlock(PotentialDeadlockException e) { logger.log(Level.SEVERE, "Detected potential deadlock", e); } }, /** * Disables cycle detection. This option causes the factory to return unmodified lock * implementations provided by the JDK, and is provided to allow applications to easily * parameterize when cycle detection is enabled. * *

Note that locks created by a factory with this policy will not participate the * cycle detection performed by locks created by other factories. */ DISABLED { @Override public void handlePotentialDeadlock(PotentialDeadlockException e) {} }; } /** Creates a new factory with the specified policy. */ public static CycleDetectingLockFactory newInstance(Policy policy) { return new CycleDetectingLockFactory(policy); } /** Equivalent to {@code newReentrantLock(lockName, false)}. */ public ReentrantLock newReentrantLock(String lockName) { return newReentrantLock(lockName, false); } /** * Creates a {@link ReentrantLock} with the given fairness policy. The {@code lockName} is used in * the warning or exception output to help identify the locks involved in the detected deadlock. */ public ReentrantLock newReentrantLock(String lockName, boolean fair) { return policy == Policies.DISABLED ? new ReentrantLock(fair) : new CycleDetectingReentrantLock(new LockGraphNode(lockName), fair); } /** Equivalent to {@code newReentrantReadWriteLock(lockName, false)}. */ public ReentrantReadWriteLock newReentrantReadWriteLock(String lockName) { return newReentrantReadWriteLock(lockName, false); } /** * Creates a {@link ReentrantReadWriteLock} with the given fairness policy. The {@code lockName} * is used in the warning or exception output to help identify the locks involved in the detected * deadlock. */ public ReentrantReadWriteLock newReentrantReadWriteLock(String lockName, boolean fair) { return policy == Policies.DISABLED ? new ReentrantReadWriteLock(fair) : new CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock(new LockGraphNode(lockName), fair); } // A static mapping from an Enum type to its set of LockGraphNodes. private static final ConcurrentMap, Map> lockGraphNodesPerType = new MapMaker().weakKeys().makeMap(); /** Creates a {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering}. */ public static > WithExplicitOrdering newInstanceWithExplicitOrdering( Class enumClass, Policy policy) { // createNodes maps each enumClass to a Map with the corresponding enum key // type. checkNotNull(enumClass); checkNotNull(policy); @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") Map lockGraphNodes = (Map) getOrCreateNodes(enumClass); return new WithExplicitOrdering(policy, lockGraphNodes); } private static Map getOrCreateNodes(Class clazz) { Map existing = lockGraphNodesPerType.get(clazz); if (existing != null) { return existing; } Map created = createNodes(clazz); existing = lockGraphNodesPerType.putIfAbsent(clazz, created); return MoreObjects.firstNonNull(existing, created); } /** * For a given Enum type, creates an immutable map from each of the Enum's values to a * corresponding LockGraphNode, with the {@code allowedPriorLocks} and {@code * disallowedPriorLocks} prepopulated with nodes according to the natural ordering of the * associated Enum values. */ @VisibleForTesting static > Map createNodes(Class clazz) { EnumMap map = Maps.newEnumMap(clazz); E[] keys = clazz.getEnumConstants(); final int numKeys = keys.length; ArrayList nodes = Lists.newArrayListWithCapacity(numKeys); // Create a LockGraphNode for each enum value. for (E key : keys) { LockGraphNode node = new LockGraphNode(getLockName(key)); nodes.add(node); map.put(key, node); } // Pre-populate all allowedPriorLocks with nodes of smaller ordinal. for (int i = 1; i < numKeys; i++) { nodes.get(i).checkAcquiredLocks(Policies.THROW, nodes.subList(0, i)); } // Pre-populate all disallowedPriorLocks with nodes of larger ordinal. for (int i = 0; i < numKeys - 1; i++) { nodes.get(i).checkAcquiredLocks(Policies.DISABLED, nodes.subList(i + 1, numKeys)); } return Collections.unmodifiableMap(map); } /** * For the given Enum value {@code rank}, returns the value's {@code "EnumClass.name"}, which is * used in exception and warning output. */ private static String getLockName(Enum rank) { return rank.getDeclaringClass().getSimpleName() + "." + rank.name(); } /** * A {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering} provides the additional enforcement of * an application-specified ordering of lock acquisitions. The application defines the allowed * ordering with an {@code Enum} whose values each correspond to a lock type. The order in which * the values are declared dictates the allowed order of lock acquisition. In other words, locks * corresponding to smaller values of {@link Enum#ordinal()} should only be acquired before locks * with larger ordinals. Example: * *

{@code
   * enum MyLockOrder {
   *   FIRST, SECOND, THIRD;
   * }
   *
   * CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering factory =
   *   CycleDetectingLockFactory.newInstanceWithExplicitOrdering(Policies.THROW);
   *
   * Lock lock1 = factory.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.FIRST);
   * Lock lock2 = factory.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.SECOND);
   * Lock lock3 = factory.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.THIRD);
   *
   * lock1.lock();
   * lock3.lock();
   * lock2.lock();  // will throw an IllegalStateException
   * }
* *

As with all locks created by instances of {@code CycleDetectingLockFactory} explicitly * ordered locks participate in general cycle detection with all other cycle detecting locks, and * a lock's behavior when detecting a cyclic lock acquisition is defined by the {@code Policy} of * the factory that created it. * *

Note, however, that although multiple locks can be created for a given Enum value, whether * it be through separate factory instances or through multiple calls to the same factory, * attempting to acquire multiple locks with the same Enum value (within the same thread) will * result in an IllegalStateException regardless of the factory's policy. For example: * *

{@code
   * CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering factory1 =
   *   CycleDetectingLockFactory.newInstanceWithExplicitOrdering(...);
   * CycleDetectingLockFactory.WithExplicitOrdering factory2 =
   *   CycleDetectingLockFactory.newInstanceWithExplicitOrdering(...);
   *
   * Lock lockA = factory1.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.FIRST);
   * Lock lockB = factory1.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.FIRST);
   * Lock lockC = factory2.newReentrantLock(MyLockOrder.FIRST);
   *
   * lockA.lock();
   *
   * lockB.lock();  // will throw an IllegalStateException
   * lockC.lock();  // will throw an IllegalStateException
   *
   * lockA.lock();  // reentrant acquisition is okay
   * }
* *

It is the responsibility of the application to ensure that multiple lock instances with the * same rank are never acquired in the same thread. * * @param The Enum type representing the explicit lock ordering. * @since 13.0 */ @Beta public static final class WithExplicitOrdering> extends CycleDetectingLockFactory { private final Map lockGraphNodes; @VisibleForTesting WithExplicitOrdering(Policy policy, Map lockGraphNodes) { super(policy); this.lockGraphNodes = lockGraphNodes; } /** Equivalent to {@code newReentrantLock(rank, false)}. */ public ReentrantLock newReentrantLock(E rank) { return newReentrantLock(rank, false); } /** * Creates a {@link ReentrantLock} with the given fairness policy and rank. The values returned * by {@link Enum#getDeclaringClass()} and {@link Enum#name()} are used to describe the lock in * warning or exception output. * * @throws IllegalStateException If the factory has already created a {@code Lock} with the * specified rank. */ public ReentrantLock newReentrantLock(E rank, boolean fair) { return policy == Policies.DISABLED ? new ReentrantLock(fair) : new CycleDetectingReentrantLock(lockGraphNodes.get(rank), fair); } /** Equivalent to {@code newReentrantReadWriteLock(rank, false)}. */ public ReentrantReadWriteLock newReentrantReadWriteLock(E rank) { return newReentrantReadWriteLock(rank, false); } /** * Creates a {@link ReentrantReadWriteLock} with the given fairness policy and rank. The values * returned by {@link Enum#getDeclaringClass()} and {@link Enum#name()} are used to describe the * lock in warning or exception output. * * @throws IllegalStateException If the factory has already created a {@code Lock} with the * specified rank. */ public ReentrantReadWriteLock newReentrantReadWriteLock(E rank, boolean fair) { return policy == Policies.DISABLED ? new ReentrantReadWriteLock(fair) : new CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock(lockGraphNodes.get(rank), fair); } } //////// Implementation ///////// private static final Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(CycleDetectingLockFactory.class.getName()); final Policy policy; private CycleDetectingLockFactory(Policy policy) { this.policy = checkNotNull(policy); } /** * Tracks the currently acquired locks for each Thread, kept up to date by calls to {@link * #aboutToAcquire(CycleDetectingLock)} and {@link #lockStateChanged(CycleDetectingLock)}. */ // This is logically a Set, but an ArrayList is used to minimize the amount // of allocation done on lock()/unlock(). private static final ThreadLocal> acquiredLocks = new ThreadLocal>() { @Override protected ArrayList initialValue() { return Lists.newArrayListWithCapacity(3); } }; /** * A Throwable used to record a stack trace that illustrates an example of a specific lock * acquisition ordering. The top of the stack trace is truncated such that it starts with the * acquisition of the lock in question, e.g. * *

   * com...ExampleStackTrace: LockB -> LockC
   *   at com...CycleDetectingReentrantLock.lock(CycleDetectingLockFactory.java:443)
   *   at ...
   *   at ...
   *   at com...MyClass.someMethodThatAcquiresLockB(MyClass.java:123)
   * 
*/ private static class ExampleStackTrace extends IllegalStateException { static final StackTraceElement[] EMPTY_STACK_TRACE = new StackTraceElement[0]; static final ImmutableSet EXCLUDED_CLASS_NAMES = ImmutableSet.of( CycleDetectingLockFactory.class.getName(), ExampleStackTrace.class.getName(), LockGraphNode.class.getName()); ExampleStackTrace(LockGraphNode node1, LockGraphNode node2) { super(node1.getLockName() + " -> " + node2.getLockName()); StackTraceElement[] origStackTrace = getStackTrace(); for (int i = 0, n = origStackTrace.length; i < n; i++) { if (WithExplicitOrdering.class.getName().equals(origStackTrace[i].getClassName())) { // For pre-populated disallowedPriorLocks edges, omit the stack trace. setStackTrace(EMPTY_STACK_TRACE); break; } if (!EXCLUDED_CLASS_NAMES.contains(origStackTrace[i].getClassName())) { setStackTrace(Arrays.copyOfRange(origStackTrace, i, n)); break; } } } } /** * Represents a detected cycle in lock acquisition ordering. The exception includes a causal chain * of {@code ExampleStackTrace} instances to illustrate the cycle, e.g. * *
   * com....PotentialDeadlockException: Potential Deadlock from LockC -> ReadWriteA
   *   at ...
   *   at ...
   * Caused by: com...ExampleStackTrace: LockB -> LockC
   *   at ...
   *   at ...
   * Caused by: com...ExampleStackTrace: ReadWriteA -> LockB
   *   at ...
   *   at ...
   * 
* *

Instances are logged for the {@code Policies.WARN}, and thrown for {@code Policies.THROW}. * * @since 13.0 */ @Beta public static final class PotentialDeadlockException extends ExampleStackTrace { private final ExampleStackTrace conflictingStackTrace; private PotentialDeadlockException( LockGraphNode node1, LockGraphNode node2, ExampleStackTrace conflictingStackTrace) { super(node1, node2); this.conflictingStackTrace = conflictingStackTrace; initCause(conflictingStackTrace); } public ExampleStackTrace getConflictingStackTrace() { return conflictingStackTrace; } /** * Appends the chain of messages from the {@code conflictingStackTrace} to the original {@code * message}. */ @Override public String getMessage() { StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(super.getMessage()); for (Throwable t = conflictingStackTrace; t != null; t = t.getCause()) { message.append(", ").append(t.getMessage()); } return message.toString(); } } /** * Internal Lock implementations implement the {@code CycleDetectingLock} interface, allowing the * detection logic to treat all locks in the same manner. */ private interface CycleDetectingLock { /** @return the {@link LockGraphNode} associated with this lock. */ LockGraphNode getLockGraphNode(); /** @return {@code true} if the current thread has acquired this lock. */ boolean isAcquiredByCurrentThread(); } /** * A {@code LockGraphNode} associated with each lock instance keeps track of the directed edges in * the lock acquisition graph. */ private static class LockGraphNode { /** * The map tracking the locks that are known to be acquired before this lock, each associated * with an example stack trace. Locks are weakly keyed to allow proper garbage collection when * they are no longer referenced. */ final Map allowedPriorLocks = new MapMaker().weakKeys().makeMap(); /** * The map tracking lock nodes that can cause a lock acquisition cycle if acquired before this * node. */ final Map disallowedPriorLocks = new MapMaker().weakKeys().makeMap(); final String lockName; LockGraphNode(String lockName) { this.lockName = Preconditions.checkNotNull(lockName); } String getLockName() { return lockName; } void checkAcquiredLocks(Policy policy, List acquiredLocks) { for (int i = 0, size = acquiredLocks.size(); i < size; i++) { checkAcquiredLock(policy, acquiredLocks.get(i)); } } /** * Checks the acquisition-ordering between {@code this}, which is about to be acquired, and the * specified {@code acquiredLock}. * *

When this method returns, the {@code acquiredLock} should be in either the {@code * preAcquireLocks} map, for the case in which it is safe to acquire {@code this} after the * {@code acquiredLock}, or in the {@code disallowedPriorLocks} map, in which case it is not * safe. */ void checkAcquiredLock(Policy policy, LockGraphNode acquiredLock) { // checkAcquiredLock() should never be invoked by a lock that has already // been acquired. For unordered locks, aboutToAcquire() ensures this by // checking isAcquiredByCurrentThread(). For ordered locks, however, this // can happen because multiple locks may share the same LockGraphNode. In // this situation, throw an IllegalStateException as defined by contract // described in the documentation of WithExplicitOrdering. Preconditions.checkState( this != acquiredLock, "Attempted to acquire multiple locks with the same rank %s", acquiredLock.getLockName()); if (allowedPriorLocks.containsKey(acquiredLock)) { // The acquisition ordering from "acquiredLock" to "this" has already // been verified as safe. In a properly written application, this is // the common case. return; } PotentialDeadlockException previousDeadlockException = disallowedPriorLocks.get(acquiredLock); if (previousDeadlockException != null) { // Previously determined to be an unsafe lock acquisition. // Create a new PotentialDeadlockException with the same causal chain // (the example cycle) as that of the cached exception. PotentialDeadlockException exception = new PotentialDeadlockException( acquiredLock, this, previousDeadlockException.getConflictingStackTrace()); policy.handlePotentialDeadlock(exception); return; } // Otherwise, it's the first time seeing this lock relationship. Look for // a path from the acquiredLock to this. Set seen = Sets.newIdentityHashSet(); ExampleStackTrace path = acquiredLock.findPathTo(this, seen); if (path == null) { // this can be safely acquired after the acquiredLock. // // Note that there is a race condition here which can result in missing // a cyclic edge: it's possible for two threads to simultaneous find // "safe" edges which together form a cycle. Preventing this race // condition efficiently without _introducing_ deadlock is probably // tricky. For now, just accept the race condition---missing a warning // now and then is still better than having no deadlock detection. allowedPriorLocks.put(acquiredLock, new ExampleStackTrace(acquiredLock, this)); } else { // Unsafe acquisition order detected. Create and cache a // PotentialDeadlockException. PotentialDeadlockException exception = new PotentialDeadlockException(acquiredLock, this, path); disallowedPriorLocks.put(acquiredLock, exception); policy.handlePotentialDeadlock(exception); } } /** * Performs a depth-first traversal of the graph edges defined by each node's {@code * allowedPriorLocks} to find a path between {@code this} and the specified {@code lock}. * * @return If a path was found, a chained {@link ExampleStackTrace} illustrating the path to the * {@code lock}, or {@code null} if no path was found. */ private @Nullable ExampleStackTrace findPathTo(LockGraphNode node, Set seen) { if (!seen.add(this)) { return null; // Already traversed this node. } ExampleStackTrace found = allowedPriorLocks.get(node); if (found != null) { return found; // Found a path ending at the node! } // Recurse the edges. for (Entry entry : allowedPriorLocks.entrySet()) { LockGraphNode preAcquiredLock = entry.getKey(); found = preAcquiredLock.findPathTo(node, seen); if (found != null) { // One of this node's allowedPriorLocks found a path. Prepend an // ExampleStackTrace(preAcquiredLock, this) to the returned chain of // ExampleStackTraces. ExampleStackTrace path = new ExampleStackTrace(preAcquiredLock, this); path.setStackTrace(entry.getValue().getStackTrace()); path.initCause(found); return path; } } return null; } } /** * CycleDetectingLock implementations must call this method before attempting to acquire the lock. */ private void aboutToAcquire(CycleDetectingLock lock) { if (!lock.isAcquiredByCurrentThread()) { ArrayList acquiredLockList = acquiredLocks.get(); LockGraphNode node = lock.getLockGraphNode(); node.checkAcquiredLocks(policy, acquiredLockList); acquiredLockList.add(node); } } /** * CycleDetectingLock implementations must call this method in a {@code finally} clause after any * attempt to change the lock state, including both lock and unlock attempts. Failure to do so can * result in corrupting the acquireLocks set. */ private static void lockStateChanged(CycleDetectingLock lock) { if (!lock.isAcquiredByCurrentThread()) { ArrayList acquiredLockList = acquiredLocks.get(); LockGraphNode node = lock.getLockGraphNode(); // Iterate in reverse because locks are usually locked/unlocked in a // LIFO order. for (int i = acquiredLockList.size() - 1; i >= 0; i--) { if (acquiredLockList.get(i) == node) { acquiredLockList.remove(i); break; } } } } final class CycleDetectingReentrantLock extends ReentrantLock implements CycleDetectingLock { private final LockGraphNode lockGraphNode; private CycleDetectingReentrantLock(LockGraphNode lockGraphNode, boolean fair) { super(fair); this.lockGraphNode = Preconditions.checkNotNull(lockGraphNode); } ///// CycleDetectingLock methods. ///// @Override public LockGraphNode getLockGraphNode() { return lockGraphNode; } @Override public boolean isAcquiredByCurrentThread() { return isHeldByCurrentThread(); } ///// Overridden ReentrantLock methods. ///// @Override public void lock() { aboutToAcquire(this); try { super.lock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(this); } } @Override public void lockInterruptibly() throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(this); try { super.lockInterruptibly(); } finally { lockStateChanged(this); } } @Override public boolean tryLock() { aboutToAcquire(this); try { return super.tryLock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(this); } } @Override public boolean tryLock(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(this); try { return super.tryLock(timeout, unit); } finally { lockStateChanged(this); } } @Override public void unlock() { try { super.unlock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(this); } } } final class CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock extends ReentrantReadWriteLock implements CycleDetectingLock { // These ReadLock/WriteLock implementations shadow those in the // ReentrantReadWriteLock superclass. They are simply wrappers around the // internal Sync object, so this is safe since the shadowed locks are never // exposed or used. private final CycleDetectingReentrantReadLock readLock; private final CycleDetectingReentrantWriteLock writeLock; private final LockGraphNode lockGraphNode; private CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock(LockGraphNode lockGraphNode, boolean fair) { super(fair); this.readLock = new CycleDetectingReentrantReadLock(this); this.writeLock = new CycleDetectingReentrantWriteLock(this); this.lockGraphNode = Preconditions.checkNotNull(lockGraphNode); } ///// Overridden ReentrantReadWriteLock methods. ///// @Override public ReadLock readLock() { return readLock; } @Override public WriteLock writeLock() { return writeLock; } ///// CycleDetectingLock methods. ///// @Override public LockGraphNode getLockGraphNode() { return lockGraphNode; } @Override public boolean isAcquiredByCurrentThread() { return isWriteLockedByCurrentThread() || getReadHoldCount() > 0; } } private class CycleDetectingReentrantReadLock extends ReentrantReadWriteLock.ReadLock { @Weak final CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock readWriteLock; CycleDetectingReentrantReadLock(CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock readWriteLock) { super(readWriteLock); this.readWriteLock = readWriteLock; } @Override public void lock() { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { super.lock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public void lockInterruptibly() throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { super.lockInterruptibly(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public boolean tryLock() { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { return super.tryLock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public boolean tryLock(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { return super.tryLock(timeout, unit); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public void unlock() { try { super.unlock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } } private class CycleDetectingReentrantWriteLock extends ReentrantReadWriteLock.WriteLock { @Weak final CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock readWriteLock; CycleDetectingReentrantWriteLock(CycleDetectingReentrantReadWriteLock readWriteLock) { super(readWriteLock); this.readWriteLock = readWriteLock; } @Override public void lock() { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { super.lock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public void lockInterruptibly() throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { super.lockInterruptibly(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public boolean tryLock() { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { return super.tryLock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public boolean tryLock(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException { aboutToAcquire(readWriteLock); try { return super.tryLock(timeout, unit); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } @Override public void unlock() { try { super.unlock(); } finally { lockStateChanged(readWriteLock); } } } }





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