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/**
 *  Copyright 2003-2010 Terracotta, Inc.
 *
 *  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 net.sf.ehcache.constructs.blocking;

import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicReference;

import net.sf.ehcache.CacheException;
import net.sf.ehcache.Ehcache;
import net.sf.ehcache.Element;
import net.sf.ehcache.concurrent.CacheLockProvider;
import net.sf.ehcache.concurrent.LockType;
import net.sf.ehcache.concurrent.StripedReadWriteLockSync;
import net.sf.ehcache.concurrent.Sync;
import net.sf.ehcache.constructs.EhcacheDecoratorAdapter;
import net.sf.ehcache.loader.CacheLoader;

/**
 * A blocking decorator for an Ehcache, backed by a {@link Ehcache}.
 * 

* It allows concurrent read access to elements already in the cache. If the element is null, other * reads will block until an element with the same key is put into the cache. *

* This is useful for constructing read-through or self-populating caches. *

* This implementation uses the {@link net.sf.ehcache.concurrent.ReadWriteLockSync} class. If you wish to use * this class, you will need the concurrent package in your class path. *

* It features: *

    *
  • Excellent liveness. *
  • Fine-grained locking on each element, rather than the cache as a whole. *
  • Scalability to a large number of threads. *
*

* "Hashtable / synchronizedMap uses the "one big fat lock" approach to guard the mutable state of the map. * That works, but is a big concurrency bottleneck, as you've observed. You went to the opposite extreme, one lock per key. * That works (as long as you've got sufficient synchronization in the cache itself to protect its own data structures.) *

* Lock striping is a middle ground, partitioning keys into a fixed number of subsets, like the trick used at large * theaters for will-call ticket pickup -- there are separate lines for "A-F, G-M, N-R, and S-Z". * This way, there are a fixed number of locks, each guarding (hopefully) 1/Nth of the keys." * - Brian Goetz *

* Further improvements to hashing suggested by Joe Bowbeer. * * @author Greg Luck * @version $Id: BlockingCache.java 3491 2011-01-21 20:00:25Z cdennis $ */ public class BlockingCache extends EhcacheDecoratorAdapter { /** * The amount of time to block a thread before a LockTimeoutException is thrown */ protected volatile int timeoutMillis; private final int stripes; private final AtomicReference cacheLockProviderReference; /** * Creates a BlockingCache which decorates the supplied cache. * * @param cache a backing ehcache. * @param numberOfStripes how many stripes to has the keys against. Must be a non-zero even number. This is a trade-off between * memory use and concurrency * @throws CacheException shouldn't happen * @since 1.2 */ public BlockingCache(final Ehcache cache, int numberOfStripes) throws CacheException { super(cache); this.stripes = numberOfStripes; this.cacheLockProviderReference = new AtomicReference(); } /** * Creates a BlockingCache which decorates the supplied cache. * * @param cache a backing ehcache. * @throws CacheException shouldn't happen * @since 1.6.1 */ public BlockingCache(final Ehcache cache) throws CacheException { this(cache, StripedReadWriteLockSync.DEFAULT_NUMBER_OF_MUTEXES); } private CacheLockProvider getCacheLockProvider() { CacheLockProvider provider = cacheLockProviderReference.get(); while (provider == null) { cacheLockProviderReference.compareAndSet(null, createCacheLockProvider()); provider = cacheLockProviderReference.get(); } return provider; } private CacheLockProvider createCacheLockProvider() { Object context = underlyingCache.getInternalContext(); if (underlyingCache.getCacheConfiguration().isTerracottaClustered() && context != null) { return (CacheLockProvider) context; } else { return new StripedReadWriteLockSync(stripes); } } /** * Retrieve the EHCache backing cache * * @return the backing cache */ protected Ehcache getCache() { return underlyingCache; } /** * Looks up an entry. Blocks if the entry is null until a call to {@link #put} is done * to put an Element in. *

* If a put is not done, the lock is never released. *

* If this method throws an exception, it is the responsibility of the caller to catch that exception and call * put(new Element(key, null)); to release the lock acquired. See {@link net.sf.ehcache.constructs.blocking.SelfPopulatingCache} * for an example. *

* Note. If a LockTimeoutException is thrown while doing a get it means the lock was never acquired, * therefore it is a threading error to call {@link #put} * * @throws LockTimeoutException if timeout millis is non zero and this method has been unable to * acquire a lock in that time * @throws RuntimeException if thrown the lock will not released. Catch and callput(new Element(key, null)); * to release the lock acquired. */ @Override public Element get(final Object key) throws RuntimeException, LockTimeoutException { Sync lock = getLockForKey(key); acquiredLockForKey(key, lock, LockType.READ); Element element = underlyingCache.get(key); lock.unlock(LockType.READ); if (element == null) { acquiredLockForKey(key, lock, LockType.WRITE); element = underlyingCache.getQuiet(key); if (element != null) { if (underlyingCache.isStatisticsEnabled()) { element = underlyingCache.get(key); } lock.unlock(LockType.WRITE); } } return element; } private void acquiredLockForKey(final Object key, final Sync lock, final LockType lockType) { if (timeoutMillis > 0) { try { boolean acquired = lock.tryLock(lockType, timeoutMillis); if (!acquired) { StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder("Lock timeout. Waited more than ") .append(timeoutMillis) .append("ms to acquire lock for key ") .append(key).append(" on blocking cache ").append(underlyingCache.getName()); throw new LockTimeoutException(message.toString()); } } catch (InterruptedException e) { throw new LockTimeoutException("Got interrupted while trying to acquire lock for key " + key, e); } } else { lock.lock(lockType); } } /** * Gets the Sync to use for a given key. * * @param key the key * @return one of a limited number of Sync's. */ protected Sync getLockForKey(final Object key) { return getCacheLockProvider().getSyncForKey(key); } /** * Adds an entry and unlocks it */ @Override public void put(Element element) { if (element == null) { return; } Object key = element.getObjectKey(); Object value = element.getObjectValue(); Sync lock = getLockForKey(key); if (!lock.isHeldByCurrentThread(LockType.WRITE)) { lock.lock(LockType.WRITE); } try { if (value != null) { underlyingCache.put(element); } else { underlyingCache.remove(key); } } finally { //Release the readlock here. This will have been acquired in the get, where the element was null lock.unlock(LockType.WRITE); } } /** * Gets an element from the cache. Updates Element Statistics *

* Note that the Element's lastAccessTime is always the time of this get. * Use {@link #getQuiet(Object)} to peak into the Element to see its last access time with get * * @param key a serializable value * @return the element, or null, if it does not exist. * @throws IllegalStateException if the cache is not {@link net.sf.ehcache.Status#STATUS_ALIVE} * @see #isExpired */ @Override public Element get(Serializable key) throws IllegalStateException, CacheException { return this.get((Object) key); } /** * Synchronized version of getName to test liveness of the object lock. *

* The time taken for this method to return is a useful measure of runtime contention on the cache. * * @return the name of the cache. */ public synchronized String liveness() { return getName(); } /** * Sets the time to wait to acquire a lock. This may be modified at any time. *

* The consequences of setting a timeout are: *

    *
  1. if a lock cannot be acquired in the given time a LockTimeoutException is thrown. *
  2. if there is a queue of threads waiting for the first thread to complete, but it does not complete within * the time out period, the successive threads may find that they have exceeded their lock timeouts and fail. This * is usually a good thing because it stops a build up of threads from overwhelming a busy resource, but it does * need to be considered in the design of user interfaces. The timeout should be set no greater than the time a user * would be expected to wait before considering the action will never return *
  3. it will be common to see a number of threads timeout trying to get the same lock. This is a normal and desired * consequence. *
* The consequences of not setting a timeout (or setting it to 0) are: *
    *
  1. There are no partial failures in the system. But there is a greater possibility that a temporary overload * in one part of the system can cause a back up that may take a long time to recover from. *
  2. A failing method that perhaps fails because a resource is overloaded will be hit by each thread in turn, no matter whether there is a still a user who * cares about getting a response. *
* * @param timeoutMillis the time in ms. Must be a positive number. 0 means wait forever. */ public void setTimeoutMillis(int timeoutMillis) { if (timeoutMillis < 0) { throw new CacheException("The lock timeout must be a positive number of ms. Value was " + timeoutMillis); } this.timeoutMillis = timeoutMillis; } /** * Gets the time to wait to acquire a lock. * * @return the time in ms. */ public int getTimeoutMillis() { return timeoutMillis; } /** * Register a {@link CacheLoader} with the cache. It will then be tied into the cache lifecycle. *

* If the CacheLoader is not initialised, initialise it. * * @param cacheLoader A Cache Loader to register */ @Override public void registerCacheLoader(CacheLoader cacheLoader) { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a blocking cache."); } /** * Unregister a {@link CacheLoader} with the cache. It will then be detached from the cache lifecycle. * * @param cacheLoader A Cache Loader to unregister */ @Override public void unregisterCacheLoader(CacheLoader cacheLoader) { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a blocking cache."); } /** * This method is not appropriate to use with BlockingCache. * * @throws CacheException if this method is called */ @Override public Element getWithLoader(Object key, CacheLoader loader, Object loaderArgument) throws CacheException { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a Blocking Cache"); } /** * This method is not appropriate to use with BlockingCache. * * @throws CacheException if this method is called */ @Override public Map getAllWithLoader(Collection keys, Object loaderArgument) throws CacheException { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a Blocking Cache"); } /** * This method is not appropriate to use with BlockingCache. * * @throws CacheException if this method is called */ @Override public void load(Object key) throws CacheException { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a Blocking Cache"); } /** * This method is not appropriate to use with BlockingCache. * * @throws CacheException if this method is called */ @Override public void loadAll(Collection keys, Object argument) throws CacheException { throw new CacheException("This method is not appropriate for a Blocking Cache"); } }





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