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The Apache Cassandra Project develops a highly scalable second-generation distributed database, bringing together Dynamo's fully distributed design and Bigtable's ColumnFamily-based data model.

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/*
 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
 * or more contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file
 * distributed with this work for additional information
 * regarding copyright ownership.  The ASF licenses this file
 * to you 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,
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package org.apache.cassandra.utils.concurrent;

import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentLinkedQueue;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.LockSupport;
import java.util.function.BooleanSupplier;
import java.util.function.Consumer;

import org.apache.cassandra.utils.Intercept;
import org.apache.cassandra.utils.Shared;
import org.apache.cassandra.utils.concurrent.Awaitable.AbstractAwaitable;

import static org.apache.cassandra.utils.Clock.Global.nanoTime;
import static org.apache.cassandra.utils.Shared.Recursive.INTERFACES;
import static org.apache.cassandra.utils.Shared.Scope.SIMULATION;

/**
 * 

A relatively easy to use utility for general purpose thread signalling.

*

Usage on a thread awaiting a state change using a WaitQueue q is:

*
 * {@code
 *      while (!conditionMet())
 *          Signal s = q.register();
 *              if (!conditionMet())    // or, perhaps more correctly, !conditionChanged()
 *                  s.await();
 *              else
 *                  s.cancel();
 * }
 * 
* A signalling thread, AFTER changing the state, then calls q.signal() to wake up one, or q.signalAll() * to wake up all, waiting threads. *

To understand intuitively how this class works, the idea is simply that a thread, once it considers itself * incapable of making progress, registers to be awoken once that changes. Since this could have changed between * checking and registering (in which case the thread that made this change would have been unable to signal it), * it checks the condition again, sleeping only if it hasn't changed/still is not met.

*

This thread synchronisation scheme has some advantages over Condition objects and Object.wait/notify in that no monitor * acquisition is necessary and, in fact, besides the actual waiting on a signal, all operations are non-blocking. * As a result consumers can never block producers, nor each other, or vice versa, from making progress. * Threads that are signalled are also put into a RUNNABLE state almost simultaneously, so they can all immediately make * progress without having to serially acquire the monitor/lock, reducing scheduler delay incurred.

* *

A few notes on utilisation:

*

1. A thread will only exit await() when it has been signalled, but this does not guarantee the condition has not * been altered since it was signalled, and depending on your design it is likely the outer condition will need to be * checked in a loop, though this is not always the case.

*

2. Each signal is single use, so must be re-registered after each await(). This is true even if it times out.

*

3. If you choose not to wait on the signal (because the condition has been met before you waited on it) * you must cancel() the signal if the signalling thread uses signal() to awake waiters; otherwise signals will be * lost. If signalAll() is used but infrequent, and register() is frequent, cancel() should still be used to prevent the * queue growing unboundedly. Similarly, if you provide a TimerContext, cancel should be used to ensure it is not erroneously * counted towards wait time.

*

4. Care must be taken when selecting conditionMet() to ensure we are waiting on the condition that actually * indicates progress is possible. In some complex cases it may be tempting to wait on a condition that is only indicative * of local progress, not progress on the task we are aiming to complete, and a race may leave us waiting for a condition * to be met that we no longer need. *

5. This scheme is not fair

*

6. Only the thread that calls register() may call await()

* * TODO: this class should not be backed by CLQ (should use an intrusive linked-list with lower overhead) */ @Shared(scope = SIMULATION, inner = INTERFACES) public interface WaitQueue { /** * A Signal is a one-time-use mechanism for a thread to wait for notification that some condition * state has transitioned that it may be interested in (and hence should check if it is). * It is potentially transient, i.e. the state can change in the meantime, it only indicates * that it should be checked, not necessarily anything about what the expected state should be. * * Signal implementations should never wake up spuriously, they are always woken up by a * signal() or signalAll(). * * This abstract definition of Signal does not need to be tied to a WaitQueue. * Whilst RegisteredSignal is the main building block of Signals, this abstract * definition allows us to compose Signals in useful ways. The Signal is 'owned' by the * thread that registered itself with WaitQueue(s) to obtain the underlying RegisteredSignal(s); * only the owning thread should use a Signal. */ public static interface Signal extends Condition { /** * @return true if cancelled; once cancelled, must be discarded by the owning thread. */ public boolean isCancelled(); /** * @return isSignalled() || isCancelled(). Once true, the state is fixed and the Signal should be discarded * by the owning thread. */ public boolean isSet(); /** * atomically: cancels the Signal if !isSet(), or returns true if isSignalled() * * @return true if isSignalled() */ public boolean checkAndClear(); /** * Should only be called by the owning thread. Indicates the signal can be retired, * and if signalled propagates the signal to another waiting thread */ public abstract void cancel(); } /** * The calling thread MUST be the thread that uses the signal */ public Signal register(); /** * The calling thread MUST be the thread that uses the signal. * If the Signal is waited on, context.stop() will be called when the wait times out, the Signal is signalled, * or the waiting thread is interrupted. */ public Signal register(V supplyOnDone, Consumer receiveOnDone); /** * Signal one waiting thread */ public boolean signal(); /** * Signal all waiting threads */ public void signalAll(); /** getWaiting() > 0 */ public boolean hasWaiters(); /** Return how many threads are waiting */ public int getWaiting(); /** * Factory method used to capture and redirect instantiations for simulation */ @Intercept public static WaitQueue newWaitQueue() { return new Standard(); } class Standard implements WaitQueue { private static final int CANCELLED = -1; private static final int SIGNALLED = 1; private static final int NOT_SET = 0; private static final AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater signalledUpdater = AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater.newUpdater(RegisteredSignal.class, "state"); // the waiting signals private final ConcurrentLinkedQueue queue = new ConcurrentLinkedQueue<>(); protected Standard() {} /** * The calling thread MUST be the thread that uses the signal * @return x */ public Signal register() { RegisteredSignal signal = new RegisteredSignal(); queue.add(signal); return signal; } /** * The calling thread MUST be the thread that uses the signal. * If the Signal is waited on, context.stop() will be called when the wait times out, the Signal is signalled, * or the waiting thread is interrupted. */ public Signal register(V supplyOnDone, Consumer receiveOnDone) { RegisteredSignal signal = new SignalWithListener<>(supplyOnDone, receiveOnDone); queue.add(signal); return signal; } /** * Signal one waiting thread */ public boolean signal() { while (true) { RegisteredSignal s = queue.poll(); if (s == null || s.doSignal() != null) return s != null; } } /** * Signal all waiting threads */ public void signalAll() { if (!hasWaiters()) return; // to avoid a race where the condition is not met and the woken thread managed to wait on the queue before // we finish signalling it all, we pick a random thread we have woken-up and hold onto it, so that if we encounter // it again we know we're looping. We reselect a random thread periodically, progressively less often. // the "correct" solution to this problem is to use a queue that permits snapshot iteration, but this solution is sufficient // TODO: this is only necessary because we use CLQ - which is only for historical any-NIH reasons int i = 0, s = 5; Thread randomThread = null; Iterator iter = queue.iterator(); while (iter.hasNext()) { RegisteredSignal signal = iter.next(); Thread signalled = signal.doSignal(); if (signalled != null) { if (signalled == randomThread) break; if (++i == s) { randomThread = signalled; s <<= 1; } } iter.remove(); } } private void cleanUpCancelled() { // TODO: attempt to remove the cancelled from the beginning only (need atomic cas of head) queue.removeIf(RegisteredSignal::isCancelled); } public boolean hasWaiters() { return !queue.isEmpty(); } /** * @return how many threads are waiting */ public int getWaiting() { if (!hasWaiters()) return 0; Iterator iter = queue.iterator(); int count = 0; while (iter.hasNext()) { Signal next = iter.next(); if (!next.isCancelled()) count++; } return count; } /** * An abstract signal implementation * * TODO: use intrusive linked list */ public static abstract class AbstractSignal extends AbstractAwaitable implements Signal { public Signal await() throws InterruptedException { while (!isSignalled()) { checkInterrupted(); LockSupport.park(); } checkAndClear(); return this; } public boolean awaitUntil(long nanoTimeDeadline) throws InterruptedException { long now; while (nanoTimeDeadline > (now = nanoTime()) && !isSignalled()) { checkInterrupted(); long delta = nanoTimeDeadline - now; LockSupport.parkNanos(delta); } return checkAndClear(); } private void checkInterrupted() throws InterruptedException { if (Thread.interrupted()) { cancel(); throw new InterruptedException(); } } } /** * A signal registered with this WaitQueue */ private class RegisteredSignal extends AbstractSignal { private volatile Thread thread = Thread.currentThread(); volatile int state; public boolean isSignalled() { return state == SIGNALLED; } public boolean isCancelled() { return state == CANCELLED; } public boolean isSet() { return state != NOT_SET; } private Thread doSignal() { if (!isSet() && signalledUpdater.compareAndSet(this, NOT_SET, SIGNALLED)) { Thread thread = this.thread; LockSupport.unpark(thread); this.thread = null; return thread; } return null; } public void signal() { doSignal(); } public boolean checkAndClear() { if (!isSet() && signalledUpdater.compareAndSet(this, NOT_SET, CANCELLED)) { thread = null; cleanUpCancelled(); return false; } // must now be signalled assuming correct API usage return true; } /** * Should only be called by the registered thread. Indicates the signal can be retired, * and if signalled propagates the signal to another waiting thread */ public void cancel() { if (isCancelled()) return; if (!signalledUpdater.compareAndSet(this, NOT_SET, CANCELLED)) { // must already be signalled - switch to cancelled and state = CANCELLED; // propagate the signal WaitQueue.Standard.this.signal(); } thread = null; cleanUpCancelled(); } } /** * A RegisteredSignal that stores a TimerContext, and stops the timer when either cancelled or * finished waiting. i.e. if the timer is started when the signal is registered it tracks the * time in between registering and invalidating the signal. */ private final class SignalWithListener extends RegisteredSignal { private final V supplyOnDone; private final Consumer receiveOnDone; private SignalWithListener(V supplyOnDone, Consumer receiveOnDone) { this.receiveOnDone = receiveOnDone; this.supplyOnDone = supplyOnDone; } @Override public boolean checkAndClear() { receiveOnDone.accept(supplyOnDone); return super.checkAndClear(); } @Override public void cancel() { if (!isCancelled()) { receiveOnDone.accept(supplyOnDone); super.cancel(); } } } } /** * Loops waiting on the supplied condition and WaitQueue and will not return until the condition is true */ public static void waitOnCondition(BooleanSupplier condition, WaitQueue queue) throws InterruptedException { while (!condition.getAsBoolean()) { Signal s = queue.register(); if (!condition.getAsBoolean()) s.await(); else s.cancel(); } } }




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