public interface WatchService extends Closeable
A Watchable
object is registered with a watch service by invoking
its register
method, returning a WatchKey
to represent the registration. When an event for an object is detected the
key is signalled, and if not currently signalled, it is queued to
the watch service so that it can be retrieved by consumers that invoke the
poll
or take
methods to retrieve keys
and process events. Once the events have been processed the consumer
invokes the key's reset
method to reset the key which
allows the key to be signalled and re-queued with further events.
Registration with a watch service is cancelled by invoking the key's
cancel
method. A key that is queued at the time that
it is cancelled remains in the queue until it is retrieved. Depending on the
object, a key may be cancelled automatically. For example, suppose a
directory is watched and the watch service detects that it has been deleted
or its file system is no longer accessible. When a key is cancelled in this
manner it is signalled and queued, if not currently signalled. To ensure
that the consumer is notified the return value from the reset
method indicates if the key is valid.
A watch service is safe for use by multiple concurrent consumers. To
ensure that only one consumer processes the events for a particular object at
any time then care should be taken to ensure that the key's reset
method is only invoked after its events have been processed. The close
method may be invoked at any time to close the service causing
any threads waiting to retrieve keys, to throw ClosedWatchServiceException
.
File systems may report events faster than they can be retrieved or
processed and an implementation may impose an unspecified limit on the number
of events that it may accumulate. Where an implementation knowingly
discards events then it arranges for the key's pollEvents
method to return an element with an event type of OVERFLOW
. This event can be used by the
consumer as a trigger to re-examine the state of the object.
When an event is reported to indicate that a file in a watched directory
has been modified then there is no guarantee that the program (or programs)
that have modified the file have completed. Care should be taken to coordinate
access with other programs that may be updating the file.
The FileChannel
class defines methods
to lock regions of a file against access by other programs.
The implementation that observes events from the file system is intended
to map directly on to the native file event notification facility where
available, or to use a primitive mechanism, such as polling, when a native
facility is not available. Consequently, many of the details on how events
are detected, their timeliness, and whether their ordering is preserved are
highly implementation specific. For example, when a file in a watched
directory is modified then it may result in a single ENTRY_MODIFY
event in some
implementations but several events in other implementations. Short-lived
files (meaning files that are deleted very quickly after they are created)
may not be detected by primitive implementations that periodically poll the
file system to detect changes.
If a watched file is not located on a local storage device then it is implementation specific if changes to the file can be detected. In particular, it is not required that changes to files carried out on remote systems be detected.
FileSystem.newWatchService()
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
close()
Closes this watch service.
|
WatchKey |
poll()
Retrieves and removes the next watch key, or
null if none are
present. |
WatchKey |
poll(long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
Retrieves and removes the next watch key, waiting if necessary up to the
specified wait time if none are yet present.
|
WatchKey |
take()
Retrieves and removes next watch key, waiting if none are yet present.
|
void close() throws IOException
If a thread is currently blocked in the take
or poll
methods waiting for a key to be queued then
it immediately receives a ClosedWatchServiceException
. Any
valid keys associated with this watch service are invalidated
.
After a watch service is closed, any further attempt to invoke
operations upon it will throw ClosedWatchServiceException
.
If this watch service is already closed then invoking this method
has no effect.
close
in interface AutoCloseable
close
in interface Closeable
IOException
- if an I/O error occursWatchKey poll()
null
if none are
present.null
ClosedWatchServiceException
- if this watch service is closedWatchKey poll(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException
timeout
- how to wait before giving up, in units of unitunit
- a TimeUnit
determining how to interpret the timeout
parameternull
ClosedWatchServiceException
- if this watch service is closed, or it is closed while waiting
for the next keyInterruptedException
- if interrupted while waitingWatchKey take() throws InterruptedException
ClosedWatchServiceException
- if this watch service is closed, or it is closed while waiting
for the next keyInterruptedException
- if interrupted while waiting Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
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