See: Description
Interface | Description |
---|---|
Condition | |
Lock |
Lock implementations provide more extensive locking
operations than can be obtained using synchronized methods
and statements. |
ReadWriteLock |
A ReadWriteLock maintains a pair of associated
locks , one for read-only operations and one for writing. |
Class | Description |
---|---|
AbstractOwnableSynchronizer |
A synchronizer that may be exclusively owned by a thread.
|
AbstractQueuedLongSynchronizer |
A version of
AbstractQueuedSynchronizer in
which synchronization state is maintained as a long. |
AbstractQueuedSynchronizer |
Provides a framework for implementing blocking locks and related
synchronizers (semaphores, events, etc) that rely on
first-in-first-out (FIFO) wait queues.
|
LockSupport |
Basic thread blocking primitives for creating locks and other
synchronization classes.
|
ReentrantLock |
A reentrant mutual exclusion
Lock with the same basic
behavior and semantics as the implicit monitor lock accessed using
synchronized methods and statements, but with extended
capabilities. |
ReentrantReadWriteLock |
An implementation of
ReadWriteLock supporting similar
semantics to ReentrantLock . |
ReentrantReadWriteLock.ReadLock |
The lock returned by method
ReentrantReadWriteLock.readLock() . |
ReentrantReadWriteLock.WriteLock |
The lock returned by method
ReentrantReadWriteLock.writeLock() . |
The Lock
interface supports
locking disciplines that differ in semantics (reentrant, fair, etc),
and that can be used in non-block-structured contexts including
hand-over-hand and lock reordering algorithms. The main implementation
is ReentrantLock
.
The ReadWriteLock
interface
similarly defines locks that may be shared among readers but are
exclusive to writers. Only a single implementation, ReentrantReadWriteLock
, is provided, since
it covers most standard usage contexts. But programmers may create
their own implementations to cover nonstandard requirements.
The Condition
interface
describes condition variables that may be associated with Locks.
These are similar in usage to the implicit monitors accessed using
Object.wait
, but offer extended capabilities.
In particular, multiple Condition
objects may be associated
with a single Lock
. To avoid compatibility issues, the
names of Condition
methods are different from the
corresponding Object
versions.
The AbstractQueuedSynchronizer
class serves as a useful superclass for defining locks and other
synchronizers that rely on queuing blocked threads. The AbstractQueuedLongSynchronizer
class
provides the same functionality but extends support to 64 bits of
synchronization state. Both extend class AbstractOwnableSynchronizer
, a simple
class that helps record the thread currently holding exclusive
synchronization. The LockSupport
class provides lower-level blocking and unblocking support that is
useful for those developers implementing their own customized lock
classes.
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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.
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