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java - illustrating volatile : is this code thread-safe?

I'm trying to illustrate the use and importance of volatile with an example that would really not give a good result if volatile was omitted.

But I'm not really used to using volatile. The idea of the following code is to cause an infinite loop if volatile is omitted, and be perfectly thread-safe if volatile is present. Is the following code thread-safe? Do you have any other realistic and short example of code that uses volatile and would give an obviously incorrect result without it?

Here's the code:

public class VolatileTest implements Runnable {

    private int count;
    private volatile boolean stopped;

    @Override
    public void run() {
        while (!stopped) {
            count++;
        }
        System.out.println("Count 1 = " + count);
    }

    public void stopCounting() {
        stopped = true;
    }

    public int getCount() {
        if (!stopped) {
            throw new IllegalStateException("not stopped yet.");
        }
        return count;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
        VolatileTest vt = new VolatileTest();
        Thread t = new Thread(vt);
        t.start();
        Thread.sleep(1000L);
        vt.stopCounting();
        System.out.println("Count 2 = " + vt.getCount());
    }
}
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1 Answer

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Victor is right, there are issues with your code: atomicity and visibility.

Here's my edition:

    private int count;
    private volatile boolean stop;
    private volatile boolean stopped;

    @Override
    public void run() {
        while (!stop) {
            count++; // the work
        }
        stopped = true;
        System.out.println("Count 1 = " + count);
    }

    public void stopCounting() {
        stop = true;
        while(!stopped)
           ; //busy wait; ok in this example
    }

    public int getCount() {
        if (!stopped) {
            throw new IllegalStateException("not stopped yet.");
        }
        return count;
    }

}

If a thread observes that stopped==true, it's guaranteed that the work completes and the result is visible.

There is a happens-before relation from volatile write to volatile read (on the same variable), so if there are two threads

   thread 1              thread 2

   action A
       |
 volatile write  
                  
                     volatile read
                          |  
                       action B

action A happens-before action B; writes in A are visible by B.


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