I think I understood what is confuzzabling you so here's my longer answer: the terminology is a tiny bit misleading (obviously, or you wouldn't ask that question specifically putting the emphasis on 'reuse'):
How do thread pools 'reuse' threads?
What is happening is that a single thread can be used to process several tasks (typically passed as Runnable
, but this depend on your 'executor' framework: the default executors accepts Runnable
, but you could write your own "executor" / thread-pool accepting something more complex than a Runnable
[like, say, a CancellableRunnable
]).
Now in the default ExecutorService
implementation if a thread is somehow terminated while still in use, it is automatically replaced with a new thread, but this is not the 'reuse' they're talking about. There is no "reuse" in this case.
So it is true that you cannot call start()
on a Java Thread twice but you can pass as many Runnable
as you want to an executor and each Runnable
's run()
method shall be called once.
You can pass 30 Runnable
to 5 Java Thread
and each worker thread may be calling, for example, run()
6 times (practically there's not guarantee that you'll be executing exactly 6 Runnable
per Thread
but that is a detail).
In this example start()
would have been called 6 times. Each one these 6 start()
will call exactly once the run()
method of each Thread
:
From Thread.start()
Javadoc:
* Causes this thread to begin execution; the Java Virtual Machine
* calls the <code>run</code> method of this thread.
BUT then inside each Thread's run()
method Runnable
shall be dequeued and the run()
method of each Runnable
is going to be called. So each thread can process several Runnable
. That's what they refer to by "thread reuse".
One way to do your own thread pool is to use a blocking queue on to which you enqueue runnables and have each of your thread, once it's done processing the run()
method of a Runnable
, dequeue the next Runnable
(or block) and run its run()
method, then rinse and repeat.
I guess part of the confusion (and it is a bit confusing) comes from the fact that a Thread
takes a Runnable
and upon calling start()
the Runnable 's run()
method is called while the default thread pools also take Runnable
.
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