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GUIDED BY: 
Multithreaded Programming in JAVA 
DEVELOPED BY: Prof. Miral Patel 
Vikram Kalyani 120110116017
What is Multithreading? 
 A multi-processing Operating System can run several processes at the same time 
 Each process has its own address/memory space 
 The OS's scheduler decides when each process is executed 
 Only one process is actually executing at any given time. However, 
the system appears to be running several programs simultaneously 
 Separate processes to not have access to each other's memory space 
 Many OSes have a shared memory system so that processes can 
share memory space 
 In a multithreaded application, there are several points of execution within the 
same memory space. 
 Each point of execution is called a thread 
 Threads share access to memory
Why to use Multithreading? 
 In a single threaded application, one thread of execution must do everything 
 If an application has several tasks to perform, those tasks will be 
performed when the thread can get to them. 
 A single task which requires a lot of processing can make the entire 
application appear to be "sluggish" or unresponsive. 
 In a multithreaded application, each task can be performed by a separate thread 
 If one thread is executing a long process, it does not make the entire 
application wait for it to finish. 
 If a multithreaded application is being executed on a system that has multiple 
processors, the OS may execute separate threads simultaneously on separate 
processors.
What Kind of Applications Use Multithreading? 
 Any kind of application which has distinct tasks which can be performed independently 
 Any application with a GUI. 
 Threads dedicated to the GUI can delegate the processing of user 
requests to other threads. 
 The GUI remains responsive to the user even when the user's requests 
are being processed. 
 Any application which requires asynchronous response 
 Network based applications are ideally suited to multithreading. 
Data can arrive from the network at any time. 
In a single threaded system, data is queued until the thread can 
read the data 
In a multithreaded system, a thread can be dedicated to listening 
for data on the network port 
When data arrives, the thread reads it immediately and processes 
it or delegates its processing to another thread
What are Threads? 
 A piece of code that run in concurrent with other threads. 
 Each thread is a statically ordered sequence of instructions. 
 Threads are being extensively used express concurrency on both single and 
multiprocessors machines. 
 Programming a task having multiple threads of control – Multithreading or 
Multithreaded Programming.
Thread States 
Threads can be in one of four states 
Created, Running, Blocked, and Dead 
A thread's state changes based on: 
Control methods such as start, sleep, yield, wait, notify 
Termination of the run method 
notify() 
Created Runnable Blocked 
Dead 
Thread() start() 
run() method terminates 
sleep() 
wait()
Java Threads 
 Java has built in thread support for Multithreading 
 Synchronization 
 Thread Scheduling 
 Inter-Thread Communication: 
 Java Garbage Collector is a low-priority thread
Threading Mechanisms 
 Create a class that extends the Thread class 
 Create a class that implements the Runnable interface
1st Method 
Extending Thread class 
 Threads are implemented as objects that contains a method called 
run() 
class MyThread extends Thread 
{ 
public void run() 
{ 
// thread body of execution 
} 
} 
 Create a thread: 
MyThread thr1 = new MyThread(); 
 Start Execution of threads: 
thr1.start();
An example 
class MyThread extends Thread { // the thread 
public void run() { 
System.out.println(" this thread is running ... "); 
} 
} // end class MyThread 
class ThreadEx1 { // a program that utilizes the thread 
public static void main(String [] args ) { 
MyThread t = new MyThread(); 
// due to extending the Thread class (above) 
// I can call start(), and this will call 
// run(). start() is a method in class Thread. 
t.start(); 
} // end main() 
} // end class ThreadEx1
2nd Method 
Threads by implementing Runnable interface 
class MyThread implements Runnable 
{ 
..... 
public void run() 
{ 
// thread body of execution 
} 
} 
 Creating Object: 
MyThread myObject = new MyThread(); 
 Creating Thread Object: 
Thread thr1 = new Thread( myObject ); 
 Start Execution: 
thr1.start();
An example 
class MyThread implements Runnable { 
public void run() { 
System.out.println(" this thread is running ... "); 
} 
} // end class MyThread 
class ThreadEx2 { 
public static void main(String [] args ) { 
Thread t = new Thread(new MyThread()); 
// due to implementing the Runnable interface 
// We can call start(), and this will call run(). 
t.start(); 
} // end main() 
} // end class ThreadEx2
Thread Priority 
 In Java, each thread is assigned priority, which affects the 
order in which it is scheduled for running. The threads so far had 
same default priority (ORM_PRIORITY) and they are served using 
FCFS policy. 
 Java allows users to change priority: 
ThreadName.setPriority(intNumber) 
MIN_PRIORITY = 1 
NORM_PRIORITY=5 
MAX_PRIORITY=10
Thread priority Example 
class A extends Thread 
{ 
public void run() 
{ 
System.out.println("Thread A 
started"); 
for(int i=1;i<=4;i++) 
{ 
System.out.println("t From 
ThreadA: i= "+i); 
} 
System.out.println("Exit from A"); 
} 
} 
class B extends Thread 
{ 
public void run() 
{ 
System.out.println("Thread B 
started"); 
for(int j=1;j<=4;j++) 
{ 
System.out.println("t From 
ThreadB: j= "+j); 
} 
System.out.println("Exit from B"); 
} 
}
Thread priority Example(Cont.) 
class C extends Thread 
{ 
public void run() 
{ 
System.out.println("Thread C started"); 
for(int k=1;k<=4;k++) 
{ 
System.out.println("t From ThreadC: k= "+k); 
} 
System.out.println("Exit from C"); 
} 
}
Thread priority Example(Cont.) 
class ThreadPriority 
{ 
public static void main(String args[]) 
{ 
A threadA=new A(); 
B threadB=new B(); 
C threadC=new C(); 
threadC.setPriority(Thread.MAX_PRIORITY); 
threadB.setPriority(threadA.getPriority()+1); 
threadA.setPriority(Thread.MIN_PRIORITY); 
System.out.println("Started Thread A"); 
threadA.start(); 
System.out.println("Started Thread B"); 
threadB.start(); 
System.out.println("Started Thread C"); 
threadC.start(); 
System.out.println("End of main thread"); 
} 
}
Deadlock: What is it ? 
 A special type of error which occurs when two threads have 
a circular dependency on a pair of synchronized objects. 
 For example, Traffic Jam. 
 Device allocation 
 Thread 1 requests tape drive 1 & gets it. 
 Thread 2 requests tape drive 2 & gets it. 
 Thread 1 requests tape drive 2 but is blocked. 
 Thread 2 requests tape drive 1 but is blocked.
Deadlock as error: 
 Deadlock is a difficult error to debug for two reasons.. 
In general, it occurs only rarely, when the two threads 
time-slice in just the right way. 
It may involve more than two threads and two 
synchronized objects.
Suspending, Resuming, and Stopping Threads 
 Sometimes, suspending execution of a thread is useful as a 
solution of deadlock. 
 The methods are…. 
void suspend( ) 
void resume( ) 
Void stop()
Java Synchonization 
 Java provides Synchronized keyword to methods that cause only one invocation of a synchronized 
method on the same object at a time. 
Example 
public class SynchronizedCounter { 
private int c = 0; 
public synchronized void increment() { 
c++; 
} 
public synchronized void decrement() { 
c--; 
} 
public synchronized int value() { 
return c; 
} 
}
21 
Synchronized Statements 
Unlike synchronized methods, synchronized 
statements must specify the object that provides the 
intrinsic lock: 
Uses construct ion: 
synchronized ( expression ) { 
statements 
} 
Evaluate to an 
object or an 
array. Used to 
identify lock. 
“critical section”
22 
Synchronized Statements 
Example: 
public void addName(String name) { 
synchronized(this) { 
lastName = name; 
nameCount++; 
} 
nameList.add(name); 
} 
Only this part 
synchronized
Atomic action 
An atomic action cannot stop in the middle: it either happens completely, or it 
doesn't happen at all. No side effects of an atomic action are visible until the 
action is complete. 
Read/writes can be declared atomic with the volatile keyword, e.g. 
private volatile int x; 
Sometimes can be more efficient than synchronized methods
Coordinating threads 
Wait/notify mechanism 
 Sometimes need a thread to stop running and wait for an event before continuing. 
 wait() and notify() methods are methods of class Object. 
 Every object can maintain a list of waiting threads. 
wait(): When a thread calls wait() method of an object, any locks the thread 
holds are temporarily released and thread added to list of waiting threads for that 
object and stops running. 
notify(): When another thread calls notify() method on the same object, object 
wakes up one of the waiting threads and allows it to continue.
Join 
 Sometimes one thread needs to stop and wait for another thread to 
complete. 
 join() -- waits for a thread to die, i.e. thr1.join() waits for thread thr1 to die. 
 Calling return() from the run method implicitly causes the thread to exit.
Multi-threaded Programming in JAVA

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Multi-threaded Programming in JAVA

  • 1. GUIDED BY: Multithreaded Programming in JAVA DEVELOPED BY: Prof. Miral Patel Vikram Kalyani 120110116017
  • 2. What is Multithreading?  A multi-processing Operating System can run several processes at the same time  Each process has its own address/memory space  The OS's scheduler decides when each process is executed  Only one process is actually executing at any given time. However, the system appears to be running several programs simultaneously  Separate processes to not have access to each other's memory space  Many OSes have a shared memory system so that processes can share memory space  In a multithreaded application, there are several points of execution within the same memory space.  Each point of execution is called a thread  Threads share access to memory
  • 3. Why to use Multithreading?  In a single threaded application, one thread of execution must do everything  If an application has several tasks to perform, those tasks will be performed when the thread can get to them.  A single task which requires a lot of processing can make the entire application appear to be "sluggish" or unresponsive.  In a multithreaded application, each task can be performed by a separate thread  If one thread is executing a long process, it does not make the entire application wait for it to finish.  If a multithreaded application is being executed on a system that has multiple processors, the OS may execute separate threads simultaneously on separate processors.
  • 4. What Kind of Applications Use Multithreading?  Any kind of application which has distinct tasks which can be performed independently  Any application with a GUI.  Threads dedicated to the GUI can delegate the processing of user requests to other threads.  The GUI remains responsive to the user even when the user's requests are being processed.  Any application which requires asynchronous response  Network based applications are ideally suited to multithreading. Data can arrive from the network at any time. In a single threaded system, data is queued until the thread can read the data In a multithreaded system, a thread can be dedicated to listening for data on the network port When data arrives, the thread reads it immediately and processes it or delegates its processing to another thread
  • 5. What are Threads?  A piece of code that run in concurrent with other threads.  Each thread is a statically ordered sequence of instructions.  Threads are being extensively used express concurrency on both single and multiprocessors machines.  Programming a task having multiple threads of control – Multithreading or Multithreaded Programming.
  • 6. Thread States Threads can be in one of four states Created, Running, Blocked, and Dead A thread's state changes based on: Control methods such as start, sleep, yield, wait, notify Termination of the run method notify() Created Runnable Blocked Dead Thread() start() run() method terminates sleep() wait()
  • 7. Java Threads  Java has built in thread support for Multithreading  Synchronization  Thread Scheduling  Inter-Thread Communication:  Java Garbage Collector is a low-priority thread
  • 8. Threading Mechanisms  Create a class that extends the Thread class  Create a class that implements the Runnable interface
  • 9. 1st Method Extending Thread class  Threads are implemented as objects that contains a method called run() class MyThread extends Thread { public void run() { // thread body of execution } }  Create a thread: MyThread thr1 = new MyThread();  Start Execution of threads: thr1.start();
  • 10. An example class MyThread extends Thread { // the thread public void run() { System.out.println(" this thread is running ... "); } } // end class MyThread class ThreadEx1 { // a program that utilizes the thread public static void main(String [] args ) { MyThread t = new MyThread(); // due to extending the Thread class (above) // I can call start(), and this will call // run(). start() is a method in class Thread. t.start(); } // end main() } // end class ThreadEx1
  • 11. 2nd Method Threads by implementing Runnable interface class MyThread implements Runnable { ..... public void run() { // thread body of execution } }  Creating Object: MyThread myObject = new MyThread();  Creating Thread Object: Thread thr1 = new Thread( myObject );  Start Execution: thr1.start();
  • 12. An example class MyThread implements Runnable { public void run() { System.out.println(" this thread is running ... "); } } // end class MyThread class ThreadEx2 { public static void main(String [] args ) { Thread t = new Thread(new MyThread()); // due to implementing the Runnable interface // We can call start(), and this will call run(). t.start(); } // end main() } // end class ThreadEx2
  • 13. Thread Priority  In Java, each thread is assigned priority, which affects the order in which it is scheduled for running. The threads so far had same default priority (ORM_PRIORITY) and they are served using FCFS policy.  Java allows users to change priority: ThreadName.setPriority(intNumber) MIN_PRIORITY = 1 NORM_PRIORITY=5 MAX_PRIORITY=10
  • 14. Thread priority Example class A extends Thread { public void run() { System.out.println("Thread A started"); for(int i=1;i<=4;i++) { System.out.println("t From ThreadA: i= "+i); } System.out.println("Exit from A"); } } class B extends Thread { public void run() { System.out.println("Thread B started"); for(int j=1;j<=4;j++) { System.out.println("t From ThreadB: j= "+j); } System.out.println("Exit from B"); } }
  • 15. Thread priority Example(Cont.) class C extends Thread { public void run() { System.out.println("Thread C started"); for(int k=1;k<=4;k++) { System.out.println("t From ThreadC: k= "+k); } System.out.println("Exit from C"); } }
  • 16. Thread priority Example(Cont.) class ThreadPriority { public static void main(String args[]) { A threadA=new A(); B threadB=new B(); C threadC=new C(); threadC.setPriority(Thread.MAX_PRIORITY); threadB.setPriority(threadA.getPriority()+1); threadA.setPriority(Thread.MIN_PRIORITY); System.out.println("Started Thread A"); threadA.start(); System.out.println("Started Thread B"); threadB.start(); System.out.println("Started Thread C"); threadC.start(); System.out.println("End of main thread"); } }
  • 17. Deadlock: What is it ?  A special type of error which occurs when two threads have a circular dependency on a pair of synchronized objects.  For example, Traffic Jam.  Device allocation  Thread 1 requests tape drive 1 & gets it.  Thread 2 requests tape drive 2 & gets it.  Thread 1 requests tape drive 2 but is blocked.  Thread 2 requests tape drive 1 but is blocked.
  • 18. Deadlock as error:  Deadlock is a difficult error to debug for two reasons.. In general, it occurs only rarely, when the two threads time-slice in just the right way. It may involve more than two threads and two synchronized objects.
  • 19. Suspending, Resuming, and Stopping Threads  Sometimes, suspending execution of a thread is useful as a solution of deadlock.  The methods are…. void suspend( ) void resume( ) Void stop()
  • 20. Java Synchonization  Java provides Synchronized keyword to methods that cause only one invocation of a synchronized method on the same object at a time. Example public class SynchronizedCounter { private int c = 0; public synchronized void increment() { c++; } public synchronized void decrement() { c--; } public synchronized int value() { return c; } }
  • 21. 21 Synchronized Statements Unlike synchronized methods, synchronized statements must specify the object that provides the intrinsic lock: Uses construct ion: synchronized ( expression ) { statements } Evaluate to an object or an array. Used to identify lock. “critical section”
  • 22. 22 Synchronized Statements Example: public void addName(String name) { synchronized(this) { lastName = name; nameCount++; } nameList.add(name); } Only this part synchronized
  • 23. Atomic action An atomic action cannot stop in the middle: it either happens completely, or it doesn't happen at all. No side effects of an atomic action are visible until the action is complete. Read/writes can be declared atomic with the volatile keyword, e.g. private volatile int x; Sometimes can be more efficient than synchronized methods
  • 24. Coordinating threads Wait/notify mechanism  Sometimes need a thread to stop running and wait for an event before continuing.  wait() and notify() methods are methods of class Object.  Every object can maintain a list of waiting threads. wait(): When a thread calls wait() method of an object, any locks the thread holds are temporarily released and thread added to list of waiting threads for that object and stops running. notify(): When another thread calls notify() method on the same object, object wakes up one of the waiting threads and allows it to continue.
  • 25. Join  Sometimes one thread needs to stop and wait for another thread to complete.  join() -- waits for a thread to die, i.e. thr1.join() waits for thread thr1 to die.  Calling return() from the run method implicitly causes the thread to exit.