I am trying to build something, which requires multithreading functionality. The desired work was not done using javascript i.e. Web-Workers.
So I changed focus from javascript to JSP. Now I want to call one method which will execute series of some queries, and at the same time I want to show the affected table rows on other hand. And when first process done with it's execution, I want to stop other process also. My work is done but statically. Now I want to share some resource between this two threads. So that when first thread done with it's execution, I will set some value to that resource(variable,flag), and check that resource in another thread. Is it possible to access variable of one thread in another while it running.
Thanks
JavaScript in a browser is per design not capable of multithreading. You can simulate it a little bit when using setTimeout or setInterval methods.
But, as with the introduction of HTML5, there are now so called WebWorkers available. They run completely separate, spawn a real OS thread, do not have access the DOM but can interact with your UI application e.g. via events.
Related
I'm fairly new to java and I was creating a program which would run indefinitely. Currently, the way I have the program set up is calling a certain method which would perform a task then call another method in the same class, this method would perform a task then call the initial method. This process would repeat indefinitely until I stop the compiler.
My problem is when I try to create a GUI to make my program more user friendly, once I press the initial start button this infinite loop will not allow me to perform any other actions -- including stopping the program.
There has to be another way to do this?
I apologize if this method is extremely sloppy, I sort of taught myself java from videos and looking at other programs and don't entirely understand it yet.
You'll need to run your task in a new thread, and have your GUI stuff in another thread.
Actually, if you keep working on this problem, you'll eventually invent event driven programming. Lots of GUI based software, like Android, use this paradigm.
There are several solutions. The first that comes to mind is that you could put whatever method needs to run forever in its own thread, and have a different thread listen for user input. This might introduce difficulties in getting the threads to interact with each other, but it would allow you to do this.
Alternatively, add a method that checks for user input and handles it inside the infinite loop of your program. something like below
while(true){
//do stuff
checkForUserInput();
//do other stuff
}
To solve this problem, you need to run your UI in another thread.
Many programs are based on an infinite loop (servers that keep waiting for a new user to connect for example) and your problem isn't there.
Managing the CPU time (or the core) allocated to your infinite loop and the one allocated to take care of your UI interactions is the job of the operating system, not yours : that's why your UI should run in a separate thread than your actual code.
Depending on the GUI library (Swing, ...) you're using there may be different ways to do it and the way to implement it is well answered on Stack Overflow
I have a GUI and the GUI is starting another thread (Java). This thread is starting a class which is crawling many websites. Now I want to show in the GUI how many websites are crawled and how many are left.
I wonder what's the best solution for that.
First idea was to start a timer in the GUI and periodically ask the crawler how many is left. But I guess this is quite dirty...
Then one could pass the GUI to the crawler and it is calling a GUI method every time the count of ready websites changes. But I don't think that's much better?
What is the best way to do something like that?
It depends.
Ask the crawler how much work it is done isn't a bad idea. The benefit is you can actually control when an update occurs and can balance out the load.
The downside is that the information may go stale very quickly and you may never get accurate results, as by the time you've read the values, the crawler may have already changed them.
You could have the crawler provide a call back interface, which the GUI registers to and when the crawler updates it's states, calls back to the GUI.
The problem here is the UI may become swamped with results, causing to lag as it tries to keep up. Equally, while the crawler is firing these notifications, it isn't doing it's work...
(Assuming Swing)
In either case, you need to make sure that any ideas you make to the UI are made from within the Event Dispatching Thread. This means if you use the callback method, the updates coming back will come from the crawlers thread context. You will need to resync these with the EDT.
In this case you could simply use a SwingWorker which provides mechanisms for syncing updates back to the EDT for you.
Check out Concurrency in Swing for more details
register a callback function to your thread. when your data is dirty, invoke this callback function to notify GUI thread to update. don't forget to use synchronization.
This is a recent interview question to my friend:
How would you handle a situation where users enter some data in the screen and let's say 5 of them clicked on the Submit button *the SAME time ?*
(By same time,the interviewer insisted that they are same to the level of nanoseconds)
My answer was just to make the method that handles the request synchronized and only one request can acquire the lock on the method at a given time.
But it looks like the interviewer kept insisting there was a "better way" to handle it .
One other approach to handle locking at the database level, but I don't think it is "better".
Are there any other approaches. This seems to be a fairly common problem.
If you have only one network card, you can only have one request coming down it at once. ;)
The answer he is probably looking for is something like
Make the servlet stateless so they can be executed concurrently.
Use components which allow thread safe concurrent access like Atomic* or Concurrent*
Use locks only where you obsolutely have to.
What I prefer to do is to make the service so fast it can respond before the next resquest can come in. ;) Though I don't have the overhead of Java EE or databases to worry about.
Does it matter that they click at the same time e.g. are they both updating the same record on a database?
A synchronized method will not cut it, especially if it's a webapp distributed amongst multiple JVMs. Also the synchronized method may block, but then the other threads would just fire after the first completes and you'd have lost writes.
So locking at database level seems to be the option here i.e. if the record has been updated, report an error back to the users whose updates were serviced after the first.
You do not have to worry about this as web server launches each request in isolated thread and manages it.
But if you have some shared resource like some file for logging then you need to achieve concurrency and put thread lock on it in request and inter requests
I am confused about the applicability of multi threading in general...
I am creating an application which executes some code which has been saved in xml format. The work is to use apache http client and retrieve some data from websites...More than 1 website can be visited by one block of code in xml...
Now I want that if 2 users have created their own respective codes and saved them in XML, then each user's 'job' (ie block of code in xml format) runs in a separate thread.
I have with me code to execute one user's code...Now I want that multiple persons' code can be run in parallel. But I have some doubts--
(1) The Apache HTTP client provides a way of multithreaded communication, currently I am simply using the default HTTP client- this same client can be made to visit multiple websites, one after the other- as per code block in xml. Am I correct in thinking that I do not need to change my code so that it uses the recommended multithreaded communication?
(2) I am thinking of creating a servlet that when invoked, executes one block of xml code. So to execute 2 blocks of code as given by 2 different users, I will have to invoke this servlet twice. I am going to deploy this application using Amazon Elastic Beanstalk, so what I am confused about is, do I need to use multi threading at all in my program? Can I not simply invoke the existing code (which is used to execute one block of code at a time) from the servlet? And I do want to keep processing of the different blocks of XML code separate from each other, so I dont think I should use multi threading here.. Am I correct in my assumption?
Running it one after the other as per your 1st option will not be considered 'concurrent' .
Coming to the servlet method , the way you describe it will work concurrently , but you also need to think about how many users concurrently ? Since for each user , there would be a separate request , there would be some network latency involved for multiple calls. You need to think about all these factors before going ahead with this option
Since you have the code for one user's job , you can define a thread class which has userid as an attribute. In the run() method call the code for a particular user's job.
Now create two threads and set the appropriate userid for each thread and spawn them off.
If the number of users are more , you can look at using Java's Thread Pool Executor .
Since you are going to use a servlet container then it's going to manage multithreading for you. Every servlet request will be executed in a different thread. In that scenario one servlet call would execute on block of code from provided XML in a single threaded manner. If there are several sites declared per block of code they would be visited serially. Other user in the same time may call the same server with other block of code running in parallel with the first one.
I have a SWING UI that contains a button that creates a new SwingWorker thread. That thread then queries the SQLite database for results to put them in a JTable. In my StringWorker constructor, the parameters are various fields taken from other SWING components such as a JSpinner, JComboBoxes, etc.
Since I'm new to all of this thread thing, I'd like some advice from more knowledgeable programmers on how I should go about doing what I want to do.
I'd like to know if threads automatically end when I close the program with System.exit(0); so I don't end up with memory leaks
What is the best way to make sure I don't have two threads accessing my database at the same time (let's say the user clicks multiple times on the button or, other case, an administrator is updating the database with some files as input (within my program), then while the first thread is parsing the files and updating the database, he wants to query the database using the button, etc.).
Is it slower to use threads? At first I did all my calculations right in the EDT and of course the UI locked every time after pressing the button, but it only locked for about 5 seconds if I recall correctly. Now, when I press the button, it doesn't lock up but it seems like the result take about a little bit less than twice as long to show up in the JTable. Is it because I made a mistake in my code or is this normal?
I though about using a static field in the class the queries are in and setting it to true if it's in use. Is that the correct way of doing it? That way, not matter which thread is using the database, the second thread won't launch.
If it's not absolutely necessary (it shouldn't be), don't use System#exit in your code. Here are some explanations why and what is better.
Your database is capable of handling two concurrent requests, so it's not a bad thing in itself. If you use JDBC and its pooled connections via DataSource, then you should probably restrict the usage of one such a connection to one thread at a time. To cure the problem of having redundant database queries, e.g. when "clicking twice", there is probably more than one solution. I assume here that you mean the scenario where you have a Swing UI that is distributed to several people, and each of these instances talks to the same database -> simply disable your button as long as the execution of the database query takes.
It's slightly slower if you do not run your code directly in the Event Dispatch Thread due to scheduling of execution of your workers, but this should not be noticable. To see what goes wrong I would have to see the relevant code.
I'd like to know if threads automatically end when I close the program with System.exit(0);
Yes. Entire process will end and threads that are part of this process. However, if you don't call System.exit(), all non daemon threads must finish before process is gone.
What is the best way to make sure I don't have two threads accessing my database at the same time
Since it's a Swing application, I assume that both you and administrator can't access the application at the same time. However, to guarantee that even in single application you can't start more than one operation affecting database, you have to block UI. Either disable buttons or put glass pane on top of UI. Modal progress dialog is also helpful.
Is it slower to use threads?
No, it is not slower if done right. Slow operation will take as long as it takes. You can't fix it with threads, but you can, either keep speed (perceived) the same while providing nice, non blocking UI or you can do more than one slow operation at a time and therefore increase that perceived speed.