| JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.6.0
java.lang
Class Thread
java.lang.Object
java.lang.Thread
- All Implemented Interfaces:
- Runnable
public class Thread - extends Object
- implements Runnable
A thread is a thread of execution in a program. The Java
Virtual Machine allows an application to have multiple threads of
execution running concurrently.
Every thread has a priority. Threads with higher priority are
executed in preference to threads with lower priority. Each thread
may or may not also be marked as a daemon. When code running in
some thread creates a new Thread object, the new
thread has its priority initially set equal to the priority of the
creating thread, and is a daemon thread if and only if the
creating thread is a daemon.
When a Java Virtual Machine starts up, there is usually a single
non-daemon thread (which typically calls the method named
main of some designated class). The Java Virtual
Machine continues to execute threads until either of the following
occurs:
- The
exit method of class Runtime has been
called and the security manager has permitted the exit operation
to take place.
- All threads that are not daemon threads have died, either by
returning from the call to the
run method or by
throwing an exception that propagates beyond the run
method.
There are two ways to create a new thread of execution. One is to
declare a class to be a subclass of Thread. This
subclass should override the run method of class
Thread. An instance of the subclass can then be
allocated and started. For example, a thread that computes primes
larger than a stated value could be written as follows:
class PrimeThread extends Thread {
long minPrime;
PrimeThread(long minPrime) {
this.minPrime = minPrime;
}
public void run() {
// compute primes larger than minPrime
. . .
}
}
The following code would then create a thread and start it running:
PrimeThread p = new PrimeThread(143);
p.start();
The other way to create a thread is to declare a class that
implements the Runnable interface. That class then
implements the run method. An instance of the class can
then be allocated, passed as an argument when creating
Thread, and started. The same example in this other
style looks like the following:
class PrimeRun implements Runnable {
long minPrime;
PrimeRun(long minPrime) {
this.minPrime = minPrime;
}
public void run() {
// compute primes larger than minPrime
. . .
}
}
The following code would then create a thread and start it running:
PrimeRun p = new PrimeRun(143);
new Thread(p).start();
Every thread has a name for identification purposes. More than
one thread may have the same name. If a name is not specified when
a thread is created, a new name is generated for it.
- Since:
- JDK1.0
- See Also:
Runnable,
Runtime.exit(int),
run(),
stop()
|
Field Summary |
static int |
MAX_PRIORITY
The maximum priority that a thread can have. |
static int |
MIN_PRIORITY
The minimum priority that a thread can have. |
static int |
NORM_PRIORITY
The default priority that is assigned to a thread. |
|
Constructor Summary |
Thread()
Allocates a new Thread object. |
Thread(Runnable target)
Allocates a new Thread object. |
Thread(Runnable target,
String name)
Allocates a new Thread object. |
Thread(String name)
Allocates a new Thread object. |
Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target)
Allocates a new Thread object. |
Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target,
String name)
Allocates a new Thread object so that it has
target as its run object, has the specified
name as its name, and belongs to the thread group
referred to by group. |
Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target,
String name,
long stackSize)
Allocates a new Thread object so that it has
target as its run object, has the specified
name as its name, belongs to the thread group referred to
by group, and has the specified stack size. |
Thread(ThreadGroup group,
String name)
Allocates a new Thread object. |
|
Method Summary |
static int |
activeCount()
Returns the number of active threads in the current thread's thread
group. |
void |
checkAccess()
Determines if the currently running thread has permission to
modify this thread. |
int |
countStackFrames()
Deprecated. The definition of this call depends on suspend(),
which is deprecated. Further, the results of this call
were never well-defined. |
static Thread |
currentThread()
Returns a reference to the currently executing thread object. |
void |
destroy()
Deprecated. This method was originally designed to destroy this
thread without any cleanup. Any monitors it held would have
remained locked. However, the method was never implemented.
If if were to be implemented, it would be deadlock-prone in
much the manner of suspend(). If the target thread held
a lock protecting a critical system resource when it was
destroyed, no thread could ever access this resource again.
If another thread ever attempted to lock this resource, deadlock
would result. Such deadlocks typically manifest themselves as
"frozen" processes. For more information, see
Why are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?. |
static void |
dumpStack()
Prints a stack trace of the current thread to the standard error stream. |
static int |
enumerate(Thread[] tarray)
Copies into the specified array every active thread in
the current thread's thread group and its subgroups. |
static Map<Thread,StackTraceElement[]> |
getAllStackTraces()
Returns a map of stack traces for all live threads. |
ClassLoader |
getContextClassLoader()
Returns the context ClassLoader for this Thread. |
static Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler |
getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler()
Returns the default handler invoked when a thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception. |
long |
getId()
Returns the identifier of this Thread. |
String |
getName()
Returns this thread's name. |
int |
getPriority()
Returns this thread's priority. |
StackTraceElement[] |
getStackTrace()
Returns an array of stack trace elements representing the stack dump
of this thread. |
Thread.State |
getState()
Returns the state of this thread. |
ThreadGroup |
getThreadGroup()
Returns the thread group to which this thread belongs. |
Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler |
getUncaughtExceptionHandler()
Returns the handler invoked when this thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception. |
static boolean |
holdsLock(Object obj)
Returns true if and only if the current thread holds the
monitor lock on the specified object. |
void |
interrupt()
Interrupts this thread. |
static boolean |
interrupted()
Tests whether the current thread has been interrupted. |
boolean |
isAlive()
Tests if this thread is alive. |
boolean |
isDaemon()
Tests if this thread is a daemon thread. |
boolean |
isInterrupted()
Tests whether this thread has been interrupted. |
void |
join()
Waits for this thread to die. |
void |
join(long millis)
Waits at most millis milliseconds for this thread to
die. |
void |
join(long millis,
int nanos)
Waits at most millis milliseconds plus
nanos nanoseconds for this thread to die. |
void |
resume()
Deprecated. This method exists solely for use with suspend(),
which has been deprecated because it is deadlock-prone.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?. |
void |
run()
If this thread was constructed using a separate
Runnable run object, then that
Runnable object's run method is called;
otherwise, this method does nothing and returns. |
void |
setContextClassLoader(ClassLoader cl)
Sets the context ClassLoader for this Thread. |
void |
setDaemon(boolean on)
Marks this thread as either a daemon thread or a user thread. |
static void |
setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler eh)
Set the default handler invoked when a thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception, and no other handler has been defined
for that thread. |
void |
setName(String name)
Changes the name of this thread to be equal to the argument
name. |
void |
setPriority(int newPriority)
Changes the priority of this thread. |
void |
setUncaughtExceptionHandler(Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler eh)
Set the handler invoked when this thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception. |
static void |
sleep(long millis)
Causes the currently executing thread to sleep (temporarily cease
execution) for the specified number of milliseconds, subject to
the precision and accuracy of system timers and schedulers. |
static void |
sleep(long millis,
int nanos)
Causes the currently executing thread to sleep (cease execution)
for the specified number of milliseconds plus the specified number
of nanoseconds, subject to the precision and accuracy of system
timers and schedulers. |
void |
start()
Causes this thread to begin execution; the Java Virtual Machine
calls the run method of this thread. |
void |
stop()
Deprecated. This method is inherently unsafe. Stopping a thread with
Thread.stop causes it to unlock all of the monitors that it
has locked (as a natural consequence of the unchecked
ThreadDeath exception propagating up the stack). If
any of the objects previously protected by these monitors were in
an inconsistent state, the damaged objects become visible to
other threads, potentially resulting in arbitrary behavior. Many
uses of stop should be replaced by code that simply
modifies some variable to indicate that the target thread should
stop running. The target thread should check this variable
regularly, and return from its run method in an orderly fashion
if the variable indicates that it is to stop running. If the
target thread waits for long periods (on a condition variable,
for example), the interrupt method should be used to
interrupt the wait.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?. |
void |
stop(Throwable obj)
Deprecated. This method is inherently unsafe. See stop()
for details. An additional danger of this
method is that it may be used to generate exceptions that the
target thread is unprepared to handle (including checked
exceptions that the thread could not possibly throw, were it
not for this method).
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?. |
void |
suspend()
Deprecated. This method has been deprecated, as it is
inherently deadlock-prone. If the target thread holds a lock on the
monitor protecting a critical system resource when it is suspended, no
thread can access this resource until the target thread is resumed. If
the thread that would resume the target thread attempts to lock this
monitor prior to calling resume, deadlock results. Such
deadlocks typically manifest themselves as "frozen" processes.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?. |
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of this thread, including the
thread's name, priority, and thread group. |
static void |
yield()
Causes the currently executing thread object to temporarily pause
and allow other threads to execute. |
MIN_PRIORITY
public static final int MIN_PRIORITY
- The minimum priority that a thread can have.
- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
NORM_PRIORITY
public static final int NORM_PRIORITY
- The default priority that is assigned to a thread.
- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
MAX_PRIORITY
public static final int MAX_PRIORITY
- The maximum priority that a thread can have.
- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
Thread
public Thread()
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(null, null,
gname), where gname is
a newly generated name. Automatically generated names are of the
form "Thread-"+n, where n is an integer.
- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(Runnable target)
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(null, target,
gname), where gname is
a newly generated name. Automatically generated names are of the
form "Thread-"+n, where n is an integer.
- Parameters:
target - the object whose run method is called.- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target)
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(group, target,
gname), where gname is
a newly generated name. Automatically generated names are of the
form "Thread-"+n, where n is an integer.
- Parameters:
group - the thread group.target - the object whose run method is called.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot create a
thread in the specified thread group.- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(String name)
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(null, null, name).
- Parameters:
name - the name of the new thread.- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(ThreadGroup group,
String name)
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(group, null, name)
- Parameters:
group - the thread group.name - the name of the new thread.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot create a
thread in the specified thread group.- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(Runnable target,
String name)
- Allocates a new
Thread object. This constructor has
the same effect as Thread(null, target, name).
- Parameters:
target - the object whose run method is called.name - the name of the new thread.- See Also:
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
Thread
public Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target,
String name)
- Allocates a new
Thread object so that it has
target as its run object, has the specified
name as its name, and belongs to the thread group
referred to by group.
If group is null and there is a
security manager, the group is determined by the security manager's
getThreadGroup method. If group is
null and there is not a security manager, or the
security manager's getThreadGroup method returns
null, the group is set to be the same ThreadGroup
as the thread that is creating the new thread.
If there is a security manager, its checkAccess
method is called with the ThreadGroup as its argument.
In addition, its checkPermission
method is called with the
RuntimePermission("enableContextClassLoaderOverride")
permission when invoked directly or indirectly by the constructor
of a subclass which overrides the getContextClassLoader
or setContextClassLoader methods.
This may result in a SecurityException.
If the target argument is not null, the
run method of the target is called when
this thread is started. If the target argument is
null, this thread's run method is called
when this thread is started.
The priority of the newly created thread is set equal to the
priority of the thread creating it, that is, the currently running
thread. The method setPriority may be used to
change the priority to a new value.
The newly created thread is initially marked as being a daemon
thread if and only if the thread creating it is currently marked
as a daemon thread. The method setDaemon may be used
to change whether or not a thread is a daemon.
- Parameters:
group - the thread group.target - the object whose run method is called.name - the name of the new thread.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot create a
thread in the specified thread group or cannot
override the context class loader methods.- See Also:
Runnable.run(),
run(),
setDaemon(boolean),
setPriority(int),
ThreadGroup.checkAccess(),
SecurityManager.checkAccess(java.lang.Thread)
Thread
public Thread(ThreadGroup group,
Runnable target,
String name,
long stackSize)
- Allocates a new
Thread object so that it has
target as its run object, has the specified
name as its name, belongs to the thread group referred to
by group, and has the specified stack size.
This constructor is identical to Thread(ThreadGroup,Runnable,String) with the exception of the fact
that it allows the thread stack size to be specified. The stack size
is the approximate number of bytes of address space that the virtual
machine is to allocate for this thread's stack. The effect of the
stackSize parameter, if any, is highly platform dependent.
On some platforms, specifying a higher value for the
stackSize parameter may allow a thread to achieve greater
recursion depth before throwing a StackOverflowError.
Similarly, specifying a lower value may allow a greater number of
threads to exist concurrently without throwing an OutOfMemoryError (or other internal error). The details of
the relationship between the value of the stackSize parameter
and the maximum recursion depth and concurrency level are
platform-dependent. On some platforms, the value of the
stackSize parameter may have no effect whatsoever.
The virtual machine is free to treat the stackSize
parameter as a suggestion. If the specified value is unreasonably low
for the platform, the virtual machine may instead use some
platform-specific minimum value; if the specified value is unreasonably
high, the virtual machine may instead use some platform-specific
maximum. Likewise, the virtual machine is free to round the specified
value up or down as it sees fit (or to ignore it completely).
Specifying a value of zero for the stackSize parameter will
cause this constructor to behave exactly like the
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String) constructor.
Due to the platform-dependent nature of the behavior of this
constructor, extreme care should be exercised in its use.
The thread stack size necessary to perform a given computation will
likely vary from one JRE implementation to another. In light of this
variation, careful tuning of the stack size parameter may be required,
and the tuning may need to be repeated for each JRE implementation on
which an application is to run.
Implementation note: Java platform implementers are encouraged to
document their implementation's behavior with respect to the
stackSize parameter.
- Parameters:
group - the thread group.target - the object whose run method is called.name - the name of the new thread.stackSize - the desired stack size for the new thread, or
zero to indicate that this parameter is to be ignored.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot create a
thread in the specified thread group.- Since:
- 1.4
currentThread
public static Thread currentThread()
- Returns a reference to the currently executing thread object.
- Returns:
- the currently executing thread.
yield
public static void yield()
- Causes the currently executing thread object to temporarily pause
and allow other threads to execute.
sleep
public static void sleep(long millis)
throws InterruptedException
- Causes the currently executing thread to sleep (temporarily cease
execution) for the specified number of milliseconds, subject to
the precision and accuracy of system timers and schedulers. The thread
does not lose ownership of any monitors.
- Parameters:
millis - the length of time to sleep in milliseconds.
- Throws:
InterruptedException - if any thread has interrupted
the current thread. The interrupted status of the
current thread is cleared when this exception is thrown.- See Also:
Object.notify()
sleep
public static void sleep(long millis,
int nanos)
throws InterruptedException
- Causes the currently executing thread to sleep (cease execution)
for the specified number of milliseconds plus the specified number
of nanoseconds, subject to the precision and accuracy of system
timers and schedulers. The thread does not lose ownership of any
monitors.
- Parameters:
millis - the length of time to sleep in milliseconds.nanos - 0-999999 additional nanoseconds to sleep.
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the value of millis is
negative or the value of nanos is not in the range
0-999999.
InterruptedException - if any thread has interrupted
the current thread. The interrupted status of the
current thread is cleared when this exception is thrown.- See Also:
Object.notify()
start
public void start()
- Causes this thread to begin execution; the Java Virtual Machine
calls the
run method of this thread.
The result is that two threads are running concurrently: the
current thread (which returns from the call to the
start method) and the other thread (which executes its
run method).
It is never legal to start a thread more than once.
In particular, a thread may not be restarted once it has completed
execution.
- Throws:
IllegalThreadStateException - if the thread was already
started.- See Also:
run(),
stop()
run
public void run()
- If this thread was constructed using a separate
Runnable run object, then that
Runnable object's run method is called;
otherwise, this method does nothing and returns.
Subclasses of Thread should override this method.
- Specified by:
run in interface Runnable
- See Also:
start(),
stop(),
Thread(ThreadGroup, Runnable, String)
stop
@Deprecated
public final void stop()
- Deprecated. This method is inherently unsafe. Stopping a thread with
Thread.stop causes it to unlock all of the monitors that it
has locked (as a natural consequence of the unchecked
ThreadDeath exception propagating up the stack). If
any of the objects previously protected by these monitors were in
an inconsistent state, the damaged objects become visible to
other threads, potentially resulting in arbitrary behavior. Many
uses of stop should be replaced by code that simply
modifies some variable to indicate that the target thread should
stop running. The target thread should check this variable
regularly, and return from its run method in an orderly fashion
if the variable indicates that it is to stop running. If the
target thread waits for long periods (on a condition variable,
for example), the interrupt method should be used to
interrupt the wait.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?.
- Forces the thread to stop executing.
If there is a security manager installed, its checkAccess
method is called with this
as its argument. This may result in a
SecurityException being raised (in the current thread).
If this thread is different from the current thread (that is, the current
thread is trying to stop a thread other than itself), the
security manager's checkPermission method (with a
RuntimePermission("stopThread") argument) is called in
addition.
Again, this may result in throwing a
SecurityException (in the current thread).
The thread represented by this thread is forced to stop whatever
it is doing abnormally and to throw a newly created
ThreadDeath object as an exception.
It is permitted to stop a thread that has not yet been started.
If the thread is eventually started, it immediately terminates.
An application should not normally try to catch
ThreadDeath unless it must do some extraordinary
cleanup operation (note that the throwing of
ThreadDeath causes finally clauses of
try statements to be executed before the thread
officially dies). If a catch clause catches a
ThreadDeath object, it is important to rethrow the
object so that the thread actually dies.
The top-level error handler that reacts to otherwise uncaught
exceptions does not print out a message or otherwise notify the
application if the uncaught exception is an instance of
ThreadDeath.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot
modify this thread.- See Also:
interrupt(),
checkAccess(),
run(),
start(),
ThreadDeath,
ThreadGroup.uncaughtException(Thread,Throwable),
SecurityManager.checkAccess(Thread),
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission)
stop
@Deprecated
public final void stop(Throwable obj)
- Deprecated. This method is inherently unsafe. See
stop()
for details. An additional danger of this
method is that it may be used to generate exceptions that the
target thread is unprepared to handle (including checked
exceptions that the thread could not possibly throw, were it
not for this method).
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?.
- Forces the thread to stop executing.
If there is a security manager installed, the checkAccess
method of this thread is called, which may result in a
SecurityException being raised (in the current thread).
If this thread is different from the current thread (that is, the current
thread is trying to stop a thread other than itself) or
obj is not an instance of ThreadDeath, the
security manager's checkPermission method (with the
RuntimePermission("stopThread") argument) is called in
addition.
Again, this may result in throwing a
SecurityException (in the current thread).
If the argument obj is null, a
NullPointerException is thrown (in the current thread).
The thread represented by this thread is forced to stop
whatever it is doing abnormally and to throw the
Throwable object obj as an exception. This
is an unusual action to take; normally, the stop method
that takes no arguments should be used.
It is permitted to stop a thread that has not yet been started.
If the thread is eventually started, it immediately terminates.
- Parameters:
obj - the Throwable object to be thrown.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify
this thread.
NullPointerException - if obj is null.- See Also:
interrupt(),
checkAccess(),
run(),
start(),
stop(),
SecurityManager.checkAccess(Thread),
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission)
interrupt
public void interrupt()
- Interrupts this thread.
Unless the current thread is interrupting itself, which is
always permitted, the checkAccess method
of this thread is invoked, which may cause a SecurityException to be thrown.
If this thread is blocked in an invocation of the wait(), wait(long), or wait(long, int) methods of the Object
class, or of the join(), join(long), join(long, int), sleep(long), or sleep(long, int),
methods of this class, then its interrupt status will be cleared and it
will receive an InterruptedException.
If this thread is blocked in an I/O operation upon an interruptible
channel then the channel will be closed, the thread's interrupt
status will be set, and the thread will receive a ClosedByInterruptException.
If this thread is blocked in a Selector
then the thread's interrupt status will be set and it will return
immediately from the selection operation, possibly with a non-zero
value, just as if the selector's wakeup method were invoked.
If none of the previous conditions hold then this thread's interrupt
status will be set.
Interrupting a thread that is not alive need not have any effect.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify this thread
interrupted
public static boolean interrupted()
- Tests whether the current thread has been interrupted. The
interrupted status of the thread is cleared by this method. In
other words, if this method were to be called twice in succession, the
second call would return false (unless the current thread were
interrupted again, after the first call had cleared its interrupted
status and before the second call had examined it).
A thread interruption ignored because a thread was not alive
at the time of the interrupt will be reflected by this method
returning false.
- Returns:
true if the current thread has been interrupted;
false otherwise.- See Also:
isInterrupted()
isInterrupted
public boolean isInterrupted()
- Tests whether this thread has been interrupted. The interrupted
status of the thread is unaffected by this method.
A thread interruption ignored because a thread was not alive
at the time of the interrupt will be reflected by this method
returning false.
- Returns:
true if this thread has been interrupted;
false otherwise.- See Also:
interrupted()
destroy
@Deprecated
public void destroy()
- Deprecated. This method was originally designed to destroy this
thread without any cleanup. Any monitors it held would have
remained locked. However, the method was never implemented.
If if were to be implemented, it would be deadlock-prone in
much the manner of
suspend(). If the target thread held
a lock protecting a critical system resource when it was
destroyed, no thread could ever access this resource again.
If another thread ever attempted to lock this resource, deadlock
would result. Such deadlocks typically manifest themselves as
"frozen" processes. For more information, see
Why are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?.
- Throws
NoSuchMethodError.
- Throws:
NoSuchMethodError - always
isAlive
public final boolean isAlive()
- Tests if this thread is alive. A thread is alive if it has
been started and has not yet died.
- Returns:
true if this thread is alive;
false otherwise.
suspend
@Deprecated
public final void suspend()
- Deprecated. This method has been deprecated, as it is
inherently deadlock-prone. If the target thread holds a lock on the
monitor protecting a critical system resource when it is suspended, no
thread can access this resource until the target thread is resumed. If
the thread that would resume the target thread attempts to lock this
monitor prior to calling
resume, deadlock results. Such
deadlocks typically manifest themselves as "frozen" processes.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?.
- Suspends this thread.
First, the checkAccess method of this thread is called
with no arguments. This may result in throwing a
SecurityException (in the current thread).
If the thread is alive, it is suspended and makes no further
progress unless and until it is resumed.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify
this thread.- See Also:
checkAccess()
resume
@Deprecated
public final void resume()
- Deprecated. This method exists solely for use with
suspend(),
which has been deprecated because it is deadlock-prone.
For more information, see
Why
are Thread.stop, Thread.suspend and Thread.resume Deprecated?.
- Resumes a suspended thread.
First, the checkAccess method of this thread is called
with no arguments. This may result in throwing a
SecurityException (in the current thread).
If the thread is alive but suspended, it is resumed and is
permitted to make progress in its execution.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify this
thread.- See Also:
checkAccess(),
suspend()
setPriority
public final void setPriority(int newPriority)
- Changes the priority of this thread.
First the checkAccess method of this thread is called
with no arguments. This may result in throwing a
SecurityException.
Otherwise, the priority of this thread is set to the smaller of
the specified newPriority and the maximum permitted
priority of the thread's thread group.
- Parameters:
newPriority - priority to set this thread to
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - If the priority is not in the
range MIN_PRIORITY to
MAX_PRIORITY.
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify
this thread.- See Also:
getPriority(),
checkAccess(),
getThreadGroup(),
MAX_PRIORITY,
MIN_PRIORITY,
ThreadGroup.getMaxPriority()
getPriority
public final int getPriority()
- Returns this thread's priority.
- Returns:
- this thread's priority.
- See Also:
setPriority(int)
setName
public final void setName(String name)
- Changes the name of this thread to be equal to the argument
name.
First the checkAccess method of this thread is called
with no arguments. This may result in throwing a
SecurityException.
- Parameters:
name - the new name for this thread.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify this
thread.- See Also:
getName(),
checkAccess()
getName
public final String getName()
- Returns this thread's name.
- Returns:
- this thread's name.
- See Also:
setName(String)
getThreadGroup
public final ThreadGroup getThreadGroup()
- Returns the thread group to which this thread belongs.
This method returns null if this thread has died
(been stopped).
- Returns:
- this thread's thread group.
activeCount
public static int activeCount()
- Returns the number of active threads in the current thread's thread
group.
- Returns:
- the number of active threads in the current thread's thread
group.
enumerate
public static int enumerate(Thread[] tarray)
- Copies into the specified array every active thread in
the current thread's thread group and its subgroups. This method simply
calls the
enumerate method of the current thread's thread
group with the array argument.
First, if there is a security manager, that enumerate
method calls the security
manager's checkAccess method
with the thread group as its argument. This may result
in throwing a SecurityException.
- Parameters:
tarray - an array of Thread objects to copy to
- Returns:
- the number of threads put into the array
- Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
checkAccess method doesn't allow the operation.- See Also:
ThreadGroup.enumerate(Thread[]),
SecurityManager.checkAccess(ThreadGroup)
countStackFrames
@Deprecated
public int countStackFrames()
- Deprecated. The definition of this call depends on
suspend(),
which is deprecated. Further, the results of this call
were never well-defined.
- Counts the number of stack frames in this thread. The thread must
be suspended.
- Returns:
- the number of stack frames in this thread.
- Throws:
IllegalThreadStateException - if this thread is not
suspended.
join
public final void join(long millis)
throws InterruptedException
- Waits at most
millis milliseconds for this thread to
die. A timeout of 0 means to wait forever.
- Parameters:
millis - the time to wait in milliseconds.
- Throws:
InterruptedException - if any thread has interrupted
the current thread. The interrupted status of the
current thread is cleared when this exception is thrown.
join
public final void join(long millis,
int nanos)
throws InterruptedException
- Waits at most
millis milliseconds plus
nanos nanoseconds for this thread to die.
- Parameters:
millis - the time to wait in milliseconds.nanos - 0-999999 additional nanoseconds to wait.
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the value of millis is negative
the value of nanos is not in the range 0-999999.
InterruptedException - if any thread has interrupted
the current thread. The interrupted status of the
current thread is cleared when this exception is thrown.
join
public final void join()
throws InterruptedException
- Waits for this thread to die.
- Throws:
InterruptedException - if any thread has interrupted
the current thread. The interrupted status of the
current thread is cleared when this exception is thrown.
dumpStack
public static void dumpStack()
- Prints a stack trace of the current thread to the standard error stream.
This method is used only for debugging.
- See Also:
Throwable.printStackTrace()
setDaemon
public final void setDaemon(boolean on)
- Marks this thread as either a daemon thread or a user thread. The
Java Virtual Machine exits when the only threads running are all
daemon threads.
This method must be called before the thread is started.
This method first calls the checkAccess method
of this thread
with no arguments. This may result in throwing a
SecurityException (in the current thread).
- Parameters:
on - if true, marks this thread as a
daemon thread.
- Throws:
IllegalThreadStateException - if this thread is active.
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot modify
this thread.- See Also:
isDaemon(),
checkAccess()
isDaemon
public final boolean isDaemon()
- Tests if this thread is a daemon thread.
- Returns:
true if this thread is a daemon thread;
false otherwise.- See Also:
setDaemon(boolean)
checkAccess
public final void checkAccess()
- Determines if the currently running thread has permission to
modify this thread.
If there is a security manager, its checkAccess method
is called with this thread as its argument. This may result in
throwing a SecurityException.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread is not allowed to
access this thread.- See Also:
SecurityManager.checkAccess(Thread)
toString
public String toString()
- Returns a string representation of this thread, including the
thread's name, priority, and thread group.
- Overrides:
toString in class Object
- Returns:
- a string representation of this thread.
getContextClassLoader
public ClassLoader getContextClassLoader()
- Returns the context ClassLoader for this Thread. The context
ClassLoader is provided by the creator of the thread for use
by code running in this thread when loading classes and resources.
If not set, the default is the ClassLoader context of the parent
Thread. The context ClassLoader of the primordial thread is
typically set to the class loader used to load the application.
First, if there is a security manager, and the caller's class
loader is not null and the caller's class loader is not the same as or
an ancestor of the context class loader for the thread whose
context class loader is being requested, then the security manager's
checkPermission
method is called with a
RuntimePermission("getClassLoader") permission
to see if it's ok to get the context ClassLoader..
- Returns:
- the context ClassLoader for this Thread
- Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
checkPermission method doesn't allow
getting the context ClassLoader.- Since:
- 1.2
- See Also:
setContextClassLoader(java.lang.ClassLoader),
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission),
RuntimePermission
setContextClassLoader
public void setContextClassLoader(ClassLoader cl)
- Sets the context ClassLoader for this Thread. The context
ClassLoader can be set when a thread is created, and allows
the creator of the thread to provide the appropriate class loader
to code running in the thread when loading classes and resources.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkPermission
method is called with a
RuntimePermission("setContextClassLoader") permission
to see if it's ok to set the context ClassLoader..
- Parameters:
cl - the context ClassLoader for this Thread
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread cannot set the
context ClassLoader.- Since:
- 1.2
- See Also:
getContextClassLoader(),
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission),
RuntimePermission
holdsLock
public static boolean holdsLock(Object obj)
- Returns true if and only if the current thread holds the
monitor lock on the specified object.
This method is designed to allow a program to assert that
the current thread already holds a specified lock:
assert Thread.holdsLock(obj);
- Parameters:
obj - the object on which to test lock ownership
- Returns:
- true if the current thread holds the monitor lock on
the specified object.
- Throws:
NullPointerException - if obj is null- Since:
- 1.4
getStackTrace
public StackTraceElement[] getStackTrace()
- Returns an array of stack trace elements representing the stack dump
of this thread. This method will return a zero-length array if
this thread has not started or has terminated.
If the returned array is of non-zero length then the first element of
the array represents the top of the stack, which is the most recent
method invocation in the sequence. The last element of the array
represents the bottom of the stack, which is the least recent method
invocation in the sequence.
If there is a security manager, and this thread is not
the current thread, then the security manager's
checkPermission method is called with a
RuntimePermission("getStackTrace") permission
to see if it's ok to get the stack trace.
Some virtual machines may, under some circumstances, omit one
or more stack frames from the stack trace. In the extreme case,
a virtual machine that has no stack trace information concerning
this thread is permitted to return a zero-length array from this
method.
- Returns:
- an array of StackTraceElement,
each represents one stack frame.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
checkPermission method doesn't allow
getting the stack trace of thread.- Since:
- 1.5
- See Also:
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission),
RuntimePermission,
Throwable.getStackTrace()
getAllStackTraces
public static Map<Thread,StackTraceElement[]> getAllStackTraces()
- Returns a map of stack traces for all live threads.
The map keys are threads and each map value is an array of
StackTraceElement that represents the stack dump
of the corresponding Thread.
The returned stack traces are in the format specified for
the
getStackTrace method.
The threads may be executing while this method is called.
The stack trace of each thread only represents a snapshot and
each stack trace may be obtained at different time. A zero-length
array will be returned in the map value if the virtual machine has
no stack trace information about a thread.
If there is a security manager, then the security manager's
checkPermission method is called with a
RuntimePermission("getStackTrace") permission as well as
RuntimePermission("modifyThreadGroup") permission
to see if it is ok to get the stack trace of all threads.
- Returns:
- a Map from Thread to an array of
StackTraceElement that represents the stack trace of
the corresponding thread.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
checkPermission method doesn't allow
getting the stack trace of thread.- Since:
- 1.5
- See Also:
getStackTrace(),
SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission),
RuntimePermission,
Throwable.getStackTrace()
getId
public long getId()
- Returns the identifier of this Thread. The thread ID is a positive
long number generated when this thread was created.
The thread ID is unique and remains unchanged during its lifetime.
When a thread is terminated, this thread ID may be reused.
- Returns:
- this thread's ID.
- Since:
- 1.5
getState
public Thread.State getState()
- Returns the state of this thread.
This method is designed for use in monitoring of the system state,
not for synchronization control.
- Returns:
- this thread's state.
- Since:
- 1.5
setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler
public static void setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler eh)
- Set the default handler invoked when a thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception, and no other handler has been defined
for that thread.
Uncaught exception handling is controlled first by the thread, then
by the thread's ThreadGroup object and finally by the default
uncaught exception handler. If the thread does not have an explicit
uncaught exception handler set, and the thread's thread group
(including parent thread groups) does not specialize its
uncaughtException method, then the default handler's
uncaughtException method will be invoked.
By setting the default uncaught exception handler, an application
can change the way in which uncaught exceptions are handled (such as
logging to a specific device, or file) for those threads that would
already accept whatever "default" behavior the system
provided.
Note that the default uncaught exception handler should not usually
defer to the thread's ThreadGroup object, as that could cause
infinite recursion.
- Parameters:
eh - the object to use as the default uncaught exception handler.
If null then there is no default handler.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager is present and it
denies RuntimePermission
("setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler")- Since:
- 1.5
- See Also:
setUncaughtExceptionHandler(java.lang.Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler),
getUncaughtExceptionHandler(),
ThreadGroup.uncaughtException(java.lang.Thread, java.lang.Throwable)
getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler
public static Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler getDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler()
- Returns the default handler invoked when a thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception. If the returned value is null,
there is no default.
- Since:
- 1.5
- See Also:
setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(java.lang.Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler)
getUncaughtExceptionHandler
public Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler getUncaughtExceptionHandler()
- Returns the handler invoked when this thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception. If this thread has not had an
uncaught exception handler explicitly set then this thread's
ThreadGroup object is returned, unless this thread
has terminated, in which case null is returned.
- Since:
- 1.5
setUncaughtExceptionHandler
public void setUncaughtExceptionHandler(Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler eh)
- Set the handler invoked when this thread abruptly terminates
due to an uncaught exception.
A thread can take full control of how it responds to uncaught
exceptions by having its uncaught exception handler explicitly set.
If no such handler is set then the thread's ThreadGroup
object acts as its handler.
- Parameters:
eh - the object to use as this thread's uncaught exception
handler. If null then this thread has no explicit handler.
- Throws:
SecurityException - if the current thread is not allowed to
modify this thread.- Since:
- 1.5
- See Also:
setDefaultUncaughtExceptionHandler(java.lang.Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler),
ThreadGroup.uncaughtException(java.lang.Thread, java.lang.Throwable)
Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved
|