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10:04
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A: Thread starvation deadlock example

dreamcrashTL;DR : The concurrency variable specifies the number of tasks to be executed by the threads in the Executor thread pool passed as parameter of the method time. A deadlock occurs if those tasks are not executed by different threads. From the CountDownLatch documentation one can read: A CountDown...

The Javadoc for CountDownLatch.await() says « If the current count is greater than zero then the current thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling purposes and lies dormant ». So I am not sure why the thread from the first task cannot be suspended to execute the code from the second task
@alfer yep that thread stay waiting for the other to call countDown()
But according to the doc it can be rescheduled after calling await()
@alfer because that thread has to wait for the others to call countDown(). When you use the CountDownLatch you obey to it specifications, and the rules are that if you call .await(); you will have to wait for the other threads to call countDown
@alfer the documentation does not talk about context switching, you are interpreting it wrong, it says "thread becomes disabled for thread scheduling purposes and lies dormant" which means that thread cannot be reused to work in another tasks and waits
Ok I did interpret it wrong
10:04
@alfer No problem, would you mind reaccepting the answer :P? thanks
Ok. But does it mean that calling await() never triggers a thread suspension and rescheduling? It’s just spin waiting?
@alfer exactly, That is the whole point of the CountDownLatch, make threads wait for each other based on some logic
But I asked the question here and someone seems to disagree stackoverflow.com/questions/66929133/…
Because you are using the term suspend
"The thread can then be rescheduled elsewhere." this is not correct
Where did you read that?
I thought that was what I said in my previous comment here. Why is that not correct?
10:08
Okey so
from the documentation
"A CountDownLatch is initialized with a given count. The await methods block until the current count reaches zero due to invocations of the countDown() method, after which all waiting threads are released and any subsequent invocations of await return immediately."
The wait method blocks
but it can still allow the thread the be suspended and rescheduled?
it suspended the thread
but it does not mention rescheduled
If you read this part
Does not mentioned anything about rescheduled
indeed
so I guess the other person is wrong, or misinterpreted my question
No, I think the other person meant that this part was wrong "Other blocking methods (e.g. CountDownLatch.await()) do not suspend the thread."
when I meant "suspended", I meant it would then be rescheduled. I guess the wording isn't correct, I changed it
10:15
You can have a look at the implementation of await
ok
There is there a bunch of Thread.onSpinWait();
btw where did you read this part
"(e.g. synchronized(this)) can cause the thread to be suspended and rescheduled elsewhere."
Also using "They just busy wait for the condition to become true before letting the thread continue."
is not very precise
I didn't read it anywhere recently, it's just what I thought
because we don't know if it by busy wait or not
it might be another mechanism
I replaced busy wait with spin lock
10:17
but that is an implementation detailed
what it matters is that the thread is waiting
I wasn't sure about the wording, my question was whether the thread would be blocked waiting on the same CPU or could be rescheduled
This is a behaviour typically implemented at the Pool Level
I will add an answer
if it wrong someone will complain
but the pool cannot allow the thread to be rescheduled after CountDownLatch.await()?
feel free to improve the wording of my question if you want
No, if it is not on the documentation
that you cannot assumed it
what by rescheduled do you mean what exactly ?
working in another task or get mapped to a different core?
working in another task I think
10:31
Okey then no
But by suspend it does not mean :

(..) to be suspended and rescheduled elsewhere.
what about context switching?
if the thread cannot be rescheduled then it's just blocked doing nothing?
I guess the people who answered on the other post are quite unpleasant
You mean in the comments? yep something, or times is that via comments it is hard to get the emotion behind it
btw the problem that I see
is that you are mixing concepts
context switching is when you have multiple threads in the same core
performing working a concurrent fashion
10:46
I'm probably mixing yes
actually more acurrante
"In computing, a context switch is the process of storing the state of a process or thread, so that it can be restored and resume execution at a later point. This allows multiple processes to share a single central processing unit (CPU), and is an essential feature of a multitasking operating system."
so if a thread is context switched after blocking on a lock, another thread can use the CPU
if you mean by rescheduled that the thread that is blocking might end up in a different core then you are correct
if you mean you have a pool with 10 tasks
and 2 threads
and they are blocked by another threads
those blocking threads will not pickup the work in the pool
unless it explicitly states that in the documentation
I am not even sure if that can be done efficiently
"
so if a thread is context switched after blocking on a lock, another thread can use the CPU"
yes
can, but does not mean it will
and what does the context switched thread do?
this is the Operator System that will decide
10:49
while it's waiting for the lock?
just waits
now how that wait is implemented
it depends from the concrete code
ok I guess that's where I got it wrong
but that I don't know much details about it
which technique they are using to wait
I thought the thread could actually be used to do something else
while blocked
but actually, if a thread is executing a task, it might get temporarily suspended, but it can't be used for anything else until the task is finished
thanks for your time
Yep, that is my understanding of ti
**of it
no problem, you are welcome
10:59
so we could have 10 threads, one of them is holding the lock and the 9 others are waiting for it. Yet those 9 threads are just idle, doing nothing
I thought the OS would have rescheduled them to do something, but I guess not

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