I wrote a test app that should never stop. It issues t.wait()
(t
is a Thread
object), but I never call notify. Why does this code end?
Despite the main thread synchronizing on t
, the spawned thread runs, so it doesn't lock this object.
public class ThreadWait {
public static void main(String sArgs[]) throws InterruptedException {
System.out.println("hello");
Thread t = new MyThread();
synchronized (t) {
t.start();
Thread.sleep(5000);
t.wait();
java.lang.System.out.println("main done");
}
}
}
class MyThread extends Thread {
public void run() {
for (int i = 1; i <= 5; i++) {
java.lang.System.out.println("" + i);
try {
Thread.sleep(500);
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
}
The result is that the main thread waits 5 seconds and during this time worker gives its output. Then after 5 seconds are finished, the program exits. t.wait()
does not wait. If the main thread wouldn't sleep for 5 seconds (commenting this line), then t.wait()
would actually wait until the worker finishes. Of course, join()
is a method to use here, but, unexpectedly, wait()
does the same thing as join()
. Why?
Maybe the JVM sees that, since only one thread is running, there is no chance to notify the main thread and solves the deadlock. If this is true, is it a documented feature?
I'm testing on Windows XP, Java 6.
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