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Mastering Concurrency Programming with Java 9, Second Edition

You're reading from   Mastering Concurrency Programming with Java 9, Second Edition Fast, reactive and parallel application development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785887949
Length 516 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Javier Fernández González Javier Fernández González
Author Profile Icon Javier Fernández González
Javier Fernández González
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The First Step - Concurrency Design Principles FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Basic Elements - Threads and Runnables 3. Managing Lots of Threads - Executors 4. Getting the Most from Executors 5. Getting Data from Tasks - The Callable and Future Interfaces 6. Running Tasks Divided into Phases - The Phaser Class 7. Optimizing Divide and Conquer Solutions - The Fork/Join Framework 8. Processing Massive Datasets with Parallel Streams - The Map and Reduce Model 9. Processing Massive Datasets with Parallel Streams - The Map and Collect Model 10. Asynchronous Stream Processing - Reactive Streams 11. Diving into Concurrent Data Structures and Synchronization Utilities 12. Testing and Monitoring Concurrent Applications 13. Concurrency in JVM - Clojure and Groovy with the Gpars Library and Scala

Additional information about executors

In this chapter, we have extended ThreadPoolExecutor and the ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor class, and overridden some of their methods. But you can override more methods if you want a more specific behavior. These are some methods you can override:

  • shutdown(): You must explicitly call this method to end the execution of the executor. You can override it to add some code to free additional resources used by your own executor.
  • shutdownNow(): The difference between shutdown() and shutdownNow() is that the shutdown() method waits for the finalization of all the tasks that are waiting in the executor.
  • submit(), invokeall(), or invokeany(): You call these methods to send concurrent tasks to the executor. You can override them if you need to do some actions before or after a task is inserted in the task queue of the executor. Note that adding a...
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