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ConcurrentHashMap.java
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ConcurrentHashMap.java
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/*
* Written by Doug Lea with assistance from members of JCP JSR-166
* Expert Group and released to the public domain, as explained at
* http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
*/
package java.util.concurrent;
import java.io.ObjectStreamField;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.lang.reflect.ParameterizedType;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;
import java.util.AbstractMap;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Hashtable;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.NoSuchElementException;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.Spliterator;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicReference;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.LockSupport;
import java.util.concurrent.locks.ReentrantLock;
import java.util.function.BiConsumer;
import java.util.function.BiFunction;
import java.util.function.Consumer;
import java.util.function.DoubleBinaryOperator;
import java.util.function.Function;
import java.util.function.IntBinaryOperator;
import java.util.function.LongBinaryOperator;
import java.util.function.Predicate;
import java.util.function.ToDoubleBiFunction;
import java.util.function.ToDoubleFunction;
import java.util.function.ToIntBiFunction;
import java.util.function.ToIntFunction;
import java.util.function.ToLongBiFunction;
import java.util.function.ToLongFunction;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
import jdk.internal.misc.Unsafe;
/**
* A hash table supporting full concurrency of retrievals and
* high expected concurrency for updates. This class obeys the
* same functional specification as {@link java.util.Hashtable}, and
* includes versions of methods corresponding to each method of
* {@code Hashtable}. However, even though all operations are
* thread-safe, retrieval operations do <em>not</em> entail locking,
* and there is <em>not</em> any support for locking the entire table
* in a way that prevents all access. This class is fully
* interoperable with {@code Hashtable} in programs that rely on its
* thread safety but not on its synchronization details.
*
* <p>Retrieval operations (including {@code get}) generally do not
* block, so may overlap with update operations (including {@code put}
* and {@code remove}). Retrievals reflect the results of the most
* recently <em>completed</em> update operations holding upon their
* onset. (More formally, an update operation for a given key bears a
* <em>happens-before</em> relation with any (non-null) retrieval for
* that key reporting the updated value.) For aggregate operations
* such as {@code putAll} and {@code clear}, concurrent retrievals may
* reflect insertion or removal of only some entries. Similarly,
* Iterators, Spliterators and Enumerations return elements reflecting the
* state of the hash table at some point at or since the creation of the
* iterator/enumeration. They do <em>not</em> throw {@link
* java.util.ConcurrentModificationException ConcurrentModificationException}.
* However, iterators are designed to be used by only one thread at a time.
* Bear in mind that the results of aggregate status methods including
* {@code size}, {@code isEmpty}, and {@code containsValue} are typically
* useful only when a map is not undergoing concurrent updates in other threads.
* Otherwise the results of these methods reflect transient states
* that may be adequate for monitoring or estimation purposes, but not
* for program control.
*
* <p>The table is dynamically expanded when there are too many
* collisions (i.e., keys that have distinct hash codes but fall into
* the same slot modulo the table size), with the expected average
* effect of maintaining roughly two bins per mapping (corresponding
* to a 0.75 load factor threshold for resizing). There may be much
* variance around this average as mappings are added and removed, but
* overall, this maintains a commonly accepted time/space tradeoff for
* hash tables. However, resizing this or any other kind of hash
* table may be a relatively slow operation. When possible, it is a
* good idea to provide a size estimate as an optional {@code
* initialCapacity} constructor argument. An additional optional
* {@code loadFactor} constructor argument provides a further means of
* customizing initial table capacity by specifying the table density
* to be used in calculating the amount of space to allocate for the
* given number of elements. Also, for compatibility with previous
* versions of this class, constructors may optionally specify an
* expected {@code concurrencyLevel} as an additional hint for
* internal sizing. Note that using many keys with exactly the same
* {@code hashCode()} is a sure way to slow down performance of any
* hash table. To ameliorate impact, when keys are {@link Comparable},
* this class may use comparison order among keys to help break ties.
*
* <p>A {@link Set} projection of a ConcurrentHashMap may be created
* (using {@link #newKeySet()} or {@link #newKeySet(int)}), or viewed
* (using {@link #keySet(Object)} when only keys are of interest, and the
* mapped values are (perhaps transiently) not used or all take the
* same mapping value.
*
* <p>A ConcurrentHashMap can be used as a scalable frequency map (a
* form of histogram or multiset) by using {@link
* java.util.concurrent.atomic.LongAdder} values and initializing via
* {@link #computeIfAbsent computeIfAbsent}. For example, to add a count
* to a {@code ConcurrentHashMap<String,LongAdder> freqs}, you can use
* {@code freqs.computeIfAbsent(key, k -> new LongAdder()).increment();}
*
* <p>This class and its views and iterators implement all of the
* <em>optional</em> methods of the {@link Map} and {@link Iterator}
* interfaces.
*
* <p>Like {@link Hashtable} but unlike {@link HashMap}, this class
* does <em>not</em> allow {@code null} to be used as a key or value.
*
* <p>ConcurrentHashMaps support a set of sequential and parallel bulk
* operations that, unlike most {@link Stream} methods, are designed
* to be safely, and often sensibly, applied even with maps that are
* being concurrently updated by other threads; for example, when
* computing a snapshot summary of the values in a shared registry.
* There are three kinds of operation, each with four forms, accepting
* functions with keys, values, entries, and (key, value) pairs as
* arguments and/or return values. Because the elements of a
* ConcurrentHashMap are not ordered in any particular way, and may be
* processed in different orders in different parallel executions, the
* correctness of supplied functions should not depend on any
* ordering, or on any other objects or values that may transiently
* change while computation is in progress; and except for forEach
* actions, should ideally be side-effect-free. Bulk operations on
* {@link Map.Entry} objects do not support method {@code setValue}.
*
* <ul>
* <li>forEach: Performs a given action on each element.
* A variant form applies a given transformation on each element
* before performing the action.
*
* <li>search: Returns the first available non-null result of
* applying a given function on each element; skipping further
* search when a result is found.
*
* <li>reduce: Accumulates each element. The supplied reduction
* function cannot rely on ordering (more formally, it should be
* both associative and commutative). There are five variants:
*
* <ul>
*
* <li>Plain reductions. (There is not a form of this method for
* (key, value) function arguments since there is no corresponding
* return type.)
*
* <li>Mapped reductions that accumulate the results of a given
* function applied to each element.
*
* <li>Reductions to scalar doubles, longs, and ints, using a
* given basis value.
*
* </ul>
* </ul>
*
* <p>These bulk operations accept a {@code parallelismThreshold}
* argument. Methods proceed sequentially if the current map size is
* estimated to be less than the given threshold. Using a value of
* {@code Long.MAX_VALUE} suppresses all parallelism. Using a value
* of {@code 1} results in maximal parallelism by partitioning into
* enough subtasks to fully utilize the {@link
* ForkJoinPool#commonPool()} that is used for all parallel
* computations. Normally, you would initially choose one of these
* extreme values, and then measure performance of using in-between
* values that trade off overhead versus throughput.
*
* <p>The concurrency properties of bulk operations follow
* from those of ConcurrentHashMap: Any non-null result returned
* from {@code get(key)} and related access methods bears a
* happens-before relation with the associated insertion or
* update. The result of any bulk operation reflects the
* composition of these per-element relations (but is not
* necessarily atomic with respect to the map as a whole unless it
* is somehow known to be quiescent). Conversely, because keys
* and values in the map are never null, null serves as a reliable
* atomic indicator of the current lack of any result. To
* maintain this property, null serves as an implicit basis for
* all non-scalar reduction operations. For the double, long, and
* int versions, the basis should be one that, when combined with
* any other value, returns that other value (more formally, it
* should be the identity element for the reduction). Most common
* reductions have these properties; for example, computing a sum
* with basis 0 or a minimum with basis MAX_VALUE.
*
* <p>Search and transformation functions provided as arguments
* should similarly return null to indicate the lack of any result
* (in which case it is not used). In the case of mapped
* reductions, this also enables transformations to serve as
* filters, returning null (or, in the case of primitive
* specializations, the identity basis) if the element should not
* be combined. You can create compound transformations and
* filterings by composing them yourself under this "null means
* there is nothing there now" rule before using them in search or
* reduce operations.
*
* <p>Methods accepting and/or returning Entry arguments maintain
* key-value associations. They may be useful for example when
* finding the key for the greatest value. Note that "plain" Entry
* arguments can be supplied using {@code new
* AbstractMap.SimpleEntry(k,v)}.
*
* <p>Bulk operations may complete abruptly, throwing an
* exception encountered in the application of a supplied
* function. Bear in mind when handling such exceptions that other
* concurrently executing functions could also have thrown
* exceptions, or would have done so if the first exception had
* not occurred.
*
* <p>Speedups for parallel compared to sequential forms are common
* but not guaranteed. Parallel operations involving brief functions
* on small maps may execute more slowly than sequential forms if the
* underlying work to parallelize the computation is more expensive
* than the computation itself. Similarly, parallelization may not
* lead to much actual parallelism if all processors are busy
* performing unrelated tasks.
*
* <p>All arguments to all task methods must be non-null.
*
* <p>This class is a member of the
* <a href="{@docRoot}/java.base/java/util/package-summary.html#CollectionsFramework">
* Java Collections Framework</a>.
*
* @since 1.5
* @author Doug Lea
* @param <K> the type of keys maintained by this map
* @param <V> the type of mapped values
*/
public class ConcurrentHashMap<K,V> extends AbstractMap<K,V>
implements ConcurrentMap<K,V>, Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 7249069246763182397L;
/*
* Overview:
*
* The primary design goal of this hash table is to maintain
* concurrent readability (typically method get(), but also
* iterators and related methods) while minimizing update
* contention. Secondary goals are to keep space consumption about
* the same or better than java.util.HashMap, and to support high
* initial insertion rates on an empty table by many threads.
*
* This map usually acts as a binned (bucketed) hash table. Each
* key-value mapping is held in a Node. Most nodes are instances
* of the basic Node class with hash, key, value, and next
* fields. However, various subclasses exist: TreeNodes are
* arranged in balanced trees, not lists. TreeBins hold the roots
* of sets of TreeNodes. ForwardingNodes are placed at the heads
* of bins during resizing. ReservationNodes are used as
* placeholders while establishing values in computeIfAbsent and
* related methods. The types TreeBin, ForwardingNode, and
* ReservationNode do not hold normal user keys, values, or
* hashes, and are readily distinguishable during search etc
* because they have negative hash fields and null key and value
* fields. (These special nodes are either uncommon or transient,
* so the impact of carrying around some unused fields is
* insignificant.)
*
* The table is lazily initialized to a power-of-two size upon the
* first insertion. Each bin in the table normally contains a
* list of Nodes (most often, the list has only zero or one Node).
* Table accesses require volatile/atomic reads, writes, and
* CASes. Because there is no other way to arrange this without
* adding further indirections, we use intrinsics
* (jdk.internal.misc.Unsafe) operations.
*
* We use the top (sign) bit of Node hash fields for control
* purposes -- it is available anyway because of addressing
* constraints. Nodes with negative hash fields are specially
* handled or ignored in map methods.
*
* Insertion (via put or its variants) of the first node in an
* empty bin is performed by just CASing it to the bin. This is
* by far the most common case for put operations under most
* key/hash distributions. Other update operations (insert,
* delete, and replace) require locks. We do not want to waste
* the space required to associate a distinct lock object with
* each bin, so instead use the first node of a bin list itself as
* a lock. Locking support for these locks relies on builtin
* "synchronized" monitors.
*
* Using the first node of a list as a lock does not by itself
* suffice though: When a node is locked, any update must first
* validate that it is still the first node after locking it, and
* retry if not. Because new nodes are always appended to lists,
* once a node is first in a bin, it remains first until deleted
* or the bin becomes invalidated (upon resizing).
*
* The main disadvantage of per-bin locks is that other update
* operations on other nodes in a bin list protected by the same
* lock can stall, for example when user equals() or mapping
* functions take a long time. However, statistically, under
* random hash codes, this is not a common problem. Ideally, the
* frequency of nodes in bins follows a Poisson distribution
* (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_distribution) with a
* parameter of about 0.5 on average, given the resizing threshold
* of 0.75, although with a large variance because of resizing
* granularity. Ignoring variance, the expected occurrences of
* list size k are (exp(-0.5) * pow(0.5, k) / factorial(k)). The
* first values are:
*
* 0: 0.60653066
* 1: 0.30326533
* 2: 0.07581633
* 3: 0.01263606
* 4: 0.00157952
* 5: 0.00015795
* 6: 0.00001316
* 7: 0.00000094
* 8: 0.00000006
* more: less than 1 in ten million
*
* Lock contention probability for two threads accessing distinct
* elements is roughly 1 / (8 * #elements) under random hashes.
*
* Actual hash code distributions encountered in practice
* sometimes deviate significantly from uniform randomness. This
* includes the case when N > (1<<30), so some keys MUST collide.
* Similarly for dumb or hostile usages in which multiple keys are
* designed to have identical hash codes or ones that differs only
* in masked-out high bits. So we use a secondary strategy that
* applies when the number of nodes in a bin exceeds a
* threshold. These TreeBins use a balanced tree to hold nodes (a
* specialized form of red-black trees), bounding search time to
* O(log N). Each search step in a TreeBin is at least twice as
* slow as in a regular list, but given that N cannot exceed
* (1<<64) (before running out of addresses) this bounds search
* steps, lock hold times, etc, to reasonable constants (roughly
* 100 nodes inspected per operation worst case) so long as keys
* are Comparable (which is very common -- String, Long, etc).
* TreeBin nodes (TreeNodes) also maintain the same "next"
* traversal pointers as regular nodes, so can be traversed in
* iterators in the same way.
*
* The table is resized when occupancy exceeds a percentage
* threshold (nominally, 0.75, but see below). Any thread
* noticing an overfull bin may assist in resizing after the
* initiating thread allocates and sets up the replacement array.
* However, rather than stalling, these other threads may proceed
* with insertions etc. The use of TreeBins shields us from the
* worst case effects of overfilling while resizes are in
* progress. Resizing proceeds by transferring bins, one by one,
* from the table to the next table. However, threads claim small
* blocks of indices to transfer (via field transferIndex) before
* doing so, reducing contention. A generation stamp in field
* sizeCtl ensures that resizings do not overlap. Because we are
* using power-of-two expansion, the elements from each bin must
* either stay at same index, or move with a power of two
* offset. We eliminate unnecessary node creation by catching
* cases where old nodes can be reused because their next fields
* won't change. On average, only about one-sixth of them need
* cloning when a table doubles. The nodes they replace will be
* garbage collectible as soon as they are no longer referenced by
* any reader thread that may be in the midst of concurrently
* traversing table. Upon transfer, the old table bin contains
* only a special forwarding node (with hash field "MOVED") that
* contains the next table as its key. On encountering a
* forwarding node, access and update operations restart, using
* the new table.
*
* Each bin transfer requires its bin lock, which can stall
* waiting for locks while resizing. However, because other
* threads can join in and help resize rather than contend for
* locks, average aggregate waits become shorter as resizing
* progresses. The transfer operation must also ensure that all
* accessible bins in both the old and new table are usable by any
* traversal. This is arranged in part by proceeding from the
* last bin (table.length - 1) up towards the first. Upon seeing
* a forwarding node, traversals (see class Traverser) arrange to
* move to the new table without revisiting nodes. To ensure that
* no intervening nodes are skipped even when moved out of order,
* a stack (see class TableStack) is created on first encounter of
* a forwarding node during a traversal, to maintain its place if
* later processing the current table. The need for these
* save/restore mechanics is relatively rare, but when one
* forwarding node is encountered, typically many more will be.
* So Traversers use a simple caching scheme to avoid creating so
* many new TableStack nodes. (Thanks to Peter Levart for
* suggesting use of a stack here.)
*
* The traversal scheme also applies to partial traversals of
* ranges of bins (via an alternate Traverser constructor)
* to support partitioned aggregate operations. Also, read-only
* operations give up if ever forwarded to a null table, which
* provides support for shutdown-style clearing, which is also not
* currently implemented.
*
* Lazy table initialization minimizes footprint until first use,
* and also avoids resizings when the first operation is from a
* putAll, constructor with map argument, or deserialization.
* These cases attempt to override the initial capacity settings,
* but harmlessly fail to take effect in cases of races.
*
* The element count is maintained using a specialization of
* LongAdder. We need to incorporate a specialization rather than
* just use a LongAdder in order to access implicit
* contention-sensing that leads to creation of multiple
* CounterCells. The counter mechanics avoid contention on
* updates but can encounter cache thrashing if read too
* frequently during concurrent access. To avoid reading so often,
* resizing under contention is attempted only upon adding to a
* bin already holding two or more nodes. Under uniform hash
* distributions, the probability of this occurring at threshold
* is around 13%, meaning that only about 1 in 8 puts check
* threshold (and after resizing, many fewer do so).
*
* TreeBins use a special form of comparison for search and
* related operations (which is the main reason we cannot use
* existing collections such as TreeMaps). TreeBins contain
* Comparable elements, but may contain others, as well as
* elements that are Comparable but not necessarily Comparable for
* the same T, so we cannot invoke compareTo among them. To handle
* this, the tree is ordered primarily by hash value, then by
* Comparable.compareTo order if applicable. On lookup at a node,
* if elements are not comparable or compare as 0 then both left
* and right children may need to be searched in the case of tied
* hash values. (This corresponds to the full list search that
* would be necessary if all elements were non-Comparable and had
* tied hashes.) On insertion, to keep a total ordering (or as
* close as is required here) across rebalancings, we compare
* classes and identityHashCodes as tie-breakers. The red-black
* balancing code is updated from pre-jdk-collections
* (http://gee.cs.oswego.edu/dl/classes/collections/RBCell.java)
* based in turn on Cormen, Leiserson, and Rivest "Introduction to
* Algorithms" (CLR).
*
* TreeBins also require an additional locking mechanism. While
* list traversal is always possible by readers even during
* updates, tree traversal is not, mainly because of tree-rotations
* that may change the root node and/or its linkages. TreeBins
* include a simple read-write lock mechanism parasitic on the
* main bin-synchronization strategy: Structural adjustments
* associated with an insertion or removal are already bin-locked
* (and so cannot conflict with other writers) but must wait for
* ongoing readers to finish. Since there can be only one such
* waiter, we use a simple scheme using a single "waiter" field to
* block writers. However, readers need never block. If the root
* lock is held, they proceed along the slow traversal path (via
* next-pointers) until the lock becomes available or the list is
* exhausted, whichever comes first. These cases are not fast, but
* maximize aggregate expected throughput.
*
* Maintaining API and serialization compatibility with previous
* versions of this class introduces several oddities. Mainly: We
* leave untouched but unused constructor arguments referring to
* concurrencyLevel. We accept a loadFactor constructor argument,
* but apply it only to initial table capacity (which is the only
* time that we can guarantee to honor it.) We also declare an
* unused "Segment" class that is instantiated in minimal form
* only when serializing.
*
* Also, solely for compatibility with previous versions of this
* class, it extends AbstractMap, even though all of its methods
* are overridden, so it is just useless baggage.
*
* This file is organized to make things a little easier to follow
* while reading than they might otherwise: First the main static
* declarations and utilities, then fields, then main public
* methods (with a few factorings of multiple public methods into
* internal ones), then sizing methods, trees, traversers, and
* bulk operations.
*/
/* ---------------- Constants -------------- */
/**
* The largest possible table capacity. This value must be
* exactly 1<<30 to stay within Java array allocation and indexing
* bounds for power of two table sizes, and is further required
* because the top two bits of 32bit hash fields are used for
* control purposes.
*/
private static final int MAXIMUM_CAPACITY = 1 << 30;
/**
* The default initial table capacity. Must be a power of 2
* (i.e., at least 1) and at most MAXIMUM_CAPACITY.
*/
private static final int DEFAULT_CAPACITY = 16;
/**
* The largest possible (non-power of two) array size.
* Needed by toArray and related methods.
*/
static final int MAX_ARRAY_SIZE = Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8;
/**
* The default concurrency level for this table. Unused but
* defined for compatibility with previous versions of this class.
*/
private static final int DEFAULT_CONCURRENCY_LEVEL = 16;
/**
* The load factor for this table. Overrides of this value in
* constructors affect only the initial table capacity. The
* actual floating point value isn't normally used -- it is
* simpler to use expressions such as {@code n - (n >>> 2)} for
* the associated resizing threshold.
*/
private static final float LOAD_FACTOR = 0.75f;
/**
* The bin count threshold for using a tree rather than list for a
* bin. Bins are converted to trees when adding an element to a
* bin with at least this many nodes. The value must be greater
* than 2, and should be at least 8 to mesh with assumptions in
* tree removal about conversion back to plain bins upon
* shrinkage.
*/
static final int TREEIFY_THRESHOLD = 8;
/**
* The bin count threshold for untreeifying a (split) bin during a
* resize operation. Should be less than TREEIFY_THRESHOLD, and at
* most 6 to mesh with shrinkage detection under removal.
*/
static final int UNTREEIFY_THRESHOLD = 6;
/**
* The smallest table capacity for which bins may be treeified.
* (Otherwise the table is resized if too many nodes in a bin.)
* The value should be at least 4 * TREEIFY_THRESHOLD to avoid
* conflicts between resizing and treeification thresholds.
*/
static final int MIN_TREEIFY_CAPACITY = 64;
/**
* Minimum number of rebinnings per transfer step. Ranges are
* subdivided to allow multiple resizer threads. This value
* serves as a lower bound to avoid resizers encountering
* excessive memory contention. The value should be at least
* DEFAULT_CAPACITY.
*/
private static final int MIN_TRANSFER_STRIDE = 16;
/**
* The number of bits used for generation stamp in sizeCtl.
* Must be at least 6 for 32bit arrays.
*/
private static final int RESIZE_STAMP_BITS = 16;
/**
* The maximum number of threads that can help resize.
* Must fit in 32 - RESIZE_STAMP_BITS bits.
*/
private static final int MAX_RESIZERS = (1 << (32 - RESIZE_STAMP_BITS)) - 1;
/**
* The bit shift for recording size stamp in sizeCtl.
*/
private static final int RESIZE_STAMP_SHIFT = 32 - RESIZE_STAMP_BITS;
/*
* Encodings for Node hash fields. See above for explanation.
*/
static final int MOVED = -1; // hash for forwarding nodes
static final int TREEBIN = -2; // hash for roots of trees
static final int RESERVED = -3; // hash for transient reservations
static final int HASH_BITS = 0x7fffffff; // usable bits of normal node hash
/** Number of CPUS, to place bounds on some sizings */
static final int NCPU = Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors();
/**
* Serialized pseudo-fields, provided only for jdk7 compatibility.
* @serialField segments Segment[]
* The segments, each of which is a specialized hash table.
* @serialField segmentMask int
* Mask value for indexing into segments. The upper bits of a
* key's hash code are used to choose the segment.
* @serialField segmentShift int
* Shift value for indexing within segments.
*/
private static final ObjectStreamField[] serialPersistentFields = {
new ObjectStreamField("segments", Segment[].class),
new ObjectStreamField("segmentMask", Integer.TYPE),
new ObjectStreamField("segmentShift", Integer.TYPE),
};
/* ---------------- Nodes -------------- */
/**
* Key-value entry. This class is never exported out as a
* user-mutable Map.Entry (i.e., one supporting setValue; see
* MapEntry below), but can be used for read-only traversals used
* in bulk tasks. Subclasses of Node with a negative hash field
* are special, and contain null keys and values (but are never
* exported). Otherwise, keys and vals are never null.
*/
static class Node<K,V> implements Map.Entry<K,V> {
final int hash;
final K key;
volatile V val;
volatile Node<K,V> next;
Node(int hash, K key, V val) {
this.hash = hash;
this.key = key;
this.val = val;
}
Node(int hash, K key, V val, Node<K,V> next) {
this(hash, key, val);
this.next = next;
}
public final K getKey() { return key; }
public final V getValue() { return val; }
public final int hashCode() { return key.hashCode() ^ val.hashCode(); }
public final String toString() {
return Helpers.mapEntryToString(key, val);
}
public final V setValue(V value) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
public final boolean equals(Object o) {
Object k, v, u; Map.Entry<?,?> e;
return ((o instanceof Map.Entry) &&
(k = (e = (Map.Entry<?,?>)o).getKey()) != null &&
(v = e.getValue()) != null &&
(k == key || k.equals(key)) &&
(v == (u = val) || v.equals(u)));
}
/**
* Virtualized support for map.get(); overridden in subclasses.
*/
Node<K,V> find(int h, Object k) {
Node<K,V> e = this;
if (k != null) {
do {
K ek;
if (e.hash == h &&
((ek = e.key) == k || (ek != null && k.equals(ek))))
return e;
} while ((e = e.next) != null);
}
return null;
}
}
/* ---------------- Static utilities -------------- */
/**
* Spreads (XORs) higher bits of hash to lower and also forces top
* bit to 0. Because the table uses power-of-two masking, sets of
* hashes that vary only in bits above the current mask will
* always collide. (Among known examples are sets of Float keys
* holding consecutive whole numbers in small tables.) So we
* apply a transform that spreads the impact of higher bits
* downward. There is a tradeoff between speed, utility, and
* quality of bit-spreading. Because many common sets of hashes
* are already reasonably distributed (so don't benefit from
* spreading), and because we use trees to handle large sets of
* collisions in bins, we just XOR some shifted bits in the
* cheapest possible way to reduce systematic lossage, as well as
* to incorporate impact of the highest bits that would otherwise
* never be used in index calculations because of table bounds.
*/
static final int spread(int h) {
return (h ^ (h >>> 16)) & HASH_BITS;
}
/**
* Returns a power of two table size for the given desired capacity.
* See Hackers Delight, sec 3.2
*/
private static final int tableSizeFor(int c) {
int n = -1 >>> Integer.numberOfLeadingZeros(c - 1);
return (n < 0) ? 1 : (n >= MAXIMUM_CAPACITY) ? MAXIMUM_CAPACITY : n + 1;
}
/**
* Returns x's Class if it is of the form "class C implements
* Comparable<C>", else null.
*/
static Class<?> comparableClassFor(Object x) {
if (x instanceof Comparable) {
Class<?> c; Type[] ts, as; ParameterizedType p;
if ((c = x.getClass()) == String.class) // bypass checks
return c;
if ((ts = c.getGenericInterfaces()) != null) {
for (Type t : ts) {
if ((t instanceof ParameterizedType) &&
((p = (ParameterizedType)t).getRawType() ==
Comparable.class) &&
(as = p.getActualTypeArguments()) != null &&
as.length == 1 && as[0] == c) // type arg is c
return c;
}
}
}
return null;
}
/**
* Returns k.compareTo(x) if x matches kc (k's screened comparable
* class), else 0.
*/
@SuppressWarnings({"rawtypes","unchecked"}) // for cast to Comparable
static int compareComparables(Class<?> kc, Object k, Object x) {
return (x == null || x.getClass() != kc ? 0 :
((Comparable)k).compareTo(x));
}
/* ---------------- Table element access -------------- */
/*
* Atomic access methods are used for table elements as well as
* elements of in-progress next table while resizing. All uses of
* the tab arguments must be null checked by callers. All callers
* also paranoically precheck that tab's length is not zero (or an
* equivalent check), thus ensuring that any index argument taking
* the form of a hash value anded with (length - 1) is a valid
* index. Note that, to be correct wrt arbitrary concurrency
* errors by users, these checks must operate on local variables,
* which accounts for some odd-looking inline assignments below.
* Note that calls to setTabAt always occur within locked regions,
* and so require only release ordering.
*/
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
static final <K,V> Node<K,V> tabAt(Node<K,V>[] tab, int i) {
return (Node<K,V>)U.getObjectAcquire(tab, ((long)i << ASHIFT) + ABASE);
}
static final <K,V> boolean casTabAt(Node<K,V>[] tab, int i,
Node<K,V> c, Node<K,V> v) {
return U.compareAndSetObject(tab, ((long)i << ASHIFT) + ABASE, c, v);
}
static final <K,V> void setTabAt(Node<K,V>[] tab, int i, Node<K,V> v) {
U.putObjectRelease(tab, ((long)i << ASHIFT) + ABASE, v);
}
/* ---------------- Fields -------------- */
/**
* The array of bins. Lazily initialized upon first insertion.
* Size is always a power of two. Accessed directly by iterators.
*/
transient volatile Node<K,V>[] table;
/**
* The next table to use; non-null only while resizing.
*/
private transient volatile Node<K,V>[] nextTable;
/**
* Base counter value, used mainly when there is no contention,
* but also as a fallback during table initialization
* races. Updated via CAS.
*/
private transient volatile long baseCount;
/**
* Table initialization and resizing control. When negative, the
* table is being initialized or resized: -1 for initialization,
* else -(1 + the number of active resizing threads). Otherwise,
* when table is null, holds the initial table size to use upon
* creation, or 0 for default. After initialization, holds the
* next element count value upon which to resize the table.
*/
private transient volatile int sizeCtl;
/**
* The next table index (plus one) to split while resizing.
*/
private transient volatile int transferIndex;
/**
* Spinlock (locked via CAS) used when resizing and/or creating CounterCells.
*/
private transient volatile int cellsBusy;
/**
* Table of counter cells. When non-null, size is a power of 2.
*/
private transient volatile CounterCell[] counterCells;
// views
private transient KeySetView<K,V> keySet;
private transient ValuesView<K,V> values;
private transient EntrySetView<K,V> entrySet;
/* ---------------- Public operations -------------- */
/**
* Creates a new, empty map with the default initial table size (16).
*/
public ConcurrentHashMap() {
}
/**
* Creates a new, empty map with an initial table size
* accommodating the specified number of elements without the need
* to dynamically resize.
*
* @param initialCapacity The implementation performs internal
* sizing to accommodate this many elements.
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the initial capacity of
* elements is negative
*/
public ConcurrentHashMap(int initialCapacity) {
this(initialCapacity, LOAD_FACTOR, 1);
}
/**
* Creates a new map with the same mappings as the given map.
*
* @param m the map
*/
public ConcurrentHashMap(Map<? extends K, ? extends V> m) {
this.sizeCtl = DEFAULT_CAPACITY;
putAll(m);
}
/**
* Creates a new, empty map with an initial table size based on
* the given number of elements ({@code initialCapacity}) and
* initial table density ({@code loadFactor}).
*
* @param initialCapacity the initial capacity. The implementation
* performs internal sizing to accommodate this many elements,
* given the specified load factor.
* @param loadFactor the load factor (table density) for
* establishing the initial table size
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the initial capacity of
* elements is negative or the load factor is nonpositive
*
* @since 1.6
*/
public ConcurrentHashMap(int initialCapacity, float loadFactor) {
this(initialCapacity, loadFactor, 1);
}
/**
* Creates a new, empty map with an initial table size based on
* the given number of elements ({@code initialCapacity}), initial
* table density ({@code loadFactor}), and number of concurrently
* updating threads ({@code concurrencyLevel}).
*
* @param initialCapacity the initial capacity. The implementation
* performs internal sizing to accommodate this many elements,
* given the specified load factor.
* @param loadFactor the load factor (table density) for
* establishing the initial table size
* @param concurrencyLevel the estimated number of concurrently
* updating threads. The implementation may use this value as
* a sizing hint.
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the initial capacity is
* negative or the load factor or concurrencyLevel are
* nonpositive
*/
public ConcurrentHashMap(int initialCapacity,
float loadFactor, int concurrencyLevel) {
if (!(loadFactor > 0.0f) || initialCapacity < 0 || concurrencyLevel <= 0)
throw new IllegalArgumentException();
if (initialCapacity < concurrencyLevel) // Use at least as many bins
initialCapacity = concurrencyLevel; // as estimated threads
long size = (long)(1.0 + (long)initialCapacity / loadFactor);
int cap = (size >= (long)MAXIMUM_CAPACITY) ?
MAXIMUM_CAPACITY : tableSizeFor((int)size);
this.sizeCtl = cap;
}
// Original (since JDK1.2) Map methods
/**
* {@inheritDoc}
*/
public int size() {
long n = sumCount();
return ((n < 0L) ? 0 :
(n > (long)Integer.MAX_VALUE) ? Integer.MAX_VALUE :
(int)n);
}
/**
* {@inheritDoc}
*/
public boolean isEmpty() {
return sumCount() <= 0L; // ignore transient negative values
}
/**
* Returns the value to which the specified key is mapped,
* or {@code null} if this map contains no mapping for the key.
*
* <p>More formally, if this map contains a mapping from a key
* {@code k} to a value {@code v} such that {@code key.equals(k)},
* then this method returns {@code v}; otherwise it returns
* {@code null}. (There can be at most one such mapping.)
*
* @throws NullPointerException if the specified key is null
*/
public V get(Object key) {
Node<K,V>[] tab; Node<K,V> e, p; int n, eh; K ek;
int h = spread(key.hashCode());
if ((tab = table) != null && (n = tab.length) > 0 &&
(e = tabAt(tab, (n - 1) & h)) != null) {
if ((eh = e.hash) == h) {
if ((ek = e.key) == key || (ek != null && key.equals(ek)))
return e.val;
}
else if (eh < 0)
return (p = e.find(h, key)) != null ? p.val : null;
while ((e = e.next) != null) {
if (e.hash == h &&
((ek = e.key) == key || (ek != null && key.equals(ek))))
return e.val;
}
}
return null;
}
/**
* Tests if the specified object is a key in this table.
*
* @param key possible key
* @return {@code true} if and only if the specified object
* is a key in this table, as determined by the
* {@code equals} method; {@code false} otherwise
* @throws NullPointerException if the specified key is null
*/
public boolean containsKey(Object key) {
return get(key) != null;
}
/**
* Returns {@code true} if this map maps one or more keys to the
* specified value. Note: This method may require a full traversal
* of the map, and is much slower than method {@code containsKey}.
*
* @param value value whose presence in this map is to be tested
* @return {@code true} if this map maps one or more keys to the
* specified value
* @throws NullPointerException if the specified value is null
*/
public boolean containsValue(Object value) {
if (value == null)
throw new NullPointerException();
Node<K,V>[] t;
if ((t = table) != null) {
Traverser<K,V> it = new Traverser<K,V>(t, t.length, 0, t.length);
for (Node<K,V> p; (p = it.advance()) != null; ) {
V v;
if ((v = p.val) == value || (v != null && value.equals(v)))
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
/**
* Maps the specified key to the specified value in this table.
* Neither the key nor the value can be null.
*
* <p>The value can be retrieved by calling the {@code get} method
* with a key that is equal to the original key.
*
* @param key key with which the specified value is to be associated
* @param value value to be associated with the specified key
* @return the previous value associated with {@code key}, or
* {@code null} if there was no mapping for {@code key}
* @throws NullPointerException if the specified key or value is null
*/
public V put(K key, V value) {
return putVal(key, value, false);
}
/** Implementation for put and putIfAbsent */
final V putVal(K key, V value, boolean onlyIfAbsent) {
if (key == null || value == null) throw new NullPointerException();
int hash = spread(key.hashCode());
int binCount = 0;
for (Node<K,V>[] tab = table;;) {
Node<K,V> f; int n, i, fh; K fk; V fv;
if (tab == null || (n = tab.length) == 0)
tab = initTable();
else if ((f = tabAt(tab, i = (n - 1) & hash)) == null) {
if (casTabAt(tab, i, null, new Node<K,V>(hash, key, value)))
break; // no lock when adding to empty bin
}
else if ((fh = f.hash) == MOVED)
tab = helpTransfer(tab, f);
else if (onlyIfAbsent // check first node without acquiring lock
&& fh == hash
&& ((fk = f.key) == key || (fk != null && key.equals(fk)))
&& (fv = f.val) != null)
return fv;
else {