I am am rather embarrassed to admit that I was recently bitten by the synchonized keyword in Java... again... I have this motto that if you think you understand multi-threading, you don't. It can be by far one of the most complex and tricky things to do right... and is by far the most difficult to debug (in my humblest of opinions of course). It is also one of those kind of problems that can be hardware-specific (typically a faster computer, makes it break quicker). When a method is defined as synchronised, i.e.
...then it means that the contents of that method is defined as a critical section, which implies that only one thread can be inside that method at any one point in time. The synchronize modifier requires an object to lock on of course. For static methods (i.e. methods associated with the class), the lock is on the class object, i.e. Someclass.class, while objects lock on the instance of that class (i.e. the object). This of course has a pesky side-effect, that one must be aware of.
Consider the following code:
Since synchronize locks on the class itself, only one thread can be in any synchronized method at any one point in time. In this lies the confusion: It is natural to think that two different threads can be in two different synchronized methods at the same time. However, this is not the case. The output of the above code is unexpectedly as follows (well, for people like me):
Fortunately, Java 1.5 introduced the concept of a lock. This allows a specific section of code to be locked (by a given lock) and therefore defined as a critical section in isolation of other critical sections within the same class or object. Therefore, given the following code:
Here, a thread can be in either method at any one point of time, giving the expected output:
From the above, it is clear that foo() and bar() are executed simultaneously. However, multiple foo() methods are not executed at the same time (and the same for bar()). This can be confirmed since the text "I am in foo" will always be separated with "done with foo" (likewise with bar()).
Locks also allows multiple methods to be tied together in all kinds of arrangements. For example, if we write a method called fooFriend() and use FOOLOCK to lock it, only one thread can be in the critical sections of foo() and fooFriend() at the same time. This makes a Java lock a rather powerful construct.
The try-finally finally block is rather important and ensures that the lock is releases no matter what. A situation may arise where an exception is thrown inside the critical section and the code will go into a deadlock as the lock is still owned by the original thread.
Indeed synchronized can be a rather embarrassing monster when it rears it's ugly head.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Apache Camel
Good day all. My first entry in this blog is all about Apache Camel for Java-based solutions.
Camel is a powerful open-source integration framework based on known Enterprise Integration Patterns. Camel define routing and mediation rules in a variety of domain-specific languages or even in XML. It uses URIs to work directly with any kind of Transport or messaging model such as HTTP and JMS and also allows you to define your own.
What I particularly like is the small library with minimal dependencies which makes embedding the framework within a Java application seamless. Furthermore, you work with the same API regardless of the Transport used. This makes a plug-and-play application where one endpoint can be swapped for another quite possible.
The demonstration application that I will discuss here is inspired by my new employer, Mediswitch. One of their products connects various medical aids and other third parties with all kinds of service providers (each using a different communication medium). We will define two endpoints (a rather ambiguous term referring to either a URL/URI or an entire service) for our application:
For this application we will require the following:
We do not need to write the Component, so next is the Processor to handle the Thrift call:
The Thrift call is handled by the ThriftMember member = getThriftClient().getMemberDetail(id); call. The Thrift IDL and the detail on how Thrift works is beyond the scope of this article. All I can say is that it is one of the best communication framework that I have worked with and it is quite easy to get going. Our GetMemberDetailProcessor class overrides the public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception method from the Processor interface. I handle the Thrift-connection aspects in the inherited abstract class, which looks like this:
The other Processor classes follow exactly the same pattern (and is therefore left as an exercise to you, the avid reader). To test chaining (which I'll show later when we wire everything together), I've written a DummyProcessor class, which looks like:
...and finally, all this needs to be wired up using the a subclass of the RouteBuilder class. Camel uses (amongs others) Java code to implement a DSL (domain specific language). This is where the true power of the framework is evident. There are two ways it can be wired up. I've commented out one approach:
In the first approach a single route is used where we route the request to the DummyProcessor, followed by a choice(), which, based on the CamelHttpPath, routes the request to the correct Processor. The second approach sets up four different routes rather than one. As far as I understand, these two approaches are equivalent. I prefer the first approach (in the same way that brown is my favourite colour).
To wire everything up, requires a CamelContext object, adding the routes and starting the context, which starts threads and internal processes to get Camel going:
Notice that the new-keyword above implies that Camel will work well with a dependency injection framework like Guice (if you don't know about it, you have to have a look!).
Now we can test the application. After starting the Thrift server (a separate little application to allow testing of our central switch application), we can issue a command from either the browser or the command line. Let's use a browser this time:
The log messages (after trimming down on the org.apache entries in the log4j.xml file), looks like this (notice the entries written by the DummyProcessor):
There are a number of errors that I got while writing this application. It was usually related to either an incorrect dependency/version or an incorrect route being used.
In summary, Camel makes routing between unknown endpoints as easy as possible. Notice how the internal Jetty boilerplate code is completely absent from the code. It is all handled internally and setting it up essentially required a single line of code. The chaining between Processors also makes it easy to intercept a request for some pre-processing before passing it on.
Camel is a powerful open-source integration framework based on known Enterprise Integration Patterns. Camel define routing and mediation rules in a variety of domain-specific languages or even in XML. It uses URIs to work directly with any kind of Transport or messaging model such as HTTP and JMS and also allows you to define your own.
What I particularly like is the small library with minimal dependencies which makes embedding the framework within a Java application seamless. Furthermore, you work with the same API regardless of the Transport used. This makes a plug-and-play application where one endpoint can be swapped for another quite possible.
The demonstration application that I will discuss here is inspired by my new employer, Mediswitch. One of their products connects various medical aids and other third parties with all kinds of service providers (each using a different communication medium). We will define two endpoints (a rather ambiguous term referring to either a URL/URI or an entire service) for our application:
- The first endpoint is an HTTP-GET client. I like these in tests as they can be simply called from a web browser or using good old curl on the command line.
- A server using Thrift that services the request from the first endpoint and returns the result via the central switch.
For this application we will require the following:
- A Component (already implemented for us) to handle the incoming HTTP-GET requests.
- A Processor for each of the possible request that is received by the consumer component (i.e. the HTTP-GET side). For this application we will service four different requests:
- Getting a member's details.
- Modifying a member's detail.
- Deleting a member (I called it 'zap' for some reason).
- Process a claim submitted.
- A Processor in between that does something additional with the request.
- A mechanism to wire all these things up and a main class that kicks off this process.
We do not need to write the Component, so next is the Processor to handle the Thrift call:
The Thrift call is handled by the ThriftMember member = getThriftClient().getMemberDetail(id); call. The Thrift IDL and the detail on how Thrift works is beyond the scope of this article. All I can say is that it is one of the best communication framework that I have worked with and it is quite easy to get going. Our GetMemberDetailProcessor class overrides the public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception method from the Processor interface. I handle the Thrift-connection aspects in the inherited abstract class, which looks like this:
The other Processor classes follow exactly the same pattern (and is therefore left as an exercise to you, the avid reader). To test chaining (which I'll show later when we wire everything together), I've written a DummyProcessor class, which looks like:
...and finally, all this needs to be wired up using the a subclass of the RouteBuilder class. Camel uses (amongs others) Java code to implement a DSL (domain specific language). This is where the true power of the framework is evident. There are two ways it can be wired up. I've commented out one approach:
In the first approach a single route is used where we route the request to the DummyProcessor, followed by a choice(), which, based on the CamelHttpPath, routes the request to the correct Processor. The second approach sets up four different routes rather than one. As far as I understand, these two approaches are equivalent. I prefer the first approach (in the same way that brown is my favourite colour).
To wire everything up, requires a CamelContext object, adding the routes and starting the context, which starts threads and internal processes to get Camel going:
Notice that the new-keyword above implies that Camel will work well with a dependency injection framework like Guice (if you don't know about it, you have to have a look!).
Now we can test the application. After starting the Thrift server (a separate little application to allow testing of our central switch application), we can issue a command from either the browser or the command line. Let's use a browser this time:
The log messages (after trimming down on the org.apache entries in the log4j.xml file), looks like this (notice the entries written by the DummyProcessor):
There are a number of errors that I got while writing this application. It was usually related to either an incorrect dependency/version or an incorrect route being used.
In summary, Camel makes routing between unknown endpoints as easy as possible. Notice how the internal Jetty boilerplate code is completely absent from the code. It is all handled internally and setting it up essentially required a single line of code. The chaining between Processors also makes it easy to intercept a request for some pre-processing before passing it on.
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