Java Wait for thread to finish

China☆狼群 提交于 2019-11-26 16:33:47
unholysampler

Thread has a method that does that for you join which will block until the thread has finished executing.

You could use a CountDownLatch from the java.util.concurrent package. It is very useful when waiting for one or more threads to complete before continuing execution in the awaiting thread.

For example, waiting for three tasks to complete:

CountDownLatch latch = new CountDownLatch(3);
...
latch.await(); // Wait for countdown

The other thread(s) then each call latch.countDown() when complete with the their tasks. Once the countdown is complete, three in this example, the execution will continue.

tstevens

SwingWorker has doInBackground() which you can use to perform a task. You have the option to invoke get() and wait for the download to complete or you can override the done() method which will be invoked on the event dispatch thread once the SwingWorker completes.

The Swingworker has advantages to your current approach in that it has many of the features you are looking for so there is no need to reinvent the wheel. You are able to use the getProgress() and setProgress() methods as an alternative to an observer on the runnable for download progress. The done() method as I stated above is called after the worker finishes executing and is performed on the EDT, this allows you load the data after the download has completed.

Better alternatives to join() method have been evolved over a period of time.

ExecutorService.html#invokeAll is one alternative.

Executes the given tasks, returning a list of Futures holding their status and results when all complete. Future.isDone() is true for each element of the returned list.

Note that a completed task could have terminated either normally or by throwing an exception. The results of this method are undefined if the given collection is modified while this operation is in progress.

ForkJoinPool or Executors.html#newWorkStealingPool provides other alternatives to achieve the same purpose.

Example code snippet:

import java.util.concurrent.*;

import java.util.*;

public class InvokeAllDemo{
    public InvokeAllDemo(){
        System.out.println("creating service");
        ExecutorService service = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors());

        List<MyCallable> futureList = new ArrayList<MyCallable>();
        for ( int i=0; i<10; i++){
            MyCallable myCallable = new MyCallable((long)i);
            futureList.add(myCallable);
        }
        System.out.println("Start");
        try{
            List<Future<Long>> futures = service.invokeAll(futureList);  
        }catch(Exception err){
            err.printStackTrace();
        }
        System.out.println("Completed");
        service.shutdown();
    }
    public static void main(String args[]){
        InvokeAllDemo demo = new InvokeAllDemo();
    }
    class MyCallable implements Callable<Long>{
        Long id = 0L;
        public MyCallable(Long val){
            this.id = val;
        }
        public Long call(){
            // Add your business logic
            return id;
        }
    }
}

I imagine that you're calling your download in a background thread such as provided by a SwingWorker. If so, then simply call your next code sequentially in the same SwingWorker's doInBackground method.

user7923798

You can use join() to wait for all threads to finish. Keep all objects of threads in the global ArrayList at the time of creating threads. After that keep it in loop like below:

for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) 
{
    Thread T1 = new Thread(new ThreadTest(i));                
    T1.start();                
    arrThreads.add(T1);
} 

for (int i = 0; i < arrThreads.size(); i++) 
{
    arrThreads.get(i).join(); 
}

Check here for complete details: http://www.letmeknows.com/2017/04/24/wait-for-threads-to-finish-java

Generally, when you want to wait for a thread to finish, you should call join() on it.

trashgod

Any suggestions/examples? I followed SwingWorker... The code was very messy and I don't like this approach.

Instead of get(), which waits for completion, use process() and setProgress() to show intermediate results, as suggested in this simple example or this related example.

The join() method allows one thread to wait for the completion of another.However, as with sleep, join is dependent on the OS for timing, so you should not assume that join will wait exactly as long as you specify.

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