As others have said, the fact that you have to poll is probably indicative of a deeper problem with the design of your system... but sometimes that's the way it goes, so...
If you'd like to handle "killing" the process a little more gracefully, you could install a shutdown hook which is called when you hit Ctrl+C:
volatile boolean stop = false;
Runtime.getRuntime().addShutdownHook(new Thread("shutdown thread") {
public void run() {
stop = true;
}
});
then periodically check the stop variable.
A more elegant solution is to wait on an event:
boolean stop = false;
final Object event = new Object();
Runtime.getRuntime().addShutdownHook(new Thread("shutdown thread") {
public void run() {
synchronized(event) {
stop = true;
event.notifyAll();
}
}
});
// ... and in your polling loop ...
synchronized(event) {
while(!stop) {
// ... do JDBC access ...
try {
// Wait 30 seconds, but break out as soon as the event is fired.
event.wait(30000);
}
catch(InterruptedException e) {
// Log a message and exit. Never ignore interrupted exception.
break;
}
}
}
Or something like that.