Possible Duplicate:
Java Synchronized Block for .class
I was reading through an article on synchronization. I am confused on below points and need more clarification
1) For synchronization block. How
synchronize(this){
// code
}
differs from
synchronize(MyClass.class){
//code
}
2) Synchronizing instance method means threads will have to get exclusive lock on the instance, while synchronizing static method means thread will have to acquire a lock on whole class(correct me if I am wrong). So if a class has three methods and one of them is static synchronized then if a thread acquires lock on that method then that means it will acquire lock on the whole class. So does that mean the other two will also get locked and no other method will be able to access those two methods as the whole class is having lock?
MyClass.class
and this
are different things, are different references to different objects.
this
- is the reference to particular this instance of class, and
MyClass.class
- is the reference to MyClass
description object.
This synchronization blocks differs in that the first will synchronize all threads that deal concretely with this instance of MyClass
, and the second one will synchronize all threads independently of which object on which this method was called.
The first example (acquiring lock on this
) is meant to be used in instance methods, the second one (acquiring lock on class
object) -- in static
methods.
If one thread acquires lock on MyClass.class
, other threads will have to wait to enter the synchronized block of a static
method that this block is located in. Meanwhile, all of the threads will be able to acquire lock for a particular instance of this class and execute instance methods.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14495776/synchronizethis-vs-synchronizemyclass-class