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Pausing/stopping and starting/resuming Java TimerTask continuously?

I have one simple question regarding Java TimerTask. How do I pause/resume two TimerTask tasks based on a certain condition? For example I have two timers that run between each other. When a certain condition has been met inside the task of first timer, the first timer stops and starts the second timer, and the same thing happens when a certain condition has been met inside the task of second timer. The class below shows exactly what I mean:

public class TimerTest {
    Timer timer1;
    Timer timer2;
    volatile boolean a = false;

    public TimerTest() {
        timer1 = new Timer();
        timer2 = new Timer();     
    }

    public void runStart() {
        timer1.scheduleAtFixedRate(new Task1(), 0, 1000);
    }

    class Task1 extends TimerTask {
        public void run() {
            System.out.println("Checking a");
            a = SomeClass.getSomeStaticValue();

            if (a) {
                // Pause/stop timer1, start/resume timer2 for 5 seconds
                timer2.schedule(new Task2(), 5000);
            }
        }
    }

    class Task2 extends TimerTask{
        public void run() {
            System.out.println("Checking a");
            a = SomeClass.getSomeStaticValue();

            if (!a) {
                // Pause/stop timer2, back to timer1
                timer1.scheduleAtFixedRate(new Task1(), 0, 1000);
            }

            // Do something...
        }
    }

    public static void main(String args[]) {
        TimerTest tt = new TimerTest();
        tt.runStart();      
    }
}

So my question is, how do I pause timer1 while running timer2 and vice versa while timer2 is running? Performance and timing is my main concern as this needs to be implemented inside another running thread. By the way I am trying to implement these concurrent timers on Android.

Thanks for your help!

like image 711
Faiz Avatar asked Jan 20 '10 02:01

Faiz


2 Answers

From TimerTask.cancel():

Note that calling this method from within the run method of a repeating timer task absolutely guarantees that the timer task will not run again.

So once cancelled, it won't ever run again. You'd be better off instead using the more modern ScheduledExecutorService (from Java 5+).

Edit: The basic construct is:

ScheduledExecutorService exec = Executors.newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor();
exec.scheduleAtFixedRate(runnable, 0, 1000, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);

but looking into it there's no way of cancelling that task once its started without shutting down the service, which is a bit odd.

TimerTask might be easier in this case but you'll need to create a new instance when you start one up. It can't be reused.

Alternatively you could encapsulate each task as a separate transient service:

final ScheduledExecutorService exec = Executors.newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor();
Runnable task1 = new Runnable() {
  public void run() {
    a++;
    if (a == 3) {
      exec.shutdown();
      exec = Executors.newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor();
      exec.scheduleAtFixedRate(task2, 0, 1000, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)
    }
  }
};
exec.scheduleAtFixedRate(task1, 0, 1000, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);
like image 93
cletus Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 14:09

cletus


easiest solution i found: just add a boolean in the run code in the timer task, like so:

timer.schedule( new TimerTask() {
    public void run() {
       if(!paused){
           //do your thing
       }
    }
 }, 0, 1000 );
like image 40
Song Keang Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 14:09

Song Keang