The wikipedia article on Singletons mentions a few thread safe ways to implement the structure in Java. For my questions, let's consider Singletons that have lengthy initialization procedures and are acccessed by many threads at once.
Firstly, is this unmentioned method thread-safe, and if so, what does it synchronize on?
public class Singleton {
private Singleton instance;
private Singleton() {
//lots of initialization code
}
public static synchronized Singleton getInstance() {
if(instance == null) {
instance = new Singleton();
}
return instance;
}
}
Secondly, why is the following implementation thread safe AND lazy in initialization? What exactly happens if two threads enter the getInstance()
method at the same time?
public class Singleton {
private Singleton() {
//lots of initialization code
}
private static class SingletonHolder {
public static final Singleton instance = new Singleton();
}
public static Singleton getInstance() {
return SingletonHolder.instance;
}
}
Finally, in the second example, what if one thread gets an instance first and another thread gets an instance and tries to perform actions on it before the constructor has finished in the first thread? Can you get into an unsafe state then?
Answer 1: static synchronized
methods use the class object as the lock - ie in this case Singleton.class
.
Answer 2: The java language, among other things:
These two facts mean that the inner static class SingletonHolder
is not loaded until the getInstance() method is called. At that moment, and before the thread making the call is given access to it, the static instance of that class is instantiated as part of class loading.
This all means we have safe lazy loading, and without any need for synchronization/locks!
This pattern is the pattern to use for singletons. It beats other patterns because MyClass.getInstance()
is the defacto industry standard for singletons - everyone who uses it automatically knows that they are dealing with a singleton (with code, it's always good to be obvious), so this pattern has the right API and the right implementation under the hood.
btw Bill Pugh's article is worth reading for completeness when understanding singleton patterns.
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