I would expect the following test to only print \"has been locked\" once. BUT it consequently prints the line.
public class LocKTest {
@Test
public void
Considering Kayamans answer, you could implement your own Lock
class:
public class Lock {
private boolean isLocked = false;
public synchronized void lock() throws InterruptedException {
while(isLocked) {
wait();
}
isLocked = true;
}
public synchronized void unlock() {
isLocked = false;
notify();
}
}
Use it like this:
public class LocKTest {
@Test
public void testLock() {
Lock lock = new Lock();
while (true) {
if (lock.lock()) {
System.out.println("has been locked"); // prints only once
}
}
}
}
Code example taken from this tutorial.
The name is ReentrantLock
, meaning you can re-enter
if you already own the lock.
If you wish to have the thread block, you could use for example a Semaphore
with 1 (or more) permits.
To quote the documentation about tryLock() (the emphasis in bold added by me):
Acquires the lock if it is not held by another thread and returns immediately with the value true, setting the lock hold count to one
In this case, the current thread is holding the lock, so you ca reenter("re-acquire") it multiple times. If you were to run each iteration of the loop from a different thread, the first one would acquire the lock, and the second would fail to acquire it.