问题
I have a fixed thread pool that I submit tasks to (limited to 5 threads). How can I find out which one of those 5 threads executes my task (something like "thread #3 of 5 is doing this task")?
ExecutorService taskExecutor = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(5);
//in infinite loop:
taskExecutor.execute(new MyTask());
....
private class MyTask implements Runnable {
public void run() {
logger.debug("Thread # XXX is doing this task");//how to get thread id?
}
}
回答1:
Using Thread.currentThread()
:
private class MyTask implements Runnable {
public void run() {
long threadId = Thread.currentThread().getId();
logger.debug("Thread # " + threadId + " is doing this task");
}
}
回答2:
The accepted answer answers the question about getting a thread id, but it doesn't let you do "Thread X of Y" messages. Thread ids are unique across threads but don't necessarily start from 0 or 1.
Here is an example matching the question:
import java.util.concurrent.*;
class ThreadIdTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
final int numThreads = 5;
ExecutorService exec = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(numThreads);
for (int i=0; i<10; i++) {
exec.execute(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
long threadId = Thread.currentThread().getId();
System.out.println("I am thread " + threadId + " of " + numThreads);
}
});
}
exec.shutdown();
}
}
and the output:
burhan@orion:/dev/shm$ javac ThreadIdTest.java && java ThreadIdTest
I am thread 8 of 5
I am thread 9 of 5
I am thread 10 of 5
I am thread 8 of 5
I am thread 9 of 5
I am thread 11 of 5
I am thread 8 of 5
I am thread 9 of 5
I am thread 10 of 5
I am thread 12 of 5
A slight tweak using modulo arithmetic will allow you to do "thread X of Y" correctly:
// modulo gives zero-based results hence the +1
long threadId = Thread.currentThread().getId()%numThreads +1;
New results:
burhan@orion:/dev/shm$ javac ThreadIdTest.java && java ThreadIdTest
I am thread 2 of 5
I am thread 3 of 5
I am thread 3 of 5
I am thread 3 of 5
I am thread 5 of 5
I am thread 1 of 5
I am thread 4 of 5
I am thread 1 of 5
I am thread 2 of 5
I am thread 3 of 5
回答3:
You can use Thread.getCurrentThread.getId(), but why would you want to do that when LogRecord objects managed by the logger already have the thread Id. I think you are missing a configuration somewhere that logs the thread Ids for your log messages.
回答4:
If your class inherits from Thread, you can use methods getName
and setName
to name each thread. Otherwise you could just add a name
field to MyTask
, and initialize it in your constructor.
回答5:
If you are using logging then thread names will be helpful. A thread factory helps with this:
import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
import java.util.concurrent.Executors;
import java.util.concurrent.ThreadFactory;
public class Main {
static Logger LOG = LoggerFactory.getLogger(Main.class);
static class MyTask implements Runnable {
public void run() {
LOG.info("A pool thread is doing this task");
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
ExecutorService taskExecutor = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(5, new MyThreadFactory());
taskExecutor.execute(new MyTask());
taskExecutor.shutdown();
}
}
class MyThreadFactory implements ThreadFactory {
private int counter;
public Thread newThread(Runnable r) {
return new Thread(r, "My thread # " + counter++);
}
}
Output:
[ My thread # 0] Main INFO A pool thread is doing this task
回答6:
There is the way of current thread getting:
Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
After you have got Thread class object (t) you are able to get information you need using Thread class methods.
Thread ID gettting:
long tId = t.getId(); // e.g. 14291
Thread name gettting:
String tName = t.getName(); // e.g. "pool-29-thread-7"
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3294293/how-to-get-thread-id-from-a-thread-pool