Java Executors: how can I set task priority?
you can use ThreadPoolExecutor with Priority blocking queue How to implement PriorityBlockingQueue with ThreadPoolExecutor and custom tasks
The idea here is to use a PriorityBlockingQueue in the executor. For this:
- Create a comparator that would compare our futures.
- Create a proxy for the Future to hold a priority.
- Override 'newTaskFor' in order to wrap every future in our proxy.
First you need to hold priority on your future:
class PriorityFuture<T> implements RunnableFuture<T> {
private RunnableFuture<T> src;
private int priority;
public PriorityFuture(RunnableFuture<T> other, int priority) {
this.src = other;
this.priority = priority;
}
public int getPriority() {
return priority;
}
public boolean cancel(boolean mayInterruptIfRunning) {
return src.cancel(mayInterruptIfRunning);
}
public boolean isCancelled() {
return src.isCancelled();
}
public boolean isDone() {
return src.isDone();
}
public T get() throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException {
return src.get();
}
public T get(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException, TimeoutException {
return src.get();
}
public void run() {
src.run();
}
}
Next you need to define comparator that would correctly sort the priority futures:
class PriorityFutureComparator implements Comparator<Runnable> {
public int compare(Runnable o1, Runnable o2) {
if (o1 == null && o2 == null)
return 0;
else if (o1 == null)
return -1;
else if (o2 == null)
return 1;
else {
int p1 = ((PriorityFuture<?>) o1).getPriority();
int p2 = ((PriorityFuture<?>) o2).getPriority();
return p1 > p2 ? 1 : (p1 == p2 ? 0 : -1);
}
}
}
Next let's assume we have a lengthy job like this:
class LenthyJob implements Callable<Long> {
private int priority;
public LenthyJob(int priority) {
this.priority = priority;
}
public Long call() throws Exception {
System.out.println("Executing: " + priority);
long num = 1000000;
for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++) {
num *= Math.random() * 1000;
num /= Math.random() * 1000;
if (num == 0)
num = 1000000;
}
return num;
}
public int getPriority() {
return priority;
}
}
Then in order to execute these jobs in priority the code will look like:
public class TestPQ {
public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException {
int nThreads = 2;
int qInitialSize = 10;
ExecutorService exec = new ThreadPoolExecutor(nThreads, nThreads, 0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS,
new PriorityBlockingQueue<Runnable>(qInitialSize, new PriorityFutureComparator())) {
protected <T> RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor(Callable<T> callable) {
RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor = super.newTaskFor(callable);
return new PriorityFuture<T>(newTaskFor, ((LenthyJob) callable).getPriority());
}
};
for (int i = 0; i < 20; i++) {
int priority = (int) (Math.random() * 100);
System.out.println("Scheduling: " + priority);
LenthyJob job = new LenthyJob(priority);
exec.submit(job);
}
}
}
This is a lot of code but that's nearly the only way this can be accomplished.
On my machine the output is like the following:
Scheduling: 39
Scheduling: 90
Scheduling: 88
Executing: 39
Scheduling: 75
Executing: 90
Scheduling: 15
Scheduling: 2
Scheduling: 5
Scheduling: 24
Scheduling: 82
Scheduling: 81
Scheduling: 3
Scheduling: 23
Scheduling: 7
Scheduling: 40
Scheduling: 77
Scheduling: 49
Scheduling: 34
Scheduling: 22
Scheduling: 97
Scheduling: 33
Executing: 2
Executing: 3
Executing: 5
Executing: 7
Executing: 15
Executing: 22
Executing: 23
Executing: 24
Executing: 33
Executing: 34
Executing: 40
Executing: 49
Executing: 75
Executing: 77
Executing: 81
Executing: 82
Executing: 88
Executing: 97
You can implement your own ThreadFactory and set it within ThreadPoolExecutor like this:
ThreadPoolExecutor threadPool = new ThreadPoolExecutor(1, numOfWorkerThreads, 0L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS, new LinkedBlockingQueue<Runnable>());
threadPool.setThreadFactory(new OpJobThreadFactory(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY-2));
where my OpJobThreadFactory looks like the following:
public final static class OpJobThreadFactory implements ThreadFactory {
private int priority;
private boolean daemon;
private final String namePrefix;
private static final AtomicInteger poolNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
private final AtomicInteger threadNumber = new AtomicInteger(1);
public OpJobThreadFactory(int priority) {
this(priority, true);
}
public OpJobThreadFactory(int priority, boolean daemon) {
this.priority = priority;
this.daemon = daemon;
namePrefix = "jobpool-" +poolNumber.getAndIncrement() + "-thread-";
}
@Override
public Thread newThread(Runnable r) {
Thread t = new Thread(r, namePrefix + threadNumber.getAndIncrement());
t.setDaemon(daemon);
t.setPriority(priority);
return t;
}
}
Currently the only concrete implementations of the Executor interface are the ThreadPoolExecutor and the ScheduledThreadpoolExecutor
Instead of using the utility / factory class Executors, you should create an instance using a constructor.
You can pass a BlockingQueue to the constructors of the ThreadPoolExecutor.
One of the implementations of the BlockingQueue, the PriorityBlockingQueue lets you pass a Comparator to a constructor, that way enabling you to decide the order of execution.