Trail: Essential Classes
Lesson: Concurrency
Section: Synchronization
Synchronized Methods
Home Page > Essential Classes > Concurrency
Synchronized Methods
The Java programming language provides two basic synchronization idioms: synchronized methods and synchronized statements. The more complex of the two, synchronized statements, are described in the next section. This section is about synchronized methods.

To make a method synchronized, simply add the synchronized keyword to its declaration:

public class SynchronizedCounter {
    private int c = 0;

    public synchronized void increment() {
        c++;
    }

    public synchronized void decrement() {
        c--;
    }

    public synchronized int value() {
        return c;
    }
}
If count is an instance of SynchronizedCounter, then making these methods synchronized has two effects:

Note that constructors cannot be synchronized — using the synchronized keyword with a constructor is a syntax error. Synchronizing constructors doesn't make sense, because only the thread that creates an object should have access to it while it is being constructed.


Warning:  When constructing an object that will be shared between threads, be very careful that a reference to the object does not "leak" prematurely. For example, suppose you want to maintain a List called instances containing every instance of class. You might be tempted to add the line
instances.add(this);
to your constructor. But then other threads can use instances to access the object before construction of the object is complete.

Synchronized methods enable a simple strategy for preventing thread interference and memory consistency errors: if an object is visible to more than one thread, all reads or writes to that object's variables are done through synchronized methods. (An important exception: final fields, which cannot be modified after the object is constructed, can be safely read through non-synchronized methods, once the object is constructed) This strategy is effective, but can present problems with liveness, as we'll see later in this lesson.

Previous page: Memory Consistency Errors
Next page: Intrinsic Locks and Synchronization

Discuss
We welcome your participation in our community. Please keep your comments civil and on point. You may optionally provide your email address to be notified of replies — your information is not used for any other purpose. By submitting a comment, you agree to these Terms of Use.