The flexible barrier functionality that was previously restricted to ForkJoinTasks (in class forkjoin.TaskBarrier) is being redone as class Phaser (targeted for j.u.c, not j.u.c.forkjoin), that can be applied in all kinds of tasks.



The [java.util.concurrent] CyclicBarrier class supports periodic barrier synchronization among a set of threads. Unlike Phasers, however, CyclicBarriers do not support the dynamic addition or removal of threads; nor do they support one-way synchronization or split-phase operation.



Performance results obtained from a portable implementation of phasers on three different SMP platforms demonstrate that they can deliver superior performance to existing barrier implementations, in addition to the productivity benefits that result from their generality and safety properties.



Comments and suggestions are very welcome as always. The API is likely to change a bit as we scope out further uses, and also, hopefully, stumble upon some better method names.



Doug Lea, the spec lead of the JSR 166 concurrency utilities, posted on the 166y concurrency-interest mailing list this week regarding a new feature being introduced into JSR-166y: Phasers.The 'Phaser' concept and name was coined in this whitepaper by a team at Rice University. The name comes from the construct's phase-ordering and deadlock-avoidance properties. The whitepaper explains several details of the phaser concept. When comparing phasers to existing Java features, it is explained that similar functionality to the CyclicBarrier class is supported (introduced in Java 5), but phasers are inherently more flexible:One of the main motivators for exploring additional barrier implementations was not just to have increased flexibility, but also to increase performance and scalability of the barrier synchronization concept:As mentioned by Doug Lea, the implementation of Phaser for JSR-166y is being adapted from facilities in the existing fork/join framework implementation. The fork/join framework is something that InfoQ has covered before on multiple occasions , and is one of the central features in the upcoming 166y JSR - it is also the subject of a whitepaper by Doug Lea that describes the purpose and usage of the framework. The TaskBarrier class mentioned above was used by the fork/join framework to manage the boundaries between the various tasks, and merge their results; in other words: to join the tasks. draft Javadoc for the Phaser class in JSR-166y is available. Lea made it clear in his email to the interest list that this was still a draft:It is currently expected that JSR-166y will be included as part of Java 7.