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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9001?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16948066#comment-16948066
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Przemko Robakowski commented on LUCENE-9001:
--------------------------------------------
But you have to ensure that set will be called only once, right? So if you have
multithreaded code you have to use something like
{code:java}
if (setOnce.get() == null) {
synchronized(setOnce){
if(setOnce.get() == null){
setOnce.set(load());
}
}
}
return setOnce.get();
{code}
If you want to skip synchronization and load method is lightweight you could do
something like this (you can't use this idiom now due to mentioned race
condition):
{code:java}
if (setOnce.get() == null) {
try {
setOnce.set(load());
} catch (AlreadySetException ignored){
}
}
return
{code}
It's easier to to understand in my opinion and easier to get it right - no
double checking of null and no chance that someone will forget/will refactor
away synchronized keyword. With trySet it's even cleaner:
{code:java}
if (setOnce.get() == null) {
setOnce.trySet(load());
}
return setOnce.get();
{code}
Sure, I can replace it with AtomicReference.compareAndSet but AtomicReference
doesn't give you protection and guarantee that object will be set at most once
(it's easy to introduce atomicRef.set instead by mistake).
I see set/trySet similar to add/offer pair in JDK's Queue - one throwing, one
returning boolean indicator.
> Race condition in SetOnce
> -------------------------
>
> Key: LUCENE-9001
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9001
> Project: Lucene - Core
> Issue Type: Bug
> Reporter: Przemko Robakowski
> Priority: Minor
> Time Spent: 10m
> Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> There is race condition in SetOnce that can cause code below fail with
> NullPointerException:
> {code:java}
> SetOnce<String> setOnce = new SetOnce<>();
> new Thread(() -> setOnce.set("thread")).start();
> try{
> setOnce.set("main");
> } catch (SetOnce.AlreadySetException e){
> setOnce.get().hashCode(); //possible NPE!
> }
> {code}
> This is caused by 2 separate write operations - 1 for set marker field and 1
> for actual object. So it's possible that marker is already set to true
> (causing AlreadySetException on second write attempt) but object is still not
> set (causing NullPointerException).
> This can be avoided by using single AtomicReference instead to serve both
> purposes.
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