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Home/ Questions/Q 284957
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:30:10+00:00 2026-05-12T05:30:10+00:00

Assuming that I have the following code: final Catalog catalog = createCatalog(); for (int

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Assuming that I have the following code:

final Catalog catalog = createCatalog();

for (int i = 0; i< 100; i++{
    new Thread(new CatalogWorker(catalog)).start();
}

“Catalog” is an object structure, and the method createCatalog() and the “Catalog” object structure has not been written with concurrency in mind. There are several non-final, non-volatile references within the product catalog, there may even be mutable state (but that’s going to have to be handled)

The way I understand the memory model, this code is not thread-safe. Is there any simple way to make it safe ? (The generalized version of this problem is really about single-threaded construction of shared structures that are created before the threads explode into action)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:30:11+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:30 am

    No, there’s no simple way to make it safe. Concurrent use of mutable data types is always tricky. In some situations, making each operation on Catalog synchronized (preferably on a privately-held lock) may work, but usually you’ll find that a thread actually wants to perform multiple operations without risking any other threads messing around with things.

    Just synchronizing every access to variables should be enough to make the Java memory model problem less relevant – you would always see the most recent values, for example – but the bigger problem itself is still significant.

    Any immutable state in Catalog should be fine already: there’s a “happens-before” between the construction of the Catalog and the new thread being started. From section 17.4.5 of the spec:

    A call to start() on a thread
    happens-before any actions in the
    started thread.

    (And the construction finishing happens before the call to start(), so the construction happens before any actions in the started thread.)

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