I come up with this question when implementing singleton pattern in Java. Even though the example listed below is not my real code, yet very similar to the original one.
public class ConnectionFactory{
private static ConnectionFactory instance;
public static synchronized ConnectionFactory getInstance(){
if( instance == null ){
instance = new ConnectionFactory();
}
return instance;
}
private ConnectionFactory(){
// private constructor implementation
}
}
Because I’m not quite sure about the behavior of a static synchronized method, I get some suggestion from google — do not have (or as less as possible) multiple static synchronized methods in the same class. I guess when implementing static synchronized method, a lock belongs to Class object is used so that multiple static synchronized methods may degrade performance of the system.
Am I right? or JVM use other mechanism to implement static synchronized method? What’s the best practice if I have to implement multiple static synchronized methods in a class?
Thank you all!
Kind regards!
The best approach (which makes as few changes in your code as possible) is to do like this:
As you can see, there is no real need in
getInstancemethod now, so you can simplify the code to:UPD about synchronization: the best way is synchronizing on a lock which is not visible to outer classes, i.e.:
There are many discussions about “why synchronizing on
thisis a bad idea” (like this one), I think that the same is actual for synchronizing on class.