Methods that Clear the Thread.interrupt() flag Methods that Clear the Thread.interrupt() flag multithreading multithreading

Methods that Clear the Thread.interrupt() flag


Part of the problem has been that I do not know every method call out there that clears the interrupt flag.

It is important to clarify that the following methods clear the interrupt flag by just calling them:

Thread.interrupted()Thread.isInterrupted(true) -- added to your list

For this reason Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted() should always be used instead.

The following methods will clear the interrupted flag by immediately throwing InterruptedException either if they were called and then the thread was interrupted or if the thread was already interrupted and then they were called (see junit code below). So it is not the method that clears the flag, throwing the exception does.

Your initial list:

Thread.interrupted()Thread.sleep(long)Thread.join()Thread.join(long)Object.wait()Object.wait(long)

Added to your list:

Thread.sleep(long, int)Thread.join(int, long)Thread.isInterrupted(true)Object.wait(int, long)BlockingQueue.put(...)BlockingQueue.offer(...)BlockingQueue.take(...)BlockingQueue.poll(...)Future.get(...)Process.waitFor()ExecutorService.invokeAll(...)ExecutorService.invokeAny(...)ExecutorService.awaitTermination(...)CompletionService.poll(...)CompletionService.take(...)CountDownLatch.await(...)CyclicBarrier.await(...)Semaphore.acquire(...)Semaphore.tryAcquire(...)Lock.lockInteruptibly()Lock.tryLock(...)

Please note that the proper pattern with any code that catches InterruptedException is to immediately re-interrupt the thread. We do this in case others are relying on the thread.isInterrupted() method:

try {    ...} catch (InterruptedException e) {    // immediately re-interrupt the thread    Thread.currentThread().interrupt();    // log the exception or [likely] quit the thread}

JUnit code that demonstrates some of this:

assertFalse(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());// you can do this from another thread by saying: someThread.interrupt();Thread.currentThread().interrupt();// this method does _not_ clear the interrupt flagassertTrue(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());// but this one _does_ and should probably not be usedassertTrue(Thread.interrupted());assertFalse(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());Thread.currentThread().interrupt();assertTrue(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());try {    // this throws immediately because the thread is _already_ interrupted    Thread.sleep(1);    fail("will never get here");} catch (InterruptedException e) {    // and when the InterruptedException is throw, it clears the interrupt    assertFalse(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());    // we should re-interrupt the thread so other code can use interrupt status    Thread.currentThread().interrupt();}assertTrue(Thread.currentThread().isInterrupted());


Common convention is the following: any method that throws InterruptedException (+ Thread.interrupted()) clears the interrupt flag.

So, in order to make your threads interruptable you need to find all places where InterruptedException gets caught without retrowing it or restoring the interrupt flag. Since InterruptedException is a checked exception it's not hard to do.


Here's a SUPER FUN EXAMPLE:

ch.qos.logback.core.AsyncAppenderBase prior to version 1.1.4 catches and swallows InterruptedException without resetting the flag on the thread.

So, if you use anything which routes to this logger (like slf4j), it will silently eat your thread interrupt status. 'Cos, I mean, who doesn't check thread interrupt status before and after every possible log operation?