what is the advantage of using FutureTask over Callable? what is the advantage of using FutureTask over Callable? multithreading multithreading

what is the advantage of using FutureTask over Callable?


Almost certainly none at all. A quick browse on GrepCode of the AbstractExecutorService shows each of these methods are simply helper methods that ultimately wrap the Callable/Runnable in a Future for you.

protected <T> RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor(Runnable runnable, T value) {    return new FutureTask<T>(runnable, value);}protected <T> RunnableFuture<T> newTaskFor(Callable<T> callable) {    return new FutureTask<T>(callable);}public Future<?> submit(Runnable task) {    // ...    RunnableFuture<Object> ftask = newTaskFor(task, null);    execute(ftask);    return ftask;}public <T> Future<T> submit(Runnable task, T result) {    // ...    RunnableFuture<T> ftask = newTaskFor(task, result);    execute(ftask);    return ftask;}public <T> Future<T> submit(Callable<T> task) {    // ...    RunnableFuture<T> ftask = newTaskFor(task);    execute(ftask);    return ftask;}


Using Future we can find out the status of the Callable task and get the returned Object. It provides get() method that can wait for the Callable to finish and then return the result.

Future provides cancel() method to cancel the associated Callable task. There is an overloaded version of get() method where we can specify the time to wait for the result, it’s useful to avoid current thread getting blocked for longer time. There are isDone() and isCancelled() methods to find out the current status of associated Callable task.

Here is a simple example of Callable task that returns the name of thread executing the task after one second. We are using Executor framework to execute 100 tasks in parallel and use Future to get the result of the submitted tasks.

    import java.util.ArrayList;    import java.util.Date;    import java.util.List;    import java.util.concurrent.Callable;    import java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException;    import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;    import java.util.concurrent.Executors;    import java.util.concurrent.Future;    public class MyCallable implements Callable<String> {        @Override        public String call() throws Exception {            Thread.sleep(1000);            //return the thread name executing this callable task            return Thread.currentThread().getName();        }        public static void main(String args[]){            //Get ExecutorService from Executors utility class, thread pool size is 10            ExecutorService executor = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(10);            //create a list to hold the Future object associated with Callable            List<Future<String>> list = new ArrayList<Future<String>>();            //Create MyCallable instance            Callable<String> callable = new MyCallable();            for(int i=0; i< 100; i++){                //submit Callable tasks to be executed by thread pool                Future<String> future = executor.submit(callable);                //add Future to the list, we can get return value using Future                list.add(future);            }            for(Future<String> fut : list){                try {                    //print the return value of Future, notice the output delay in console                    // because Future.get() waits for task to get completed                    System.out.println(new Date()+ "::"+fut.get());                } catch (InterruptedException | ExecutionException e) {                    e.printStackTrace();                }            }            //shut down the executor service now            executor.shutdown();        }    }

Where as FutureTask is base concrete implementation of Future interface and provides asynchronous processing. It contains the methods to start and cancel a task and also methods that can return the state of the FutureTask as whether it’s completed or cancelled. We need a callable object to create a future task and then we can use Java Thread Pool Executor to process these asynchronously.

Let’s see the example of FutureTask with a simple program.

Since FutureTask requires a callable object, we will create a simple Callable implementation.

    public class MyCallable implements Callable<String> {    private long waitTime;    public MyCallable(int timeInMillis){        this.waitTime=timeInMillis;    }    @Override    public String call() throws Exception {        Thread.sleep(waitTime);        //return the thread name executing this callable task        return Thread.currentThread().getName();    }}    import java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException;import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;import java.util.concurrent.Executors;import java.util.concurrent.FutureTask;import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException;public class FutureTaskExample {    public static void main(String[] args) {        MyCallable callable1 = new MyCallable(1000);        MyCallable callable2 = new MyCallable(2000);        FutureTask<String> futureTask1 = new FutureTask<String>(callable1);        FutureTask<String> futureTask2 = new FutureTask<String>(callable2);        ExecutorService executor = Executors.newFixedThreadPool(2);        executor.execute(futureTask1);        executor.execute(futureTask2);        while (true) {            try {                if(futureTask1.isDone() && futureTask2.isDone()){                    System.out.println("Done");                    //shut down executor service                    executor.shutdown();                    return;                }                if(!futureTask1.isDone()){                //wait indefinitely for future task to complete                System.out.println("FutureTask1 output="+futureTask1.get());                }                System.out.println("Waiting for FutureTask2 to complete");                String s = futureTask2.get(200L, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);                if(s !=null){                    System.out.println("FutureTask2 output="+s);                }            } catch (InterruptedException | ExecutionException e) {                e.printStackTrace();            }catch(TimeoutException e){                //do nothing            }        }    }}


FutureTask<T> class contains an additional " done()" method so we can override the done() method, then add the FutureTask object to the ExecutorService, so the done() method will invoke when the FutureTask completed immediately.