Java Concurrency in Practice Java Concurrency in Practice

Java Concurrency in Practice

Tim Peierls and Others
    • 3.7 • 6 Ratings
    • $57.99
    • $57.99

Publisher Description

Threads are a fundamental part of the Java platform. As multicore processors become the norm, using concurrency effectively becomes essential for building high-performance applications. Java SE 5 and 6 are a huge step forward for the development of concurrent applications, with improvements to the Java Virtual Machine to support high-performance, highly scalable concurrent classes and a rich set of new concurrency building blocks. In Java Concurrency in Practice, the creators of these new facilities explain not only how they work and how to use them, but also the motivation and design patterns behind them.

However, developing, testing, and debugging multithreaded programs can still be very difficult; it is all too easy to create concurrent programs that appear to work, but fail when it matters most: in production, under heavy load. Java Concurrency in Practice arms readers with both the theoretical underpinnings and concrete techniques for building reliable, scalable, maintainable concurrent applications. Rather than simply offering an inventory of concurrency APIs and mechanisms, it provides design rules, patterns, and mental models that make it easier to build concurrent programs that are both correct and performant.

This book covers: Basic concepts of concurrency and thread safety Techniques for building and composing thread-safe classes Using the concurrency building blocks in java.util.concurrent Performance optimization dos and don'ts Testing concurrent programs Advanced topics such as atomic variables, nonblocking algorithms, and the Java Memory Model

GENRE
Computers & Internet
RELEASED
2006
May 9
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
432
Pages
PUBLISHER
Pearson Education
SELLER
Pearson Education Inc.
SIZE
10.7
MB

Customer Reviews

Tenderlove ,

Good text, confusing examples

I own a hard copy of this book, as well as the iBooks version. The iBooks version has many code listings which are completely wrong, and make it difficult to read at times. For example, code listing 4.13 is duplicated in code listing 4.14, where the printed version has a completely different example.

If you can imagine what the code samples should be, rather than trusting the iBooks version of the text, this is a good book. If the code examples were correct, I would give this book 5 stars.

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