Reputation: 5853
Could someone please provide explanation how Java multi-threaded program (e.g. Tomcat servlet container) is able to use all cores of CPU when JVM is only single process on linux? Is there any good in-depth article that describes the subject in details?
EDIT #1: I'm not looking for advice how to implement multi-threaded program in Java. I'm looking for explanation of how JVM internally manages to use multiple cores on linux/windows while still being single process on the OS.
EDIT #2: The best explanation I managed to find is that Hotspot (Sun/Oracle JVM) implements threads as native threads on Linux using NPTL. So more less each thread in Java is lightweight process (native thread) on Linux. It is clearly visible using ps -eLf
command that print outs not only process id (PPID
) but also native thread id (LWP
).
More details can be also found here:
EDIT #3: Wikipedia has short but nice entry on NPTL with some further references http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_POSIX_Thread_Library
Upvotes: 16
Views: 14449
Reputation: 550
If you use the concurrency library and split up your work as much as you can, the JVM should handle the rest.
Take a look at this http://embarcaderos.net/2011/01/23/parallel-processing-and-multi-core-utilization-with-java/
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 54393
The JVM is a single process with many threads. Each thread can be scheduled on a different CPU core. A single process can have many threads.
When Java software running inside the JVM asks for another thread the JVM starts another thread.
That is how the JVM manages to use multiple cores.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 500933
I would start by reading the Concurrency Tutorial.
In particular, it explains the differences (and relationship) between processes and threads.
On the architectures that I'm familiar with, the threads (including JVM-created threads) are managed by the OS. The JVM simply uses the threading facilities provided by the operating system.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 308269
The Linux kernel supports threads as first-class citizens. In fact to the kernel a thread isn't much different to a process, except that it shares a address space with another thread/process.
Some old versions of ps
even showed a separate process for each thread by default and newer versions can enable this behavior using the -m
flag.
Upvotes: 11