PriorityBlockingQueue
public
class
PriorityBlockingQueue
extends AbstractQueue<E>
implements
BlockingQueue<E>,
Serializable
| java.lang.Object | |||
| ↳ | java.util.AbstractCollection<E> | ||
| ↳ | java.util.AbstractQueue<E> | ||
| ↳ | java.util.concurrent.PriorityBlockingQueue<E> | ||
An unbounded blocking queue that uses
the same ordering rules as class PriorityQueue and supplies
blocking retrieval operations. While this queue is logically
unbounded, attempted additions may fail due to resource exhaustion
(causing OutOfMemoryError). This class does not permit
null elements. A priority queue relying on natural ordering also does not permit insertion of
non-comparable objects (doing so results in
ClassCastException).
This class and its iterator implement all of the optional
methods of the Collection and Iterator interfaces.
The Iterator provided in method iterator() and the
Spliterator provided in method spliterator() are not
guaranteed to traverse the elements of the PriorityBlockingQueue in
any particular order. If you need ordered traversal, consider using
Arrays.sort(pq.toArray()). Also, method drainTo can
be used to remove some or all elements in priority order and
place them in another collection.
Operations on this class make no guarantees about the ordering
of elements with equal priority. If you need to enforce an
ordering, you can define custom classes or comparators that use a
secondary key to break ties in primary priority values. For
example, here is a class that applies first-in-first-out
tie-breaking to comparable elements. To use it, you would insert a
new FIFOEntry(anEntry) instead of a plain entry object.
class FIFOEntry<E extends Comparable<? super E>>
implements Comparable<FIFOEntry<E>> {
static final AtomicLong seq = new AtomicLong();
final long seqNum;
final E entry;
public FIFOEntry(E entry) {
seqNum = seq.getAndIncrement();
this.entry = entry;
}
public E getEntry() { return entry; }
public in