How to use MDC with thread pools?
Solution 1:
Yes, this is a common problem I've run into as well. There are a few workarounds (like manually setting it, as described), but ideally you want a solution that
- Sets the MDC consistently;
- Avoids tacit bugs where the MDC is incorrect but you don't know it; and
- Minimizes changes to how you use thread pools (e.g. subclassing
Callable
withMyCallable
everywhere, or similar ugliness).
Here's a solution that I use that meets these three needs. Code should be self-explanatory.
(As a side note, this executor can be created and fed to Guava's MoreExecutors.listeningDecorator()
, if
you use Guava's ListanableFuture
.)
import org.slf4j.MDC;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.concurrent.*;
/**
* A SLF4J MDC-compatible {@link ThreadPoolExecutor}.
* <p/>
* In general, MDC is used to store diagnostic information (e.g. a user's session id) in per-thread variables, to facilitate
* logging. However, although MDC data is passed to thread children, this doesn't work when threads are reused in a
* thread pool. This is a drop-in replacement for {@link ThreadPoolExecutor} sets MDC data before each task appropriately.
* <p/>
* Created by jlevy.
* Date: 6/14/13
*/
public class MdcThreadPoolExecutor extends ThreadPoolExecutor {
final private boolean useFixedContext;
final private Map<String, Object> fixedContext;
/**
* Pool where task threads take MDC from the submitting thread.
*/
public static MdcThreadPoolExecutor newWithInheritedMdc(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit, BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
return new MdcThreadPoolExecutor(null, corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue);
}
/**
* Pool where task threads take fixed MDC from the thread that creates the pool.
*/
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
public static MdcThreadPoolExecutor newWithCurrentMdc(int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime,
TimeUnit unit, BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
return new MdcThreadPoolExecutor(MDC.getCopyOfContextMap(), corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit,
workQueue);
}
/**
* Pool where task threads always have a specified, fixed MDC.
*/
public static MdcThreadPoolExecutor newWithFixedMdc(Map<String, Object> fixedContext, int corePoolSize,
int maximumPoolSize, long keepAliveTime, TimeUnit unit,
BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
return new MdcThreadPoolExecutor(fixedContext, corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue);
}
private MdcThreadPoolExecutor(Map<String, Object> fixedContext, int corePoolSize, int maximumPoolSize,
long keepAliveTime, TimeUnit unit, BlockingQueue<Runnable> workQueue) {
super(corePoolSize, maximumPoolSize, keepAliveTime, unit, workQueue);
this.fixedContext = fixedContext;
useFixedContext = (fixedContext != null);
}
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
private Map<String, Object> getContextForTask() {
return useFixedContext ? fixedContext : MDC.getCopyOfContextMap();
}
/**
* All executions will have MDC injected. {@code ThreadPoolExecutor}'s submission methods ({@code submit()} etc.)
* all delegate to this.
*/
@Override
public void execute(Runnable command) {
super.execute(wrap(command, getContextForTask()));
}
public static Runnable wrap(final Runnable runnable, final Map<String, Object> context) {
return new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
Map previous = MDC.getCopyOfContextMap();
if (context == null) {
MDC.clear();
} else {
MDC.setContextMap(context);
}
try {
runnable.run();
} finally {
if (previous == null) {
MDC.clear();
} else {
MDC.setContextMap(previous);
}
}
}
};
}
}
Solution 2:
We have run into a similar problem. You might want to extend ThreadPoolExecutor and override before/afterExecute methods to make the MDC calls you need before starting/stopping new threads.