In my opinion it will be non-deterministic to get the actual count of tasks for the reason that while the tasks are submitted the execute method is called and one of below 3 conditions may happen.
1. Task starts executing (added to Workers)
2. Task is enqueued (added to WorkQueue)
3. Task is rejected as WorkerQueue capacity,Workers capacity and resources exhaust
/**
* Executes the given task sometime in the future. The task
* may execute in a new thread or in an existing pooled thread.
*
* If the task cannot be submitted for execution, either because this
* executor has been shutdown or because its capacity has been reached,
* the task is handled by the current {@code RejectedExecutionHandler}.
*
* @param command the task to execute
* @throws RejectedExecutionException at discretion of
* {@code RejectedExecutionHandler}, if the task
* cannot be accepted for execution
* @throws NullPointerException if {@code command} is null
*/
public void execute(Runnable command) {
if (command == null)
throw new NullPointerException();
/*
* Proceed in 3 steps:
*
* 1. If fewer than corePoolSize threads are running, try to
* start a new thread with the given command as its first
* task. The call to addWorker atomically checks runState and
* workerCount, and so prevents false alarms that would add
* threads when it shouldn't, by returning false.
*
* 2. If a task can be successfully queued, then we still need
* to double-check whether we should have added a thread
* (because existing ones died since last checking) or that
* the pool shut down since entry into this method. So we
* recheck state and if necessary roll back the enqueuing if
* stopped, or start a new thread if there are none.
*
* 3. If we cannot queue task, then we try to add a new
* thread. If it fails, we know we are shut down or saturated
* and so reject the task.
*/
int c = ctl.get();
if (workerCountOf(c) < corePoolSize) {
if (addWorker(command, true))
return;
c = ctl.get();
}
if (isRunning(c) && workQueue.offer(command)) {
int recheck = ctl.get();
if (! isRunning(recheck) && remove(command))
reject(command);
else if (workerCountOf(recheck) == 0)
addWorker(null, false);
}
else if (!addWorker(command, false))
reject(command);
}
getTaskCount() and getCompletedTaskCount() methods are guarded by mainLock hence we do know if internal threads still submitting tasks to executor will be done by the time check (while (executor.getCompletedTaskCount() < executor.getTaskCount())
) in main executes. This condition may result is false positive for a moment ending into a wrong result.
/**
* Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have ever been
* scheduled for execution. Because the states of tasks and
* threads may change dynamically during computation, the returned
* value is only an approximation.
*
* @return the number of tasks
*/
public long getTaskCount() {
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
long n = completedTaskCount;
for (Worker w : workers) {
n += w.completedTasks;
if (w.isLocked())
++n;
}
return n + workQueue.size();
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
}
/**
* Returns the approximate total number of tasks that have
* completed execution. Because the states of tasks and threads
* may change dynamically during computation, the returned value
* is only an approximation, but one that does not ever decrease
* across successive calls.
*
* @return the number of tasks
*/
public long getCompletedTaskCount() {
final ReentrantLock mainLock = this.mainLock;
mainLock.lock();
try {
long n = completedTaskCount;
for (Worker w : workers)
n += w.completedTasks;
return n;
} finally {
mainLock.unlock();
}
}
**Code Snippets used here are from JDK 1.8 222