I am assuming you are referring to a synchronization lock. If you are unfamiliar with synchronization it is a means to prevent the same code being run by two different threads at the same time. In java synchronization is done with Object locks:
Object lock = new Object();
public void doSomething(){
...
synchronized(lock){
//something dangerous
}
...
}
In this code it is guaranteed only one thread can do something dangerous at a given time, and it will complete everything in the synchronized block before another thread may start running the same code. I am guessing what you are referring to as a "class level lock" is the implicit lock on synchronized method:
public synchronized void somethingDangerous(){...}
Here again only one thread can execute the method at any given time and will always finish before another thread may begin executing the code. This is equivalent to a synchronized block on "this":
public void somethingDangerous(){
synchronized(this){
//something dangerous
}
}
Now this lock isn't actually on the class, but rather on a single instance (i.e. not all clocks, but only your clock). If you want a true "class level lock" (which would typically be done in a static method), then you need to synchronize on something independent of any instances. For example:
public class Clock{
private static Object CLASS_LOCK = new Object();
public static void doSomething(){
...
synchronized(CLASS_LOCK){
//something dangerous to all clocks, not just yours
}
...
}
}
again there is an implicit lock for static methods:
public class Clock{
public static synchronized void somethingDangerous(){}
}
which is the equivalent of locking on the class object:
public class Clock{
public static void somethingDangerous(){
synchronized(Clock.class){
//do something dangerous
}
}
}
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