Why is this an issue?

Double-checked locking can be used for lazy initialization of volatile fields, but only if field assignment is the last step in the synchronized block. Otherwise you run the risk of threads accessing a half-initialized object.

Noncompliant code example

public class MyClass {

  private volatile List<String> strings;

  public List<String> getStrings() {
    if (strings == null) {  // check#1
      synchronized(MyClass.class) {
        if (strings == null) {
          strings = new ArrayList<>();  // Noncompliant
          strings.add("Hello");  //When threadA gets here, threadB can skip the synchronized block because check#1 is false
          strings.add("World");
        }
      }
    }
    return strings;
  }
}

Compliant solution

public class MyClass {

  private volatile List<String> strings;

  public List<String> getStrings() {
    if (strings == null) {  // check#1
      synchronized(MyClass.class) {
        if (strings == null) {
          List<String> tmpList = new ArrayList<>();
          tmpList.add("Hello");
          tmpList.add("World");
          strings = tmpList;
        }
      }
    }
    return strings;
  }
}

Resources

Related rules