I am reading Java Concurrency in Practice. In 13.1 Lock and ReentrantLock, it says:
Why create a new locking mechanism that is so similar to intrinsic locking? Intrinsic locking works fine in most situations but has some functional limitations— it is not possible to interrupt a thread waiting to acquire a lock, or to attempt to acquire a lock without being willing to wait for it forever. Intrinsic locks also must be released in the same block of code in which they are acquired; this simplifies coding and interacts nicely with exception handling, but makes non-block-structured locking disciplines impossible.
What does "non-block-structured locking" mean? I think it means that you can lock in one method, unlock in another method, like Lock, but intrinsic locks must be released in the same block of code in which they are acquired. Am I right?
But the Chinese version of that book translates "block" to "阻塞". Is it an error?