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How to run concurrent threads in perl?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-04 14:18 出处:网络
The following does not appear to run in concurrent threads as I expected, but rather each process blocks until it is complete:

The following does not appear to run in concurrent threads as I expected, but rather each process blocks until it is complete:

my @arr = (1,2,3,4);
foreach (@arr) {
   threads->new(\&doSomething, $_)->join;
}

sub doSomething {
    my $thread = shift;
    print "thread $thread\n";
    sleep(5);
}

In开发者_如何转开发 other words, it appears to be executing the same as the non-threaded version would:

my @arr = (1,2,3,4);
foreach (@arr) {
   doSomething($_);
}

I am running ActivePerl v5.10.1 mswin32-x86-multi-thread

How to I run concurrent threads in perl?


See perldoc threads.

The problem is that calling join() on a thread waits for it to finish. You want to spawn threads and then join after, not spawn/join as one operation.

A further look at perldoc threads says:

threads->list()

threads->list(threads::all)

threads->list(threads::running)

threads->list(threads::joinable)

With no arguments (or using threads::all ) and in a list context, returns a list of all non-joined, non-detached threads objects. In a scalar context, returns a count of the same.

With a true argument (using threads::running), returns a list of all non-joined, non-detached threads objects that are still running.

With a false argument (using threads::joinable ), returns a list of all non-joined, non-detached threads objects that have finished running (i.e., for which ->join() will not block).

You can use this to loop and list threads, joining when possible, until all threads are complete (and you'll probably want an upper limit to wait time where you will kill them and abort)


you have to join them afterwards, not while creating them:

my @arr = (1,2,3,4);
my @threads;
foreach (@arr) {
   push @threads, threads->new(\&doSomething, $_);
}
foreach (@threads) {
   $_->join();
}


join (not only in Perl) causes calling thread to wait for another thread finish. So your example spawns thread, waits for it to finish, and then spawns another thread, so you get impression that there are no threads spawned at all.


If you do not care of the output generated from the thread, you can use ->detach() on the thread.

my @arr = (1,2,3,4); my @threads; foreach (@arr) {
my $t = threads->new(\&doSomething, $_); $t->detach(); }

after a thread completes, it is reclaimed and you don't need to call join() on it.

this model is good to create worker bees which you dont need to report back to you.


You have to call join after spawning all threads:

perl -mthreads -le'$_->join for map threads->new(sub{print"Thread $_";sleep(2)}),1..4'


my @arr = (1,2,3,4);
my @threads;
foreach (@arr) {
   push @threads, threads->new(\&doSomething, $_);
}
foreach (@threads) {
   $_->join();
}

The above code is working in a small scale. But if you have tens of threads or more, your OS starts to stall.

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