Book Image

.NET 4.5 Parallel Extensions Cookbook

By : Bryan Freeman
Book Image

.NET 4.5 Parallel Extensions Cookbook

By: Bryan Freeman

Overview of this book

<p>.NET parallel extensions brings the power of parallel and asynchronous programming to a much wider developer audience than ever before. This book will give a developer with no multithreaded development experience the ability to write highly scalable parallel applications that take advantage of modern multicore processors.If you are an experienced .NET developer who wants to put parallel extensions to work in your applications, this book is for you.</p> <p>".NET 4.5 Parallel Extensions Cookbook" is a practical, hands-on guide that provides you with a number of clear step-by-step recipes that will introduce parallelism into your applications and take advantage of modern multicore processors. This book is a crash course in using the extensions, with theory and concepts kept to a minimum.</p> <p>".NET 4.5 Parallel Extensions Cookbook" offers a wide-ranging presentation of parallel development concepts, and provides a working knowledge of key technologies that are important to developers who want to take advantage of multi-core architectures.</p> <p>You will learn how to compose a series of producer/consumer tasks into a pipeline that can process data elements received from a real-time event stream. You will also learn how to connect the stages of pipelines together using the concurrent collections. You will learn everything you need to know to transform the multicore power found in modern processors into application performance and scalability.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
.NET 4.5 Parallel Extensions Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Using monitor


A monitor, like the lock statement, is a mechanism for ensuring that only one thread at a time may be running in a critical section of code. A monitor has a lock, and only one thread at a time may acquire it. To run in a critical section of code, a thread must have acquired the monitor. While a thread owns the lock for an object, no other thread can acquire that lock.

For this recipe, we are going to create an application that uses a ConsoleWriter class with a WriteNumbers method to write some numbers out to the Console. Three parallel tasks will each be trying to write some numbers to the Console, and we will use monitor to control access to the critical section of code.

How to do it…

Have a look at the following steps:

  1. Start a new project using the C# Console Application project template and assign MonitorExample as the Solution name.

  2. Add a new class to your project and name the class ConsoleWriter.cs.

  3. Add the following code snippet using the directives to the top of your ConsoleWriter...