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  • Book Overview & Buying Mastering C# Concurrency
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Mastering C# Concurrency

Mastering C# Concurrency

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Mastering C# Concurrency

Mastering C# Concurrency

2.3 (3)

Overview of this book

Starting with the traditional approach to concurrency, you will learn how to write multithreaded concurrent programs and compose ways that won't require locking. You will explore the concepts of parallelism granularity, and fine-grained and coarse-grained parallel tasks by choosing a concurrent program structure and parallelizing the workload optimally. You will also learn how to use task parallel library, cancellations, timeouts, and how to handle errors. You will know how to choose the appropriate data structure for a specific parallel algorithm to achieve scalability and performance. Further, you'll learn about server scalability, asynchronous I/O, and thread pools, and write responsive traditional Windows and Windows Store applications. By the end of the book, you will be able to diagnose and resolve typical problems that could happen in multithreaded applications.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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11
Index

Using the thread pool

As already mentioned, creating a thread is quite an expensive operation. In addition to this, creating more and more threads is not efficient. To make asynchronous operations easier, in Common Language Runtime there is a thread pool, which is represented by the System.Threading.Threadpool class. Instead of creating a thread every time we need one, we ask the thread pool for a worker thread. If it has a thread available, a thread pool returns it to us. When its job is done, it goes back into the thread pool in a suspended state until it is needed again.

There are two types of threads inside the thread pool: worker threads and input/output threads. I/O threads are used for asynchronous I/O processing and we are not going to review them here. Let's concentrate on worker threads instead. This is what MSDN states about thread pool and its limits:

There is one thread pool per process.

Beginning with the .NET Framework 4, the default size of the thread pool for a process...

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