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Como usar SpinWait para implementar uma operação bifásica de espera

O exemplo a seguir mostra como usar um objeto System.Threading.SpinWait para implementar uma operação de espera de duas fases. Na primeira fase, o objeto de sincronização, um Latch, gira por alguns ciclos enquanto verifica se o bloqueio ficou disponível. Na segunda fase, se o bloqueio ficar disponível, o método Wait retorna sem usar System.Threading.ManualResetEvent para executar sua espera; caso contrário, Wait executa a espera.

Exemplo

Este exemplo mostra uma implementação muito básica de uma primitivo de sincronização de Trava. Você pode usar essa estrutura de dados quando houver a expectativa de tempos de espera muito curtos. Este exemplo é para fins de demonstração. Se você precisar de funcionalidade do tipo trava em seu programa, considere o uso de System.Threading.ManualResetEventSlim.

#define LOGGING

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

class Latch
{
   private object latchLock = new object();
   // 0 = unset, 1 = set.
   private int m_state = 0;
   private volatile int totalKernelWaits = 0;

   // Block threads waiting for ManualResetEvent.
   private ManualResetEvent m_ev = new ManualResetEvent(false);
#if LOGGING
   // For fast logging with minimal impact on latch behavior.
   // Spin counts greater than 20 might be encountered depending on machine config.
   private long[] spinCountLog = new long[20];

   public void DisplayLog()
   {
      for (int i = 0; i < spinCountLog.Length; i++)
      {
          Console.WriteLine("Wait succeeded with spin count of {0} on {1:N0} attempts",
                            i, spinCountLog[i]);
      }
      Console.WriteLine("Wait used the kernel event on {0:N0} attempts.", totalKernelWaits);
      Console.WriteLine("Logging complete");
   }
#endif

   public void Set()
   {
      lock(latchLock) {
         m_state = 1;
         m_ev.Set();
      }
   }

   public void Wait()
   {
      Trace.WriteLine("Wait timeout infinite");
      Wait(Timeout.Infinite);
   }

   public bool Wait(int timeout)
   {
      SpinWait spinner = new SpinWait();
      Stopwatch watch;

      while (m_state == 0)
      {
          // Lazily allocate and start stopwatch to track timeout.
          watch = Stopwatch.StartNew();

          // Spin only until the SpinWait is ready
          // to initiate its own context switch.
          if (!spinner.NextSpinWillYield)
          {
              spinner.SpinOnce();
          }
          // Rather than let SpinWait do a context switch now,
          //  we initiate the kernel Wait operation, because
          // we plan on doing this anyway.
          else
          {
              Interlocked.Increment(ref totalKernelWaits);
              // Account for elapsed time.
              long realTimeout = timeout - watch.ElapsedMilliseconds;

              // Do the wait.
              if (realTimeout <= 0 || !m_ev.WaitOne((int)realTimeout))
              {
                  Trace.WriteLine("wait timed out.");
                  return false;
              }
          }
      }

#if LOGGING
      Interlocked.Increment(ref spinCountLog[spinner.Count]);
#endif
      // Take the latch.
      Interlocked.Exchange(ref m_state, 0);

      return true;
   }
}

class Example
{
   static Latch latch = new Latch();
   static int count = 2;
   static CancellationTokenSource cts = new CancellationTokenSource();

   static void TestMethod()
   {
      while (!cts.IsCancellationRequested)
      {
         // Obtain the latch.
         if (latch.Wait(50))
         {
            // Do the work. Here we vary the workload a slight amount
            // to help cause varying spin counts in latch.
            double d = 0;
            if (count % 2 != 0) {
               d = Math.Sqrt(count);
            }
            Interlocked.Increment(ref count);

            // Release the latch.
            latch.Set();
         }
      }
   }

   static void Main()
   {
      // Demonstrate latch with a simple scenario: multiple
      // threads updating a shared integer. Both operations
      // are relatively fast, which enables the latch to
      // demonstrate successful waits by spinning only.
      latch.Set();

      // UI thread. Press 'c' to cancel the loop.
      Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
      {
         Console.WriteLine("Press 'c' to cancel.");
         if (Console.ReadKey(true).KeyChar == 'c') {
            cts.Cancel();
         }
      });

      Parallel.Invoke( () => TestMethod(),
                       () => TestMethod(),
                       () => TestMethod() );

#if LOGGING
      latch.DisplayLog();
      if (cts != null) cts.Dispose();
#endif
   }
}
#Const LOGGING = 1

Imports System.Diagnostics
Imports System.Threading
Imports System.Threading.Tasks

Class Latch
    Private latchLock As New Object()
    ' 0 = unset, 1 = set.
    Private m_state As Integer = 0
    Private totalKernelWaits As Integer = 0

    ' Block threads waiting for ManualResetEvent.
    Private m_ev = New ManualResetEvent(False)

#If LOGGING Then
    ' For fast logging with minimal impact on latch behavior.
    ' Spin counts greater than 20 might be encountered depending on machine config.
    Dim spinCountLog(19) As Long

    Public Sub DisplayLog()
        For i As Integer = 0 To spinCountLog.Length - 1
            Console.WriteLine("Wait succeeded with spin count of {0} on {1:N0} attempts",
                              i, spinCountLog(i))
        Next
        Console.WriteLine("Wait used the kernel event on {0:N0} attempts.",
                          totalKernelWaits)
        Console.WriteLine("Logging complete")
    End Sub
#End If

    Public Sub SetLatch()
        SyncLock (latchLock)
            m_state = 1
            m_ev.Set()
        End SyncLock
    End Sub

    Public Sub Wait()
        Trace.WriteLine("Wait timeout infinite")
        Wait(Timeout.Infinite)
    End Sub

    Public Function Wait(ByVal timeout As Integer) As Boolean
        ' Allocated on the stack.
        Dim spinner = New SpinWait()
        Dim watch As Stopwatch

        While (m_state = 0)
            ' Lazily allocate and start stopwatch to track timeout.
            watch = Stopwatch.StartNew()

            ' Spin only until the SpinWait is ready
            ' to initiate its own context switch.
            If Not spinner.NextSpinWillYield Then
                spinner.SpinOnce()

                ' Rather than let SpinWait do a context switch now,
                '  we initiate the kernel Wait operation, because
                ' we plan on doing this anyway.
            Else
                Interlocked.Increment(totalKernelWaits)
                ' Account for elapsed time.
                Dim realTimeout As Long = timeout - watch.ElapsedMilliseconds

                ' Do the wait.
                If realTimeout <= 0 OrElse Not m_ev.WaitOne(realTimeout) Then
                    Trace.WriteLine("wait timed out.")
                    Return False
                End If
            End If
        End While

#If LOGGING Then
        Interlocked.Increment(spinCountLog(spinner.Count))
#End If
        ' Take the latch.
        Interlocked.Exchange(m_state, 0)

        Return True
    End Function
End Class

Class Program
    Shared latch = New Latch()
    Shared count As Integer = 2
    Shared cts = New CancellationTokenSource()
    Shared lockObj As New Object()

    Shared Sub TestMethod()
        While (Not cts.IsCancellationRequested)
            ' Obtain the latch.
            If (latch.Wait(50)) Then
                ' Do the work. Here we vary the workload a slight amount
                ' to help cause varying spin counts in latch.
                Dim d As Double = 0
                If (count Mod 2 <> 0) Then
                    d = Math.Sqrt(count)
                End If

                SyncLock (lockObj)
                    If count = Int32.MaxValue Then count = 0
                    count += 1
                End SyncLock

                ' Release the latch.
                latch.SetLatch()
            End If
        End While
    End Sub

    Shared Sub Main()
        ' Demonstrate latch with a simple scenario:
        ' two threads updating a shared integer and
        ' accessing a shared StringBuilder. Both operations
        ' are relatively fast, which enables the latch to
        ' demonstrate successful waits by spinning only. 
        latch.SetLatch()

        ' UI thread. Press 'c' to cancel the loop.
        Task.Factory.StartNew(Sub()
                                  Console.WriteLine("Press 'c' to cancel.")
                                  If (Console.ReadKey(True).KeyChar = "c"c) Then
                                      cts.Cancel()
                                  End If
                              End Sub)
        Parallel.Invoke(
               Sub() TestMethod(),
               Sub() TestMethod(),
               Sub() TestMethod()
               )

#If LOGGING Then
        latch.DisplayLog()
#End If
        If cts IsNot Nothing Then cts.Dispose()
    End Sub
End Class

A trava usa o objeto SpinWait para executar somente no local até que a próxima chamada a SpinOnce faça com que SpinWait gere a fração de tempo do thread. Nesse ponto, a trava causa sua própria alternância de contexto chamando WaitOne no ManualResetEvent, e passando o restante do valor de tempo limite.

A saída do log mostra com que frequência a trava conseguiu aumentar o desempenho adquirindo o bloqueio sem usar o ManualResetEvent.

Confira também