CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2013/ch1 1w13 aa: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
==Threads and Exceptions== | ==Threads and Exceptions== | ||
In Ruby, exceptions are handled through the 'rescue' clause which is analogous to try and catch blocks in java. The code that might throw an exception is placed within 'begin' and 'end' statements and a handler (rescue clause) is written inside it. If an exception is raised, control is transferred to the rescue clause. | In Ruby, exceptions are handled through the 'rescue' clause which is analogous to try and catch blocks in java. The code that might throw an exception is placed within 'begin' and 'end' statements and a handler (rescue clause) is written inside it. If an exception is raised, control is transferred to the rescue clause. | ||
example | |||
There are two flags which determine the course of action in case of unhandled exceptions- abort_on_exception and debug. If abort_on_exception flag is set to false, only the current thread is terminated by an unhandled exception and the rest continue to run. | |||
example | |||
However, if it is set to true, every single thread is killed and the entire process terminates. | |||
example | example |
Revision as of 21:59, 17 September 2013
Multithreading in Rails
Traditional programs have a single-thread of execution. The statements or instructions that comprise the program are executed sequentially until the program terminates. The threads are in-process and are implemented by the Ruby interpreter. As interpreted code is independent of the operating system, ruby threads are completely portable. On the other hand, there are some disadvantages when compared to native threads, such as deadlock and starvation. If a thread makes a call to the operating system that takes a long time to complete, all threads will hang until the interpreter gets control back. As the threads run within a single process, it cannot take advantage of multiple processors to achieve parallelism. Despite having so many disadvantages, Ruby threads are an efficient and lightweight way of achieving parallelism in code.
Creating Ruby Threads
The Thread library of Ruby allows concurrent programming. It provides multiple threads of execution in a single process that share the same memory space and execute concurrently. The Thread class represents user-level threads.To start a new thread, the Thread.new call is used and a block is passed as a parameter to it. This block of code runs in the thread.
The following code illustrates multithreading in Ruby
def function_1 count = 0 while count<=2 puts "Inside function_1" count += count end end def function_2 count = 0 while count<=2 puts "Inside function_2" count += count end end thread1 = Thread.new{function_1()} thread2 = Thread.new{function_2()} thread1.join thread2.join
Two threads are created and functions function_1 and fucntion_2 are passed as parameters. thread1 executes fucntion_1 and thread2 executes fucntion_2 . The following interleaved output is produced.
Inside function_1 Inside fucntion_1 Inside function_2 Inside function_2 Inside function_1 Inside fucntion_2
Threads share the global, instance and local variables that are in existence at the time the thread starts. Local variables created within a thread’s block are truly local to that thread. Each thread will have its own copy of these variables. Any number of arguments can be passed to the thread as parameters to Thread.new.
Thread lifecycle
There is no need to start a thread once it is created. It begins running automatically when CPU resources become available. There are a number of methods in the thread class to manipulate the thread while it is running.
The ‘value’ method of the Thread object returns the value of the last method that is computed in the thread if the thread has run to completion. Otherwise, the method blocks and does not return until the thread has completed. The method Thread.current returns the Thread object that represents the current thread. The method Thread.main returns the Thread object that represents the main thread which is the initial thread of execution when the program started. Thread.status and Thread.alive give the status of a particular thread. A Ruby program can terminate even if its child threads are still in execution. In order to avoid such a situation, the 'join' method can be used. Join blocks the calling process until the thread that it is called on runs to completion. Alternatively a join timeout parameter can also be passed as an argument to this method to specify the amount of time to block the calling thread.
==Ruby Thread Models==
Thread Variables
Variables defined in the block that is passed to a thread are local to the thread and cannot be accessed by other threads. However, in Ruby it is possible to define variables in a block that are accessible to other threads. This is done by treating the thread object as if it were a Hash and writing to elements using []= and reading them using []. The following code illustrates this point.
Threads and Exceptions
In Ruby, exceptions are handled through the 'rescue' clause which is analogous to try and catch blocks in java. The code that might throw an exception is placed within 'begin' and 'end' statements and a handler (rescue clause) is written inside it. If an exception is raised, control is transferred to the rescue clause. example
There are two flags which determine the course of action in case of unhandled exceptions- abort_on_exception and debug. If abort_on_exception flag is set to false, only the current thread is terminated by an unhandled exception and the rest continue to run. example However, if it is set to true, every single thread is killed and the entire process terminates. example