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Mastering Concurrency in Python

You're reading from   Mastering Concurrency in Python Create faster programs using concurrency, asynchronous, multithreading, and parallel programming

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789343052
Length 446 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Concepts
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Author (1):
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Quan Nguyen Quan Nguyen
Author Profile Icon Quan Nguyen
Quan Nguyen
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Advanced Introduction to Concurrent and Parallel Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Amdahl's Law 3. Working with Threads in Python 4. Using the with Statement in Threads 5. Concurrent Web Requests 6. Working with Processes in Python 7. Reduction Operators in Processes 8. Concurrent Image Processing 9. Introduction to Asynchronous Programming 10. Implementing Asynchronous Programming in Python 11. Building Communication Channels with asyncio 12. Deadlocks 13. Starvation 14. Race Conditions 15. The Global Interpreter Lock 16. Designing Lock-Based and Mutex-Free Concurrent Data Structures 17. Memory Models and Operations on Atomic Types 18. Building a Server from Scratch 19. Testing, Debugging, and Scheduling Concurrent Applications 20. Assessments 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Example implementation in Python

As we mentioned previously, due to their communicative and associative properties, reduction operators can have their partial tasks created and processed independently, and this is where concurrency can be applied. To truly understand how a reduction operator utilizes concurrency, let's try implementing a concurrent, multiprocessing reduction operator from scratchspecifically the add operator.

Similar to what we saw in the previous chapter, in this example, we will be using a task queue and a result queue to facilitate our interprocess communication. Specifically, the program will store all of the numbers in the input array in the task queue as individual tasks. As each of our consumers (individual processes) executes, it will call get() on the task queue twice to obtain two task numbers (except for some edge cases where there is no...

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