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Concurrency with Modern C++

You're reading from   Concurrency with Modern C++ What every professional C++ programmer should know about concurrency.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781839211027
Length 543 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rainer Grimm Rainer Grimm
Author Profile Icon Rainer Grimm
Rainer Grimm
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

1. Reader Testimonials FREE CHAPTER
2. Introduction 3. Concurrency with Modern C++ 4. Memory Model 5. Multithreading 6. Parallel Algorithms of the Standard Template Library 7. The Near Future: C++20 8. Case Studies 9. The Future: C++23 10. Patterns and Best Practices 11. Synchronisation Patterns 12. Concurrent Architecture 13. Best Practices 14. Lock-Based Data Structures 15. Challenges 16. The Time Library 17. CppMem - An Overview 18. Glossary 19. Index

Dealing with Mutation

If you don’t write and read data concurrently, no data races can happen. The easiest way to achieve this is by immutable values. Additionally to this best practice, there are two typical strategies. First, protect the critical sections by a lock such as a scoped lock or strategized locking. In object-oriented design, the critical section is typically an object including its interface. The Thread-Safe Interface protects the entire object. Second, the modifying thread just signals when it is done with its work. This is the strategy of guarded suspension.

Scoped Locking

Scoped locking is the idea of RAII (Resource Acquisition Is Initialization) applied to a mutex. The key idea of this idiom is to bind the resource acquisition and release to the lifetime of an object. As the name suggests it, the lifetime of the objects is scoped. Scoped means in particular that the C++ runtime is responsible for invoking the destructor of the object and, therefore, to release...

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