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This mini-repository has my very own implementation of a lock-free queue (that I designed from scratch) for C++.
It only supports a two-thread use case (one consuming, and one producing). The threads can't switch roles, though you could use this queue completely from a single thread if you wish (but that would sort of defeat the purpose!).
Note: If you need a general-purpose multi-producer, multi-consumer lock free queue, I have one of those too.
std::queue
, you never need to allocate memory for elements yourself
(which saves you the hassle of writing a lock-free memory manager to hold the elements you're queueing)try_enqueue
method which is guaranteed never to allocate memory (the queue starts with an initial capacity)enqueue
method which can dynamically grow the size of the queue as neededwait_dequeue
Simply drop the readerwriterqueue.h and atomicops.h files into your source code and include them :-) A modern compiler is required (MSVC2010+, GCC 4.7+, ICC 13+, or any C++11 compliant compiler should work).
Note: If you're using GCC, you really do need GCC 4.7 or above -- 4.6 has a bug that prevents the atomic fence primitives from working correctly.
Example:
using namespace moodycamel;
ReaderWriterQueue<int> q(100); // Reserve space for at least 100 elements up front
q.enqueue(17); // Will allocate memory if the queue is full
bool succeeded = q.try_enqueue(18); // Will only succeed if the queue has an empty slot (never allocates)
assert(succeeded);
int number;
succeeded = q.try_dequeue(number); // Returns false if the queue was empty
assert(succeeded && number == 17);
// You can also peek at the front item of the queue (consumer only)
int* front = q.peek();
assert(*front == 18);
succeeded = q.try_dequeue(number);
assert(succeeded && number == 18);
front = q.peek();
assert(front == nullptr); // Returns nullptr if the queue was empty
The blocking version has the exact same API, with the addition of wait_dequeue
and
wait_dequeue_timed
methods:
BlockingReaderWriterQueue<int> q;
std::thread reader([&]() {
int item;
for (int i = 0; i != 100; ++i) {
// Fully-blocking:
q.wait_dequeue(item);
// Blocking with timeout
if (q.wait_dequeue_timed(item, std::chrono::milliseconds(5)))
++i;
}
});
std::thread writer([&]() {
for (int i = 0; i != 100; ++i) {
q.enqueue(i);
std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
}
});
writer.join();
reader.join();
assert(q.size_approx() == 0);
Note that wait_dequeue
will block indefinitely while the queue is empty; this
means care must be taken to only call wait_dequeue
if you're sure another element
will come along eventually, or if the queue has a static lifetime. This is because
destroying the queue while a thread is waiting on it will invoke undefined behaviour.
The queue should only be used on platforms where aligned integer and pointer access is atomic; fortunately, that includes all modern processors (e.g. x86/x86-64, ARM, and PowerPC). Not for use with a DEC Alpha processor (which has very weak memory ordering) :-)
Note that it's only been tested on x86(-64); if someone has access to other processors I'd love to run some tests on anything that's not x86-based.
Finally, I am not an expert. This is my first foray into lock-free programming, and though I'm confident in the code, it's possible that there are bugs despite the effort I put into designing and testing this data structure.
Use this code at your own risk; in particular, lock-free programming is a patent minefield, and this code may very well violate a pending patent (I haven't looked). It's worth noting that I came up with this algorithm and implementation from scratch, independent of any existing lock-free queues.
See the LICENSE.md file for the license (simplified BSD).
My blog post introduces the context that led to this code, and may be of interest if you're curious about lock-free programming.
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