#thread-pool #worker-thread #thread #actor-model #pool #actors

nightly worker-pool

A rust crate to handle a set of worker threads, which need to communicate back their result to the main thread

3 unstable releases

0.2.1 Jun 4, 2022
0.2.0 Jun 3, 2022
0.1.0 Jun 2, 2022

#930 in Concurrency

21 downloads per month

MIT/Apache

35KB
572 lines

worker-pool

A rust crate to handle a set of worker threads, which need to communicate back their result to the main thread.

This crate implements a specialization of the actor model, with the following properties:

  • there is one manager and many workers
  • workers may work indefinitely
  • workers can send messages up to the manager; these messages must not be lost
  • the manager can broadcast messages to the workers
  • the manager can ask the workers to stop their work at any time, in which case the system should reach a normal state as fast as possible
  • the message queue can have a limit on its length
  • no deadlocks¹ and no livelocks

¹: unless specified in the documentation and under the assumption that every worker handles the Stop message and stops some time after

Installation and usage

Add this library to your Cargo.toml:

worker-pool = "0.1.0"

Then, create a new instance of worker_pool::WorkerPool:

use std::time::Duration;
use worker_pool::{WorkerPool, DownMsg};

// Here, `u64` is the type of the messages from the workers to the manager
// `()` is the type of the messages from the manager to the workers
// `32` is the maximum length of the message queue
let pool: WorkerPool<u64, ()> = WorkerPool::new(32);

To start a new thread, use WorkerPool::execute or WorkerPool::execute_many:

fn is_prime(n: u64) -> bool {
    for i in 2..n {
        if n % i == 0 {
            return false
        }
    }
    true
}

// Start a new thread, that will communicate with the manager
pool.execute(|tx, rx| {
    tx.send(2).unwrap();
    let mut n = 3;
    loop {
        match rx.try_recv() {
            Ok(DownMsg::Stop) => break,
            _ => {}
        }

        while !is_prime(n) {
            n += 2;
        }

        tx.send(n).unwrap(); // The program may block here; this will not cause a deadlock
    }
});

Then, you can interact with the threads using the different methods of WorkerPool, notably recv_burst, broadcast and stop:

// Give the worker(s) time to boot up
std::thread::sleep(Duration::new(0, 100_000_000));

// The iterator returned by pool.recv_burst() only yields messages received before it was created and is non-blocking,
// so no livelock or deadlock can occur when using it.
for x in pool.recv_burst() {
    println!("{}", x);
    std::thread::sleep(Duration::new(0, 10_000_000));
}

// `pool.stop()` also returns an iterator, which will send a Stop message
// and gather the worker's messages until they all finish. No deadlock can occur here,
// as long as the threads' only shared, critical resource are the worker/manager channels
// provided by WorkerPool and the threads eventually respond to the `Stop` message.
for x in pool.stop() {
    println!("{}", x);
}

License

This project is dual-licensed under the MIT license and the Apache v2.0 license. You may choose either of those when using this library.

Any contribution to this repository must be made available under both licenses.

No runtime deps