Function rayon::scope_fifo
source · pub fn scope_fifo<'scope, OP, R>(op: OP) -> Rwhere
OP: FnOnce(&ScopeFifo<'scope>) -> R + Send,
R: Send,
Expand description
Creates a “fork-join” scope s
with FIFO order, and invokes the
closure with a reference to s
. This closure can then spawn
asynchronous tasks into s
. Those tasks may run asynchronously with
respect to the closure; they may themselves spawn additional tasks
into s
. When the closure returns, it will block until all tasks
that have been spawned into s
complete.
Task execution
Tasks in a scope_fifo()
run similarly to scope()
, but there’s a
difference in the order of execution. Consider a similar example:
// point start
rayon::scope_fifo(|s| {
s.spawn_fifo(|s| { // task s.1
s.spawn_fifo(|s| { // task s.1.1
rayon::scope_fifo(|t| {
t.spawn_fifo(|_| ()); // task t.1
t.spawn_fifo(|_| ()); // task t.2
});
});
});
s.spawn_fifo(|s| { // task s.2
});
// point mid
});
// point end
The various tasks that are run will execute roughly like so:
| (start)
|
| (FIFO scope `s` created)
+--------------------+ (task s.1)
+-------+ (task s.2) |
| | +---+ (task s.1.1)
| | | |
| | | | (FIFO scope `t` created)
| | | +----------------+ (task t.1)
| | | +---+ (task t.2) |
| (mid) | | | | |
: | | + <-+------------+ (scope `t` ends)
: | | |
|<------+------------+---+ (scope `s` ends)
|
| (end)
Under scope_fifo()
, the spawns are prioritized in a FIFO order on
the thread from which they were spawned, as opposed to scope()
’s
LIFO. So in this example, we can expect s.1
to execute before
s.2
, and t.1
before t.2
. Other threads also steal tasks in
FIFO order, as usual. Overall, this has roughly the same order as
the now-deprecated breadth_first
option, except the effect is
isolated to a particular scope. If spawns are intermingled from any
combination of scope()
and scope_fifo()
, or from different
threads, their order is only specified with respect to spawns in the
same scope and thread.
For more details on this design, see Rayon RFC #1.
Panics
If a panic occurs, either in the closure given to scope_fifo()
or
in any of the spawned jobs, that panic will be propagated and the
call to scope_fifo()
will panic. If multiple panics occurs, it is
non-deterministic which of their panic values will propagate.
Regardless, once a task is spawned using scope.spawn_fifo()
, it
will execute, even if the spawning task should later panic.
scope_fifo()
returns once all spawned jobs have completed, and any
panics are propagated at that point.