Struct rayon_core::Scope
source · pub struct Scope<'scope> { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
Represents a fork-join scope which can be used to spawn any number of tasks.
See scope()
for more information.
Implementations§
source§impl<'scope> Scope<'scope>
impl<'scope> Scope<'scope>
sourcepub fn spawn<BODY>(&self, body: BODY)where
BODY: FnOnce(&Scope<'scope>) + Send + 'scope,
pub fn spawn<BODY>(&self, body: BODY)where
BODY: FnOnce(&Scope<'scope>) + Send + 'scope,
Spawns a job into the fork-join scope self
. This job will
execute sometime before the fork-join scope completes. The
job is specified as a closure, and this closure receives its
own reference to the scope self
as argument. This can be
used to inject new jobs into self
.
Returns
Nothing. The spawned closures cannot pass back values to the caller directly, though they can write to local variables on the stack (if those variables outlive the scope) or communicate through shared channels.
(The intention is to eventually integrate with Rust futures to support spawns of functions that compute a value.)
Examples
let mut value_a = None;
let mut value_b = None;
let mut value_c = None;
rayon::scope(|s| {
s.spawn(|s1| {
// ^ this is the same scope as `s`; this handle `s1`
// is intended for use by the spawned task,
// since scope handles cannot cross thread boundaries.
value_a = Some(22);
// the scope `s` will not end until all these tasks are done
s1.spawn(|_| {
value_b = Some(44);
});
});
s.spawn(|_| {
value_c = Some(66);
});
});
assert_eq!(value_a, Some(22));
assert_eq!(value_b, Some(44));
assert_eq!(value_c, Some(66));
See also
The scope
function has more extensive documentation about
task spawning.