Go Language Goroutines: Difference between revisions

From NovaOrdis Knowledge Base
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 25: Line 25:


<font color=darkkhaki>what happens with the result of the function?</font>
<font color=darkkhaki>what happens with the result of the function?</font>
If the invocation is done from <code>main()</code>, the scheduler always continues to execute <code>main()</code>, it does not preempt <code>main()</code> and immediately executes the new goroutine. Also, given the fact that when <code>main()</code> exists, all other goroutines are forcibly terminated, unless there's a mechanism that ensures they will be executed, they might not be executed at all.


=Exiting=
=Exiting=

Revision as of 02:23, 1 September 2023

Internal

Overview

A goroutine is a Go thread. Many goroutines execute within a single O/S thread, the main thread?. From the O/S point of view, only one thread is scheduled. The goroutine schedule is done by the Go runtime scheduler. The Go runtime scheduler uses a logical processor. The goroutines scheduled on a logical processor are executing concurrently, not |in parallel. However, it is possible to have more than one logical processor, each logical processors can be mapped onto an O/S thread, which may be scheduled to work on different cores. In this case, things may become parallel.

A goroutine is always created automatically, to run the main() function.

Creation and Invocation

To explicitly create a goroutine and schedule it, use the go keyword, by providing a function invocation.

func somefunc(i int) {
  ...
}

...

go somefunc(10)

Any function invocation can be used: go fmt.Printf("something").

Note that this syntax only schedules a goroutine. It is not determined when it will be actually executed.

what happens with the result of the function?

If the invocation is done from main(), the scheduler always continues to execute main(), it does not preempt main() and immediately executes the new goroutine. Also, given the fact that when main() exists, all other goroutines are forcibly terminated, unless there's a mechanism that ensures they will be executed, they might not be executed at all.

Exiting

A goroutine exits when the code is complete.

When the main goroutine is complete, all other goroutines are forced to exit. It is said that those goroutines exit early.