Go Concurrency
Internal
Overview
The majority of programming languages address concurrency by providing a representation of O/S threads or green threads directly in the language or in libraries, and providing memory access synchronization primitives to protect data in presence of concurrent access.
Go takes a different approach. The fundamental concurrent execution primitive is the goroutine, exposed by the language with the language keyword go
. Goroutines are managed by the Go runtime, which maps them transparently onto threads. While Go provides memory access and thread synchronization primitives at the language level via the sync
package, language guidelines do not exactly encourage their use, unless in very specific situations, such as within a small struct
scope. Go provides an alternative concurrency programming model in language, based on Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP), a theoretical model introduced by Anthony Hoare in the "Communicating Sequential Processes" 1978 ACM paper. This concurrency programming model uses channels, which are exposed at language level with the chan
keyword.
This approach allows you to directly map concurrent problems into concurrent constructs instead of dealing with the minutia of starting and managing threads, and mapping logic evenly across available threads. In languages that expose threads, you need to worry about things like thread pools, and map requests onto threads. In contrast, in Go you would write a function and prepend its invocation with the go
keyword. The runtime handles everything else automatically.
Goroutines
Channels
Memory Access and Thread Synchronization Primitives
The sync
package provides memory access and thread synchronization primitives.