Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The Dining Philosophers Problem
    • This is a canonical multithreading example used to illustrate the potential for deadlock and how to avoid it.
      • Five philosophers sit around a table, each in front of a big plate of spaghetti.
      • A single fork (utensil, not system call) is placed between neighboring philosophers.
      • Each philosopher comes to the table to think, eat, think, eat, think, and eat. That's three square meals of spaghetti after three extended think sessions.
      • Each philosopher keeps to himself as he thinks. Sometime he thinks for a long time, and sometimes he barely thinks at all.
      • After each philosopher has thought for a while, he proceeds to eat one of his three daily meals. In order to eat, he must grab hold of two forks—one on his left, then one on his right. With two forks in hand, he chows on spaghetti to nourish his big, philosophizing brain. When he's full, he puts down the forks in the same order he picked them up and returns to thinking for a while.
    • The next two slides present the core of our first stab at the program that codes to this problem description. (The full program is right here.)

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The Dining Philosophers Problem
    • The program models each of the forks as a mutex, and each philosopher either holds a fork or doesn't. By modeling the fork as a mutex, we can rely on mutex::lock to model a thread-safe grab and mutex::unlock to model a thread-safe release.
static void philosopher(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right) {
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
    think(id);
    eat(id, left, right);
  }
}

int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  mutex forks[5];
  thread philosophers[5];
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    mutex& left = forks[i], & right = forks[(i + 1) % 5];
    philosophers[i] = thread(philosopher, i, ref(left), ref(right));
  }
  for (thread& p: philosophers) p.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The Dining Philosophers Problem
    • The implementation of think is straightforward. It's designed to emulate the time a philosopher spends thinking without interacting with forks or other philosophers.
    • The implementation of eat is almost as straightforward, provided you understand the thread subroutine is being fed references to the two forks he needs to acquire if he's permitted to eat.
static void think(size_t id) {
  cout << oslock << id << " starts thinking." << endl << osunlock;
  sleep_for(getThinkTime());
  cout << oslock << id << " all done thinking. " << endl << osunlock;
}

static void eat(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right) {
  left.lock();
  right.lock();
  cout << oslock << id << " starts eating om nom nom nom." << endl << osunlock;
  sleep_for(getEatTime());
  cout << oslock << id << " all done eating." << endl << osunlock;
  left.unlock();
  right.unlock();
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The program appears to work well (we'll run it several times), but it doesn't guard against this: each philosopher emerges from deep thought, successfully grabs the fork to his left, and is then forced off the processor because his time slice is up.
  • If all five philosopher threads are subjected to the same scheduling pattern, each would be stuck waiting for a second fork to become available.  That's a real deadlock threat.
  • Deadlock is more or less guaranteed if we insert a sleep_for call in between the two calls to lock, as we have in the version of eat presented below.
    • We should be able to insert a sleep_for call anywhere in a thread routine. If it surfaces an concurrency issue, then you have a larger problem to be solved.
static void eat(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right) {
  left.lock();
  sleep_for(5000);  // artificially force off the processor
  right.lock();
  cout << oslock << id << " starts eating om nom nom nom." << endl << osunlock;
  sleep_for(getEatTime());
  cout << oslock << id << " all done eating." << endl << osunlock;
  left.unlock();
  right.unlock();
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • When coding with threads, you need to ensure that:
    • there are no race conditions, even if they rarely cause problems, and
    • there's zero threat of deadlock, lest a subset of threads forever starve for processor time.
  • mutexes are generally the solution to race conditions, as we've seen with the ticket agent example. We can use them to mark the boundaries of critical regions and limit the number of threads present within them to be at most one.
  • Deadlock can be programmatically prevented by implanting directives to limit the number of threads competing for a shared resource, like, you know, utensils.
    • We could, for instance, recognize it's impossible for three philosophers to be eating at the same time. That means we could limit the number of philosophers who have permission to grab forks to a mere 2.
    • We could also argue it's okay to let four—though certainly not all five—philosophers grab forks, knowing that at least one will successfully grab both.
      • My personal preference? Impose a limit of four.
      • My rationale? Implant the minimal amount of bottlenecking needed to remove the threat of deadlock, and trust the OS and thread manager to otherwise make good choices.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Here's the core of a program that limits the number of philosophers grabbing forks to four. (The full program can be found right here.)
    • I impose this limit by introducing the notion of a permission slip, or permit. Before grabbing forks, a philosopher must first acquire one of four permission slips.
    • These permission slips need to be acquired and released without race condition.
    • For now, I'll model a permit using a counter—I call it permits—and a companion mutex—I call it permitsLock—that must be acquired before examining or changing permits.
int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  size_t permits = 4;
  mutex forks[5], permitsLock;
  thread philosophers[5];
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    mutex& left = forks[i],
         & right = forks[(i + 1) % 5];
    philosophers[i] = 
        thread(philosopher, i, ref(left), ref(right), ref(permits), ref(permitsLock));
  }
  for (thread& p: philosophers) p.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The implementation of think is the same, so I don't present it again.
  • The implementation of eat, however, changes a bit.
    • It accepts two additional references: one to the number of available permits, and a second to the mutex used to guard against simultaneous access to permits.
static void eat(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right, size_t& permits, mutex& permitsLock) {
  waitForPermission(permits, permitsLock); // on next slide
  left.lock(); right.lock();
  cout << oslock << id << " starts eating om nom nom nom." << endl << osunlock;
  sleep_for(getEatTime());
  cout << oslock << id << " all done eating." << endl << osunlock;
  grantPermission(permits, permitsLock); // on next slide
  left.unlock(); right.unlock();
}

static void philosopher(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right,
                        size_t& permits, mutex& permitsLock) {
  for (size_t i = 0; i < kNumMeals; i++) {
    think(id);
    eat(id, left, right, permits, permitsLock);
  }
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The implementation of eat on the prior slide deck introduces calls to waitForPermission and grantPermission.
    • The implementation of grantPermission is certainly the easier of the two to understand: transactionally increment the number of permits by one.
    • The implementation of waitForPermission is less obvious. Because we don't know what else to do (yet!), we busy wait with short naps until permits goes positive. Once that happens, we consume a permit and return.
static void waitForPermission(size_t& permits, mutex& permitsLock) {
  while (true) {
    permitsLock.lock();
    if (permits > 0) break;
    permitsLock.unlock();
    sleep_for(10);
  }
  permits--;
  permitsLock.unlock();
}

static void grantPermission(size_t& permits, mutex& permitsLock) {
  permitsLock.lock();
  permits++;
  permitsLock.unlock();
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The second version of the program works, in the sense that it never deadlocks.
    • It does, however, suffer from busy waiting, which the systems programmer gospel says is verboten unless there are no other options.
  • A better solution? If a philosopher doesn't have permission to advance, then that thread should sleep until another thread sees reason to wake it up. In this example, another philosopher thread, after it increments permits within grantPermission, could notify the sleeping thread that a permit just became available.
  • Implementing this idea requires a more sophisticated concurrency directive that supports a different form of thread communication—one akin to the use of signals and sigsuspend to support communication between processes. Fortunately, C++ provides a standard directive called the condition_variable_any to do exactly this.
class condition_variable_any {
public:
   void wait(mutex& m);
   template <typename Pred> void wait(mutex& m, Pred pred);
   void notify_one();
   void notify_all();
};

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Here's the main thread routine that introduces a condition_variable_any to support the notification model we'll use in place of busy waiting. (Full program: here)
    • All of the variables needed to foster inter-thread communication are defined across the first three lines of main.
    • The philosopher thread routine and the eat thread subroutine accept references to permits, cv, and m, because references to all three need to be passed on to waitForPermission and grantPermission.
    • I go with the shorter name m instead of permitsLock for reasons I'll soon get to. 
int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  size_t permits = 4;
  mutex forks[5], m;
  condition_variable_any cv;
  thread philosophers[5];
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    mutex& left = forks[i], & right = forks[(i + 1) % 5];
    philosophers[i] = 
       thread(philosopher, i, ref(left), ref(right), ref(permits), ref(cv), ref(m));
  }
  for (thread& p: philosophers) p.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

static void waitForPermission(size_t& permits, condition_variable_any& cv, mutex& m) {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  while (permits == 0) cv.wait(m);
  permits--;
}

static void grantPermission(size_t& permits, condition_variable_any& cv, mutex& m) {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  permits++;
  if (permits == 1) cv.notify_all();
}

  • The new implementations of waitForPermission and grantPermission are below:







     
    • The lock_guard is a convenience class whose constructor calls lock on the supplied mutex and whose destructor calls unlock on the same mutex. It's a convenience class used to ensure the lock on a mutex is released no matter how the function exits (early return, standard return at end, exception thrown, etc.)
    • grantPermission is a straightforward thread-safe increment, save for the fact that if permits just went from 0 to 1, it's possible other threads are waiting for a permit to become available. That's why the conditional call to cv.notify_all() is there.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

static void waitForPermission(size_t& permits, condition_variable_any& cv, mutex& m) {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  while (permits == 0) cv.wait(m);
  permits--;
}

static void grantPermission(size_t& permits, condition_variable_any& cv, mutex& m) {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  permits++;
  if (permits == 1) cv.notify_all();
}

  • The new implementations of waitForPermission and grantPermission are below:







     
    • The implementation of waitForPermission will eventually grant a permit to the calling thread, though it may need to wait a while for one to become available.
      • If there aren't any permits, the thread is forced to sleep via cv.wait(m). The thread manager releases the lock on m just as it's putting the thread to sleep.
      • When cv is notified within grantPermission, the thread manager wakes the sleeping thread, but mandates it reacquire the lock on m (very much needed to properly reevaluate permits == 0) before returning from cv.wait(m).
      • Yes, waitForPermission requires a while loop instead an if test.  Why? It's possible the permit that just became available is immediately consumed by the thread that just returned it. Unlikely, but technically possible.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The Dining Philosophers Problem, continued
    • while loops around cv.wait(m) calls are so common that the
      condition_variable_any class exports a second, two-argument version of wait whose implementation is a while loop around the first. That second version looks like this:



       
    • It's a template method, because the second argument supplied via pred can be anything capable of standing in for a zero-argument, bool-returning function.
    • The first waitForPermissions can be rewritten to rely on this new version, as with:
template <Predicate pred>
void condition_variable_any::wait(mutex& m, Pred pred) {
  while (!pred()) wait(m);
}

static void waitForPermission(size_t& permits, condition_variable_any& cv, mutex& m) {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  cv.wait(m, [&permits] { return permits > 0; });
  permits--;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Fundamentally, the size_t, condition_variable_any, and mutex are collectively working together to track a resource count—in this case, four permission slips.
    • They provide thread-safe increment in grantPermission and thread-safe decrement in waitForPermission.
    • They work to ensure that a thread blocked on zero permission slips goes to sleep until further notice, and that it remains asleep until another thread returns one.
  • In our latest dining-philosopher example, we relied on these three variables to collectively manage a thread-safe accounting of four permission slips. However!
    • There is little about the implementation that requires the original number be four. Had we gone with 20 philosophers and and 19 permission slips, waitForPermission and grantPermission would still work as is.
    • The idea of maintaining a thread-safe, generalized counter is so useful that most programming languages include more generic support for it. That support normally comes under the name of a semaphore.
    • For reason that aren't entirely clear to me, standard C++ omits the semaphore from its standard libraries. My guess as to why? It's easily built in terms of other constructs, so it was deemed unnecessary to provide official support for it.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • The semaphore constructor is so short that it's inlined right in the declaration of the semaphore class.
  • semaphore::wait is our generalization of waitForPermission.
void semaphore::wait() {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  cv.wait(m, [this] { return value > 0; })
  value--;
}
  • Why does the capture clause include the this keyword?
    • Because the anonymous predicate function passed to cv.wait is just that—a regular function.  Since functions aren't normally entitled to examine the private state of an object, the capture clause includes this to effectively convert the bool-returning function into a bool-returning semaphore method.
  • semaphore::signal is our generalization of grantPermission.
void semaphore::signal() {
  lock_guard<mutex> lg(m);
  value++;
  if (value == 1) cv.notify_all();
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Here's our final version of the dining-philosophers.
    • It strips out the exposed size_t, mutex, and condition_variable_any and replaces them with a single semaphore.
    • It updates the thread constructors to accept a single reference to that semaphore.
static void philosopher(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right, semaphore& permits) {
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
    think(id);
    eat(id, left, right, permits);
  }
}

int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  semaphore permits(4);
  mutex forks[5];
  thread philosophers[5];
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    mutex& left = forks[i], & right = forks[(i + 1) % 5];
    philosophers[i] = thread(philosopher, i, ref(left), ref(right), ref(permits));
  }
  for (thread& p: philosophers) p.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • eat now relies on that semaphore to play the roles previously played by waitForPermission and grantPermission.







  •  
    • We could switch the order of the last two lines, so that right.unlock() precedes
      left.unlock(). Is the switch a good idea? a bad one? or is it really just arbitrary?
    • One student suggested we use a mutex to bundle the calls to left.lock() and right.lock() into a critical region. Is this a solution to the deadlock problem?
    • We could lift the permits.signal() call up to appear in between right.lock() and the first cout statement. Is that valid? Why or why not?
static void eat(size_t id, mutex& left, mutex& right, semaphore& permits) {
  permits.wait();
  left.lock();
  right.lock();
  cout << oslock << id << " starts eating om nom nom nom." << endl << osunlock;
  sleep_for(getEatTime());
  cout << oslock << id << " all done eating." << endl << osunlock;
  permits.signal();
  left.unlock();
  right.unlock();
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • New concurrency pattern!
    • semaphore::wait and semaphore::signal can be leveraged to support a different form of communication: thread rendezvous.
    • Thread rendezvous is a generalization of thread::join. It allows one thread to stall—via semaphore::wait—until another thread calls semaphore::signal, often because the signaling thread just prepared some data that the waiting thread needs before it can continue.
  • To illustrate when thread rendezvous is useful, we'll implement a simple program without it, and see how thread rendezvous can be used to repair some of its problems.
    • The program has two meaningful threads of execution: one thread publishes content to a shared buffer, and a second reads that content as it becomes available.
    • The program is a nod to the communication in place between a web server and a browser. The server publishes content over a dedicated communication channel, and the browser consumes it.
    • The program also reminds me of how two independent processes behave when one writes to a pipe, a second reads from it, and how the write and read processes behave when the pipe is full (in principle, a possibility) or empty.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Consider the following program, where concurrency directives have been intentionally omitted.  The full, very buggy example is right here.
static void writer(char buffer[]) {
  cout << oslock << "Writer: ready to write." << endl << osunlock;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 320; i++) { // 320 is 40 cycles around the circular buffer of length 8
    char ch = prepareData();
    buffer[i % 8] = ch;
    cout << oslock << "Writer: published data packet with character '" << ch << "'." << endl << osunlock;
  }
}

static void reader(char buffer[]) {
  cout << oslock << "\t\tReader: ready to read." << endl << osunlock;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 320; i++) { // 320 is 40 cycles around the circular buffer of length 8 
    char ch = buffer[i % 8];
    processData(ch);
    cout << oslock << "\t\tReader: consumed data packet " << "with character '" << ch << "'." << endl << osunlock;
  }
}

int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  char buffer[8];
  thread w(writer, buffer);
  thread r(reader, buffer);
  w.join();
  r.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Here's what works:
    • Because the main thread declares a circular buffer and shares it with both children, the children each agree where content is stored.
    • Think of the buffer as the state maintained by the implementation of pipe, or the state maintained by an internet connection between a server and a client.
    • The writer thread publishes content to the circular buffer, and the reader thread consumes that same content as it's written. Each thread cycles through the buffer the same number of times, and they both agree that i % 8 identifies the next slot of interest.
  • Here's what's broken:
    • Each thread runs more or less independently of the other, without consulting the other to see how much progress it's made.
    • In particular, there's nothing in place to inform the reader that the slot it wants to read from has meaningful data in it. It's possible the writer just hasn't gotten that far yet.
    • Similarly, there's nothing preventing the writer from advancing so far ahead that it begins to overwrite content that has yet to be consumed by the reader.

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • One solution? Maintain two semaphores.
    • One can track the number of slots that can be written to without clobbering yet-to-be-consumed data. We'll call it emptyBuffers, and we'll initialize it to 8.
    • A second can track the number of slots that contain yet-to-be-consumed data that can be safely read. We'll call it fullBuffers, and we'll initialize it to 0.
  • Here's the new main program that declares, initializes, and shares the two semaphores.






     
  • The writer thread waits until at least one buffer is empty before writing. Once it writes, it'll increment the full buffer count by one.
  • The reader thread waits until at least one buffer is full before reading. Once it reads, it increments the empty buffer count by one.
int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) {
  char buffer[8];
  semaphore fullBuffers, emptyBuffers(8);
  thread w(writer, buffer, ref(fullBuffers), ref(emptyBuffers));
  thread r(reader, buffer, ref(fullBuffers), ref(emptyBuffers));
  w.join();
  r.join();
  return 0;
}

Lecture 10: Multithreading and Condition Variables

  • Here are the two new thread routines:













     
  • The reader and writer rely on these semaphores to inform the other how much work they can do before being necessarily forced off the CPU.
  • Thought question: can we rely on just one semaphore instead of two? Why or why not?
static void writer(char buffer[], semaphore& full, semaphore& empty) {
  cout << oslock << "Writer: ready to write." << endl << osunlock;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 320; i++) { // 320 is 40 cycles around the circular buffer of length 8
    char ch = prepareData();
    empty.wait();   // don't try to write to a slot unless you know it's empty                                                                                                         
    buffer[i % 8] = ch;
    full.signal();  // signal reader there's more stuff to read                                                                                                                        
    cout << oslock << "Writer: published data packet with character '" << ch << "'." << endl << osunlock;
  }
}

static void reader(char buffer[], semaphore& full, semaphore& empty) {
  cout << oslock << "\t\tReader: ready to read." << endl << osunlock;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 320; i++) { // 320 is 40 cycles around the circular buffer of length 8
    full.wait();    // don't try to read from a slot unless you know it's full                                                                                                         
    char ch = buffer[i % 8];
    empty.signal(); // signal writer there's a slot that can receive data                                                                                                              
    processData(ch);
    cout << oslock << "\t\tReader: consumed data packet " << "with character '" << ch << "'." << endl << osunlock;
  }
}

Copy of Multithreading, Condition Variables, and Semaphores

By Jerry Cain

Copy of Multithreading, Condition Variables, and Semaphores

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