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A header-only C++ library for task concurrency

transwarp

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Doxygen documentation

transwarp is a header-only C++ library for task concurrency. It allows you to easily create a graph of tasks where every task can be executed asynchronously. transwarp is written in C++17 and only depends on the standard library. Just copy include/transwarp.h to your project and off you go! Tested with GCC, Clang, ICC, and Visual Studio.

C++11 support can be enabled by defining TRANSWARP_CPP11 at compile time.

Important: Only use tagged releases of transwarp in production code!

Table of contents

Example

This example creates three tasks and connects them with each other to form a two-level graph. The tasks are then scheduled twice for computation while using 4 threads.

#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>
#include "transwarp.h"

namespace tw = transwarp;

int main() {
    double x = 0;
    int y = 0;

    // Building the task graph
    auto parent1 = tw::make_task(tw::root, [&x]{ return 13.3 + x; })->named("something");
    auto parent2 = tw::make_task(tw::root, [&y]{ return 42 + y; })->named("something else");
    auto child = tw::make_task(tw::consume, [](double a, int b) { return a + b;
                                            }, parent1, parent2)->named("adder");

    tw::parallel executor{4};  // Parallel execution with 4 threads

    child->schedule_all(executor);  // Schedules all tasks for execution
    std::cout << "result = " << child->get() << std::endl;  // result = 55.3

    // Modifying data input
    x += 2.5;
    y += 1;

    child->schedule_all(executor);  // Re-schedules all tasks for execution
    std::cout << "result = " << child->get() << std::endl;  // result = 58.8

    // Creating a dot-style graph for visualization
    std::ofstream{"basic_with_three_tasks.dot"} << tw::to_string(child->edges());
}

The resulting graph of this example looks like this:

graph

Every bubble represents a task and every arrow an edge between two tasks. The first line within a bubble is the task name. The second line denotes the task type followed by the task id and the task level in the graph.

API doc

This is a brief API doc of transwarp. For more details check out the doxygen documentation and the transwarp examples.

In the following we will use tw as a namespace alias for transwarp.

Creating tasks

transwarp supports seven different task types:

root, // The task has no parents
accept, // The task's functor accepts all parent futures
accept_any, // The task's functor accepts the first parent future that becomes ready
consume, // The task's functor consumes all parent results
consume_any, // The task's functor consumes the first parent result that becomes ready
wait, // The task's functor takes no arguments but waits for all parents to finish
wait_any, // The task's functor takes no arguments but waits for the first parent to finish

The task type is passed as the first parameter to make_task, e.g., to create a consume task simply do this:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::consume, functor, parent1, parent2);

where functor denotes some callable and parent1/2 the parent tasks.

The functor as passed to make_task needs to fulfill certain requirements based on the task type and the given parents:

root: A task at the root (top) of the graph. This task gets executed first. A functor to a root task cannot have any parameters since this task does not have parent tasks, e.g.:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::root, []{ return 42; });

Another way of defining aroot task is a value task which can be created as:

auto task = tw::make_value_task(42);  

A value task doesn't require scheduling and always returns the same value or exception.

accept: This task is required to have at least one parent. It accepts the resulting parent futures as they are without unwrapping. Hence, the child can decide how to proceed since a call to get() can potentially throw an exception. Here's an example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::accept, [](auto f1, auto f2) { return f1.get() + f2.get(); }, parent1, parent2);

accept_any: This task is required to have at least one parent but its functor takes exactly one future, namely the future of the parent that first finishes. All other parents are abandoned and canceled. Here's an example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::accept_any, [](auto f1) { return f1.get(); }, parent1, parent2);

Note that canceling only works for already running tasks when the functor is sub-classed from transwarp::functor.

consume: This task follows the same rules as accept with the difference that the resulting parent futures are unwrapped (have get() called on them). The results are then passed to the child, hence, consumed by the child task. The child task will not be invoked if any parent throws an exception. For example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::consume, [](int x, int y) { return x + y; }, parent1, parent2);

consume_any: This task follows the same rules as accept_any with the difference that the resulting parent futures are unwrapped (have get() called on them). For example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::consume_any, [](int x) { return x; }, parent1, parent2);

wait: This task's functor does not take any parameters but the task must have at least one parent. It simply waits for completion of all parents while unwrapping futures before calling the child's functor. For example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::wait, []{ return 42; }, parent1, parent2);

wait_any: This task works similar to the wait task but calls its functor as soon as the first parent completes. It abandons and cancels all remaining parent tasks. For example:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::wait_any, []{ return 42; }, parent1, parent2);

Generally, tasks are created using make_task which allows for any number of parents. However, it is a common use case for a child to only have one parent. For this, then() can be directly called on the parent object to create a continuation:

auto child = tw::make_task(tw::root, []{ return 42; })->then(tw::consume, functor);

child is now a single-parent task whose functor consumes an integer.

Scheduling tasks

Once a task is created it can be scheduled just by itself:

auto task = tw::make_task(tw::root, functor);
task->schedule();

which, if nothing else is specified, will run the task on the current thread. However, using the built-in parallel executor the task can be pushed into a thread pool and executed asynchronously:

tw::parallel executor{4};  // Thread pool with 4 threads
auto task = tw::make_task(tw::root, functor);
task->schedule(executor);

Regardless of how you schedule, the task result can be retrieved through:

std::cout << task->get() << std::endl;

When chaining multiple tasks together a directed acyclic graph is built in which every task can be scheduled individually. Though, in many scenarios it is useful to compute all tasks in the right order with a single call:

auto parent1 = tw::make_task(tw::root, foo);  // foo is a functor
auto parent2 = tw::make_task(tw::root, bar);  // bar is a functor
auto task = tw::make_task(tw::consume, functor, parent1, parent2);
task->schedule_all();  // Schedules all parents and itself

which can also be scheduled using an executor, for instance:

tw::parallel executor{4};
task->schedule_all(executor);

which will run those tasks in parallel that do not depend on each other.

Executors

We have seen that we can pass executors to schedule() and schedule_all(). Additionally, they can be assigned to a task directly:

auto exec1 = std::make_shared<tw::parallel>(2);
task->set_executor(exec1);
tw::sequential exec2;
task->schedule(exec2);  // exec1 will be used to schedule the task

The task-specific executor will always be preferred over other executors when scheduling tasks.

transwarp defines an executor interface which can be implemented to perform custom behavior when scheduling tasks. The interface looks like this:

class executor {
public:
    virtual ~executor() = default;
    
    // The name of the executor
    virtual std::string name() const = 0;
    
    // Only ever called on the thread of the caller to schedule()
    virtual void execute(const std::function<void()>& functor, tw::itask& task) = 0;
};

where functor denotes the function to be run and task the task the functor belongs to.

Range functions

There are convenience functions that can be applied to an iterator range:

  • tw::for_each
  • tw::transform

These are very similar to their standard library counterparts except that they return a task for deferred, possibly asynchronous execution. Here's an example:

std::vector<int> vec = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7};
tw::parallel exec{4};
auto task = tw::for_each(exec, vec.begin(), vec.end(), [](int& x){ x *= 2; });
task->wait();  // all values in vec will have doubled

Canceling tasks

A task can be canceled by calling task->cancel(true) which will, by default, only affect tasks that are not currently running yet. However, if you create a functor that inherits from transwarp::functor you can terminate tasks while they're running. transwarp::functor looks like this:

class functor {
public:
    virtual ~functor() = default;

protected:
    // The associated task (only to be called after the task was constructed)
    const tw::itask& transwarp_task() const noexcept;

    // The associated task (only to be called after the task was constructed)
    tw::itask& transwarp_task() noexcept;

    // If the associated task is canceled then this will throw transwarp::task_canceled
    // which will stop the task while it's running (only to be called after the task was constructed)
    void transwarp_cancel_point() const;

private:
    ...
};

By placing calls to transwarp_cancel_point() in strategic places of your functor you can denote well defined points where the functor will exit when the associated task is canceled. A task can also be canceled by throwing transwarp::task_canceled directly.

As mentioned above, tasks can be explicitly canceled on client request. In addition, all tasks considered abandoned by accept_any, consume_any, or wait_any operations are also canceled in order to terminate them as soon as their computations become superfluous.

Event system

Transwarp provides an event system that allows you to subscribe to all or specific events of a task, such as, before started or after finished events. The task events are enumerated in the event_type enum:

enum class event_type {
    before_scheduled, // Just before a task is scheduled
    after_future_changed, // Just after the task's future was changed
    before_started, // Just before a task starts running
    before_invoked, // Just before a task's functor is invoked
    after_finished, // Just after a task has finished running
    after_canceled, // Just after a task was canceled
    after_satisfied, ///< Just after a task has satisfied all its children with results
    after_custom_data_set, // Just after custom data was assigned
}

Listeners are created by sub-classing from the listener interface:

class listener {
public:
    virtual ~listener() = default;

    // This may be called from arbitrary threads depending on the event type
    virtual void handle_event(tw::event_type event, tw::itask& task) = 0;
};

A listener can then be passed to the add_listener functions of a task to add a new listener or to the remove_listener functions to remove an existing listener.

Task pool

A task pool is useful when one wants to run the same graph in parallel. For this purpose, transwarp provides a task_pool which manages a pool of tasks from which one can request an idle task for parallel graph execution. For example:

tw::parallel exec{4};

auto my_task = make_graph();
tw::task_pool<double> pool{my_task};

for (;;) {
    auto task = pool.next_task(); // task may be null if the pool size is exhausted
    if (task) {
        task->schedule_all(exec);
    }
}

Timing tasks

In order to identify bottlenecks it's often useful to know how much time is spent in which task. transwarp provides a timer listener that will automatically time the tasks it listens to:

auto task = make_graph();
task->add_listener_all(std::make_shared<tw::timer>()); // assigns the timer listener to all tasks
task->schedule_all();
std::ofstream{"graph.dot"} << tw::to_string(task->edges()); // the dot file now contains timing info

Optimizing efficiency

Compile time switches

By default, transwarp provides its full functionality to its client. However, in many cases not all of that is actually required and so transwarp provides a few compile time switches to reduce the task size. These switches are:

TRANSWARP_DISABLE_TASK_CUSTOM_DATA
TRANSWARP_DISABLE_TASK_NAME
TRANSWARP_DISABLE_TASK_PRIORITY
TRANSWARP_DISABLE_TASK_REFCOUNT
TRANSWARP_DISABLE_TASK_TIME

To get the minimal task size with a single switch one can define

TRANSWARP_MINIMUM_TASK_SIZE

at build time.

Releasing unused memory

By default, every task in a graph will keep its result until rescheduling or a manual task reset. The releaser listener allows you to automatically release a task result after that task's children have consumed the result. For example:

auto task = make_graph();
task->add_listener_all(std::make_shared<tw::releaser>()); // assigns the releaser listener to all tasks
task->schedule_all();
// All intermediate task results are now released (i.e. futures are invalid)
auto result = task->get(); // The final task's result remains valid

The releaser also accepts an executor that gives control over where a task's result is released.

Using transwarp with tipi.build

transwarp can be easily used in tipi.build projects simply by adding the following entry to your .tipi/deps:

{
    "bloomen/transwarp": { }
}

Feedback

Get in touch if you have any questions or suggestions to make this a better library! You can post on gitter, submit a pull request, create a Github issue, or simply email one of the contributors.

If you're serious about contributing code to transwarp (which would be awesome!) then please submit a pull request and keep in mind that:

  • unit tests should be added for all new code by extending the existing unit test suite
  • C++ code uses spaces throughout