FAQ.MultiThreading
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Contents
Introduction
When dealing with applications that need several connections, often using threads come up. Why that ? Mainly because the idea to use (if it's a client) or to serve (if it's a server) several sockets - ie several connections - means using or serving them concurently. And, the easiest way to understand "concurently" is to say "doing several thing at the same time" and them comes up the Threads, the multitasking, etc...
Although with ICS it's not primarily necessary, as ICS is based on the Asynchronous Paradigm, sometimes it may be needed to use threads.
But before to see why and how to use threads with ICS, let's define what is a thread : "Threads are a way for a program to split itself into two or more simultaneously running tasks [...] Threads are similar to processes, but differ in the way that they share resources " (Wikipedia's Thread (computer_science)). By extension, MultiThreading is the ability for a processus to have several Threads.
- Advantages :
- Not to freeze the other threads
- run concurently with other threads
- Disadvantages
- resources sharing has to be managed carefully (concurent access)
- With Delphi, VCL - ie all the GUI stuff - is not Thread safe.
The Main Question
Do i need Threads ?
Cases where needed and where not needed
A Thread per Socket
When incoming connection, encapsulating socket within a thread, and managing communication within the thread, across several threads
Many sockets per thread
A single thread is able to handle a lot of simultaneous sockets. Using a single socket per thread is not the way to go to support a large number of concurrent connections. In that case you need to use many socket per threads. Something like 10 to 500 sockets per thread. This way you can handle thousand simultaneous connections.
A Worker Thread
When running a lengthy process (SQLing a RBDMS, doing bottlenecked I/O, ...), and to prevent GUI from freezing, encapsulating it in a thread (JobThread), and sending back data when the thread is done (or simulating a process end).