Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Async and Await - How is order of execution maintained?

I am actually reading some topics about the Task Parallel Library and the asynchronous programming with async and await. The book "C# 5.0 in a Nutshell" states that when awaiting an expression using the await keyword, the compiler transforms the code into something like this:

var awaiter = expression.GetAwaiter();
awaiter.OnCompleted (() =>
{
var result = awaiter.GetResult();

Let's assume, we have this asynchronous function (also from the referred book):

async Task DisplayPrimeCounts()
{
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
Console.WriteLine (await GetPrimesCountAsync (i*1000000 + 2, 1000000) +
" primes between " + (i*1000000) + " and " + ((i+1)*1000000-1));
Console.WriteLine ("Done!");
}

The call of the 'GetPrimesCountAsync' method will be enqueued and executed on a pooled thread. In general invoking multiple threads from within a for loop has the potential for introducing race conditions.

So how does the CLR ensure that the requests will be processed in the order they were made? I doubt that the compiler simply transforms the code into the above manner, since this would decouple the 'GetPrimesCountAsync' method from the for loop.

like image 763
Dennis Kassel Avatar asked Jul 29 '15 15:07

Dennis Kassel


People also ask

How does async and await affect execution order?

Execution flow with async and awaitAn async function runs synchronously until the first await keyword. This means that within an async function body, all synchronous code before the first await keyword executes immediately.

Is async await sequential?

Async Await makes execution sequential This is because it is happening in sequence. Two promises are returned, both of which takes 50ms to complete. The second promise executes only after the first promise is resolved.

Does async await stop execution?

The await expression causes async function execution to pause until a Promise is settled (that is, fulfilled or rejected), and to resume execution of the async function after fulfillment.

How async functions are executed?

An async function can contain an await expression, that pauses the execution of the function and waits for the passed Promise's resolution, and then resumes the async function's execution and returns the resolved value. You can think of a Promise in JavaScript as the equivalent of Java's Future or C# 's Task.


2 Answers

Just for the sake of simplicity, I'm going to replace your example with one that's slightly simpler, but has all of the same meaningful properties:

async Task DisplayPrimeCounts()
{
    for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
    {
        var value = await SomeExpensiveComputation(i);
        Console.WriteLine(value);
    }
    Console.WriteLine("Done!");
}

The ordering is all maintained because of the definition of your code. Let's imagine stepping through it.

  1. This method is first called
  2. The first line of code is the for loop, so i is initialized.
  3. The loop check passes, so we go to the body of the loop.
  4. SomeExpensiveComputation is called. It should return a Task<T> very quickly, but the work that it'd doing will keep going on in the background.
  5. The rest of the method is added as a continuation to the returned task; it will continue executing when that task finishes.
  6. After the task returned from SomeExpensiveComputation finishes, we store the result in value.
  7. value is printed to the console.
  8. GOTO 3; note that the existing expensive operation has already finished before we get to step 4 for the second time and start the next one.

As far as how the C# compiler actually accomplishes step 5, it does so by creating a state machine. Basically every time there is an await there's a label indicating where it left off, and at the start of the method (or after it's resumed after any continuation fires) it checks the current state, and does a goto to the spot where it left off. It also needs to hoist all local variables into fields of a new class so that the state of those local variables is maintained.

Now this transformation isn't actually done in C# code, it's done in IL, but this is sort of the morale equivalent of the code I showed above in a state machine. Note that this isn't valid C# (you cannot goto into a a for loop like this, but that restriction doesn't apply to the IL code that is actually used. There are also going to be differences between this and what C# actually does, but is should give you a basic idea of what's going on here:

internal class Foo
{
    public int i;
    public long value;
    private int state = 0;
    private Task<int> task;
    int result0;
    public Task Bar()
    {
        var tcs = new TaskCompletionSource<object>();
        Action continuation = null;
        continuation = () =>
        {
            try
            {
                if (state == 1)
                {
                    goto state1;
                }
                for (i = 0; i < 10; i++)
                {
                    Task<int> task = SomeExpensiveComputation(i);
                    var awaiter = task.GetAwaiter();
                    if (!awaiter.IsCompleted)
                    {
                        awaiter.OnCompleted(() =>
                        {
                            result0 = awaiter.GetResult();
                            continuation();
                        });
                        state = 1;
                        return;
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        result0 = awaiter.GetResult();
                    }
                state1:
                    Console.WriteLine(value);
                }
                Console.WriteLine("Done!");
                tcs.SetResult(true);
            }
            catch (Exception e)
            {
                tcs.SetException(e);
            }
        };
        continuation();
    }
}

Note that I've ignored task cancellation for the sake of this example, I've ignored the whole concept of capturing the current synchronization context, there's a bit more going on with error handling, etc. Don't consider this a complete implementation.

like image 182
Servy Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 16:10

Servy


The call of the 'GetPrimesCountAsync' method will be enqueued and executed on a pooled thread.

No. await does not initiate any kind of background processing. It waits for existing processing to complete. It is up to GetPrimesCountAsync to do that (e.g. using Task.Run). It's more clear this way:

var myRunningTask = GetPrimesCountAsync();
await myRunningTask;

The loop only continues when the awaited task has completed. There is never more than one task outstanding.

So how does the CLR ensure that the requests will be processed in the order they were made?

The CLR is not involved.

I doubt that the compiler simply transforms the code into the above manner, since this would decouple the 'GetPrimesCountAsync' method from the for loop.

The transform that you shows is basically right but notice that the next loop iteration is not started right away but in the callback. That's what serializes execution.

like image 44
usr Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 14:10

usr