ACE Tutorial 010
Passing chunks of data through an ACE_Message_Queue


Our Task object executes in one or more threads and reads from the message queue it contains.


// page04.html,v 1.9 1999/09/22 03:13:45 jcej Exp

#ifndef TASK_H
#define TASK_H

#include "ace/Task.h"

#if !defined (ACE_LACKS_PRAGMA_ONCE)
# pragma once
#endif /* ACE_LACKS_PRAGMA_ONCE */

/* Like the thread-pool server tutorial, we'll derive from ACE_Task<>.
  Our goal here is to show off the ACE_Message_Queue and the best way
  to do that is to use one to pass data between threads.  The easiest
  way to create threads is with ACE_Task<> */
class Task : public ACE_Task <ACE_MT_SYNCH>
{
public:

  typedef ACE_Task <ACE_MT_SYNCH> inherited;

  /* The constructor/destructor are simple but take care of some
    necessary housekeeping.  */
  Task (size_t n_threads);
  ~Task (void);

  /* open() will kick off our thread pool for us.  */
  int open (void * = 0);

  /* Our worker method */
  int svc (void);

  /* All we'll do here is print a message to the user.  */
  int close (u_long flags = 0);

protected:
  /* Just to be clever, I'll use an ACE_Barrier to cause the threads
    to sync in svc() before doing any real work.  */
  ACE_Barrier barrier_;

  size_t n_threads_;
  // Number of threads in the pool.
};

#endif /* TASK_H */

The only thing here that we didn't see in the thread-pool server is the ACE_Barrier. The application logic really doesn't need it but it is a handy way to synchronize the threads at the beginning of svc(). In testing I found that if I didn't sync svc(), the first thread to get activated would tend to get all of the messages before the other threads came alive.


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