ants

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Published: Mar 26, 2024 License: MIT Imports: 13 Imported by: 900

README

A goroutine pool for Go


English | 中文

📖 Introduction

Library ants implements a goroutine pool with fixed capacity, managing and recycling a massive number of goroutines, allowing developers to limit the number of goroutines in your concurrent programs.

🚀 Features:

  • Managing and recycling a massive number of goroutines automatically
  • Purging overdue goroutines periodically
  • Abundant APIs: submitting tasks, getting the number of running goroutines, tuning the capacity of the pool dynamically, releasing the pool, rebooting the pool
  • Handle panic gracefully to prevent programs from crash
  • Efficient in memory usage and it even achieves higher performance than unlimited goroutines in Golang
  • Nonblocking mechanism

💡 How ants works

Flow Diagram

ants-flowchart-en

Activity Diagrams

🧰 How to install

For ants v1

go get -u github.com/panjf2000/ants

For ants v2 (with GO111MODULE=on)

go get -u github.com/panjf2000/ants/v2

🛠 How to use

Just imagine that your program starts a massive number of goroutines, resulting in a huge consumption of memory. To mitigate that kind of situation, all you need to do is to import ants package and submit all your tasks to a default pool with fixed capacity, activated when package ants is imported:

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"sync"
	"sync/atomic"
	"time"

	"github.com/panjf2000/ants/v2"
)

var sum int32

func myFunc(i interface{}) {
	n := i.(int32)
	atomic.AddInt32(&sum, n)
	fmt.Printf("run with %d\n", n)
}

func demoFunc() {
	time.Sleep(10 * time.Millisecond)
	fmt.Println("Hello World!")
}

func main() {
	defer ants.Release()

	runTimes := 1000

	// Use the common pool.
	var wg sync.WaitGroup
	syncCalculateSum := func() {
		demoFunc()
		wg.Done()
	}
	for i := 0; i < runTimes; i++ {
		wg.Add(1)
		_ = ants.Submit(syncCalculateSum)
	}
	wg.Wait()
	fmt.Printf("running goroutines: %d\n", ants.Running())
	fmt.Printf("finish all tasks.\n")

	// Use the pool with a function,
	// set 10 to the capacity of goroutine pool and 1 second for expired duration.
	p, _ := ants.NewPoolWithFunc(10, func(i interface{}) {
		myFunc(i)
		wg.Done()
	})
	defer p.Release()
	// Submit tasks one by one.
	for i := 0; i < runTimes; i++ {
		wg.Add(1)
		_ = p.Invoke(int32(i))
	}
	wg.Wait()
	fmt.Printf("running goroutines: %d\n", p.Running())
	fmt.Printf("finish all tasks, result is %d\n", sum)
	if sum != 499500 {
		panic("the final result is wrong!!!")
	}

	// Use the MultiPool and set the capacity of the 10 goroutine pools to unlimited.
	// If you use -1 as the pool size parameter, the size will be unlimited.
	// There are two load-balancing algorithms for pools: ants.RoundRobin and ants.LeastTasks.
	mp, _ := ants.NewMultiPool(10, -1, ants.RoundRobin)
	defer mp.ReleaseTimeout(5 * time.Second)
	for i := 0; i < runTimes; i++ {
		wg.Add(1)
		_ = mp.Submit(syncCalculateSum)
	}
	wg.Wait()
	fmt.Printf("running goroutines: %d\n", mp.Running())
	fmt.Printf("finish all tasks.\n")

	// Use the MultiPoolFunc and set the capacity of 10 goroutine pools to (runTimes/10).
	mpf, _ := ants.NewMultiPoolWithFunc(10, runTimes/10, func(i interface{}) {
		myFunc(i)
		wg.Done()
	}, ants.LeastTasks)
	defer mpf.ReleaseTimeout(5 * time.Second)
	for i := 0; i < runTimes; i++ {
		wg.Add(1)
		_ = mpf.Invoke(int32(i))
	}
	wg.Wait()
	fmt.Printf("running goroutines: %d\n", mpf.Running())
	fmt.Printf("finish all tasks, result is %d\n", sum)
	if sum != 499500*2 {
		panic("the final result is wrong!!!")
	}
}

Functional options for ants pool

// Option represents the optional function.
type Option func(opts *Options)

// Options contains all options which will be applied when instantiating a ants pool.
type Options struct {
	// ExpiryDuration is a period for the scavenger goroutine to clean up those expired workers,
	// the scavenger scans all workers every `ExpiryDuration` and clean up those workers that haven't been
	// used for more than `ExpiryDuration`.
	ExpiryDuration time.Duration

	// PreAlloc indicates whether to make memory pre-allocation when initializing Pool.
	PreAlloc bool

	// Max number of goroutine blocking on pool.Submit.
	// 0 (default value) means no such limit.
	MaxBlockingTasks int

	// When Nonblocking is true, Pool.Submit will never be blocked.
	// ErrPoolOverload will be returned when Pool.Submit cannot be done at once.
	// When Nonblocking is true, MaxBlockingTasks is inoperative.
	Nonblocking bool

	// PanicHandler is used to handle panics from each worker goroutine.
	// if nil, panics will be thrown out again from worker goroutines.
	PanicHandler func(interface{})

	// Logger is the customized logger for logging info, if it is not set,
	// default standard logger from log package is used.
	Logger Logger
}

// WithOptions accepts the whole options config.
func WithOptions(options Options) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		*opts = options
	}
}

// WithExpiryDuration sets up the interval time of cleaning up goroutines.
func WithExpiryDuration(expiryDuration time.Duration) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.ExpiryDuration = expiryDuration
	}
}

// WithPreAlloc indicates whether it should malloc for workers.
func WithPreAlloc(preAlloc bool) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.PreAlloc = preAlloc
	}
}

// WithMaxBlockingTasks sets up the maximum number of goroutines that are blocked when it reaches the capacity of pool.
func WithMaxBlockingTasks(maxBlockingTasks int) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.MaxBlockingTasks = maxBlockingTasks
	}
}

// WithNonblocking indicates that pool will return nil when there is no available workers.
func WithNonblocking(nonblocking bool) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.Nonblocking = nonblocking
	}
}

// WithPanicHandler sets up panic handler.
func WithPanicHandler(panicHandler func(interface{})) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.PanicHandler = panicHandler
	}
}

// WithLogger sets up a customized logger.
func WithLogger(logger Logger) Option {
	return func(opts *Options) {
		opts.Logger = logger
	}
}

ants.Optionscontains all optional configurations of the ants pool, which allows you to customize the goroutine pool by invoking option functions to set up each configuration in NewPool/NewPoolWithFuncmethod.

Customize limited pool

ants also supports customizing the capacity of the pool. You can invoke the NewPool method to instantiate a pool with a given capacity, as follows:

p, _ := ants.NewPool(10000)

Submit tasks

Tasks can be submitted by calling ants.Submit(func())

ants.Submit(func(){})

Tune pool capacity in runtime

You can tune the capacity of ants pool in runtime with Tune(int):

pool.Tune(1000) // Tune its capacity to 1000
pool.Tune(100000) // Tune its capacity to 100000

Don't worry about the contention problems in this case, the method here is thread-safe (or should be called goroutine-safe).

Pre-malloc goroutine queue in pool

ants allows you to pre-allocate the memory of the goroutine queue in the pool, which may get a performance enhancement under some special certain circumstances such as the scenario that requires a pool with ultra-large capacity, meanwhile, each task in goroutine lasts for a long time, in this case, pre-mallocing will reduce a lot of memory allocation in goroutine queue.

// ants will pre-malloc the whole capacity of pool when you invoke this method
p, _ := ants.NewPool(100000, ants.WithPreAlloc(true))

Release Pool

pool.Release()

Reboot Pool

// A pool that has been released can be still used once you invoke the Reboot().
pool.Reboot()

⚙️ About sequence

All tasks submitted to ants pool will not be guaranteed to be addressed in order, because those tasks scatter among a series of concurrent workers, thus those tasks would be executed concurrently.

🧲 Benchmarks

In this benchmark result, the first and second benchmarks performed test cases with 1M tasks, and the rest of the benchmarks performed test cases with 10M tasks, both in unlimited goroutines and `ants` pool, and the capacity of this `ants` goroutine pool was limited to 50K.
  • BenchmarkGoroutine-4 represents the benchmarks with unlimited goroutines in Golang.

  • BenchmarkPoolGroutine-4 represents the benchmarks with an ants pool.

Benchmarks with Pool

In the above benchmark result, the first and second benchmarks performed test cases with 1M tasks, and the rest of the benchmarks performed test cases with 10M tasks, both in unlimited goroutines and ants pool and the capacity of this ants goroutine-pool was limited to 50K.

As you can see, ants performs 2 times faster than goroutines without a pool (10M tasks) and it only consumes half the memory compared with goroutines without a pool. (both in 1M and 10M tasks)

Benchmarks with PoolWithFunc

Throughput (it is suitable for scenarios where tasks are submitted asynchronously without waiting for the final results)

100K tasks

1M tasks

10M tasks

📊 Performance Summary

In conclusion, ants performs 2~6 times faster than goroutines without a pool and the memory consumption is reduced by 10 to 20 times.

👏 Contributors

Please read our Contributing Guidelines before opening a PR and thank you to all the developers who already made contributions to ants!

📄 License

The source code in ants is available under the MIT License.

📚 Relevant Articles

🖥 Use cases

business companies

The following companies/organizations use ants in production.

                          

open-source software

The open-source projects below do concurrent programming with the help of ants.

  • gnet: A high-performance, lightweight, non-blocking, event-driven networking framework written in pure Go.
  • milvus: An open-source vector database for scalable similarity search and AI applications.
  • nps: A lightweight, high-performance, powerful intranet penetration proxy server, with a powerful web management terminal.
  • siyuan: SiYuan is a local-first personal knowledge management system that supports complete offline use, as well as end-to-end encrypted synchronization.
  • osmedeus: A Workflow Engine for Offensive Security.
  • jitsu: An open-source Segment alternative. Fully-scriptable data ingestion engine for modern data teams. Set-up a real-time data pipeline in minutes, not days.
  • triangula: Generate high-quality triangulated and polygonal art from images.
  • teler: Real-time HTTP Intrusion Detection.
  • bsc: A Binance Smart Chain client based on the go-ethereum fork.
  • jaeles: The Swiss Army knife for automated Web Application Testing.
  • devlake: The open-source dev data platform & dashboard for your DevOps tools.
  • matrixone: MatrixOne is a future-oriented hyper-converged cloud and edge native DBMS that supports transactional, analytical, and streaming workloads with a simplified and distributed database engine, across multiple data centers, clouds, edges and other heterogeneous infrastructures.
  • bk-bcs: BlueKing Container Service (BCS, same below) is a container management and orchestration platform for the micro-services under the BlueKing ecosystem.
  • trueblocks-core: TrueBlocks improves access to blockchain data for any EVM-compatible chain (particularly Ethereum mainnet) while remaining entirely local.
  • openGemini: openGemini is an open-source,cloud-native time-series database(TSDB) that can be widely used in IoT, Internet of Vehicles(IoV), O&M monitoring, and industrial Internet scenarios.
  • AdGuardDNS: AdGuard DNS is an alternative solution for tracker blocking, privacy protection, and parental control.
  • WatchAD2.0: WatchAD2.0 是 360 信息安全中心开发的一款针对域安全的日志分析与监控系统,它可以收集所有域控上的事件日志、网络流量,通过特征匹配、协议分析、历史行为、敏感操作和蜜罐账户等方式来检测各种已知与未知威胁,功能覆盖了大部分目前的常见内网域渗透手法。
  • vanus: Vanus is a Serverless, event streaming system with processing capabilities. It easily connects SaaS, Cloud Services, and Databases to help users build next-gen Event-driven Applications.
  • trpc-go: A pluggable, high-performance RPC framework written in Golang.
  • motan-go: a remote procedure call (RPC) framework for the rapid development of high-performance distributed services.
All use cases:

If you have ants integrated into projects, feel free to open a pull request refreshing this list of use cases.

🔋 JetBrains OS licenses

ants had been being developed with GoLand under the free JetBrains Open Source license(s) granted by JetBrains s.r.o., hence I would like to express my thanks here.

💰 Backers

Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities.

💎 Sponsors

Become a bronze sponsor with a monthly donation of $10 and get your logo on our README on GitHub.

☕️ Buy me a coffee

Please be sure to leave your name, GitHub account, or other social media accounts when you donate by the following means so that I can add it to the list of donors as a token of my appreciation.

        

💵 Patrons

Patrick Othmer Jimmy ChenZhen Mai Yang 王开帅 Unger Alejandro Weng Wei

🔋 Sponsorship

Documentation

Index

Constants

View Source
const (
	// DefaultAntsPoolSize is the default capacity for a default goroutine pool.
	DefaultAntsPoolSize = math.MaxInt32

	// DefaultCleanIntervalTime is the interval time to clean up goroutines.
	DefaultCleanIntervalTime = time.Second
)
View Source
const (
	// OPENED represents that the pool is opened.
	OPENED = iota

	// CLOSED represents that the pool is closed.
	CLOSED
)

Variables

View Source
var (
	// ErrLackPoolFunc will be returned when invokers don't provide function for pool.
	ErrLackPoolFunc = errors.New("must provide function for pool")

	// ErrInvalidPoolExpiry will be returned when setting a negative number as the periodic duration to purge goroutines.
	ErrInvalidPoolExpiry = errors.New("invalid expiry for pool")

	// ErrPoolClosed will be returned when submitting task to a closed pool.
	ErrPoolClosed = errors.New("this pool has been closed")

	// ErrPoolOverload will be returned when the pool is full and no workers available.
	ErrPoolOverload = errors.New("too many goroutines blocked on submit or Nonblocking is set")

	// ErrInvalidPreAllocSize will be returned when trying to set up a negative capacity under PreAlloc mode.
	ErrInvalidPreAllocSize = errors.New("can not set up a negative capacity under PreAlloc mode")

	// ErrTimeout will be returned after the operations timed out.
	ErrTimeout = errors.New("operation timed out")

	// ErrInvalidPoolIndex will be returned when trying to retrieve a pool with an invalid index.
	ErrInvalidPoolIndex = errors.New("invalid pool index")

	// ErrInvalidLoadBalancingStrategy will be returned when trying to create a MultiPool with an invalid load-balancing strategy.
	ErrInvalidLoadBalancingStrategy = errors.New("invalid load-balancing strategy")
)

Functions

func Cap

func Cap() int

Cap returns the capacity of this default pool.

func Free

func Free() int

Free returns the available goroutines to work.

func Reboot added in v2.3.0

func Reboot()

Reboot reboots the default pool.

func Release

func Release()

Release Closes the default pool.

func ReleaseTimeout added in v2.8.0

func ReleaseTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error

ReleaseTimeout is like Release but with a timeout, it waits all workers to exit before timing out.

func Running

func Running() int

Running returns the number of the currently running goroutines.

func Submit

func Submit(task func()) error

Submit submits a task to pool.

Types

type LoadBalancingStrategy added in v2.9.0

type LoadBalancingStrategy int

LoadBalancingStrategy represents the type of load-balancing algorithm.

const (
	// RoundRobin distributes task to a list of pools in rotation.
	RoundRobin LoadBalancingStrategy = 1 << (iota + 1)

	// LeastTasks always selects the pool with the least number of pending tasks.
	LeastTasks
)

type Logger added in v2.4.0

type Logger interface {
	// Printf must have the same semantics as log.Printf.
	Printf(format string, args ...interface{})
}

Logger is used for logging formatted messages.

type MultiPool added in v2.9.0

type MultiPool struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

MultiPool consists of multiple pools, from which you will benefit the performance improvement on basis of the fine-grained locking that reduces the lock contention. MultiPool is a good fit for the scenario where you have a large number of tasks to submit, and you don't want the single pool to be the bottleneck.

func NewMultiPool added in v2.9.0

func NewMultiPool(size, sizePerPool int, lbs LoadBalancingStrategy, options ...Option) (*MultiPool, error)

NewMultiPool instantiates a MultiPool with a size of the pool list and a size per pool, and the load-balancing strategy.

func (*MultiPool) Cap added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Cap() (n int)

Cap returns the capacity of this multi-pool.

func (*MultiPool) Free added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Free() (n int)

Free returns the number of available workers across all pools.

func (*MultiPool) FreeByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) FreeByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

FreeByIndex returns the number of available workers in the specific pool.

func (*MultiPool) IsClosed added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) IsClosed() bool

IsClosed indicates whether the multi-pool is closed.

func (*MultiPool) Reboot added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Reboot()

Reboot reboots a released multi-pool.

func (*MultiPool) ReleaseTimeout added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) ReleaseTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error

ReleaseTimeout closes the multi-pool with a timeout, it waits all pools to be closed before timing out.

func (*MultiPool) Running added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Running() (n int)

Running returns the number of the currently running workers across all pools.

func (*MultiPool) RunningByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) RunningByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

RunningByIndex returns the number of the currently running workers in the specific pool.

func (*MultiPool) Submit added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Submit(task func()) (err error)

Submit submits a task to a pool selected by the load-balancing strategy.

func (*MultiPool) Tune added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Tune(size int)

Tune resizes each pool in multi-pool.

Note that this method doesn't resize the overall capacity of multi-pool.

func (*MultiPool) Waiting added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) Waiting() (n int)

Waiting returns the number of the currently waiting tasks across all pools.

func (*MultiPool) WaitingByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPool) WaitingByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

WaitingByIndex returns the number of the currently waiting tasks in the specific pool.

type MultiPoolWithFunc added in v2.9.0

type MultiPoolWithFunc struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

MultiPoolWithFunc consists of multiple pools, from which you will benefit the performance improvement on basis of the fine-grained locking that reduces the lock contention. MultiPoolWithFunc is a good fit for the scenario where you have a large number of tasks to submit, and you don't want the single pool to be the bottleneck.

func NewMultiPoolWithFunc added in v2.9.0

func NewMultiPoolWithFunc(size, sizePerPool int, fn func(interface{}), lbs LoadBalancingStrategy, options ...Option) (*MultiPoolWithFunc, error)

NewMultiPoolWithFunc instantiates a MultiPoolWithFunc with a size of the pool list and a size per pool, and the load-balancing strategy.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Cap added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Cap() (n int)

Cap returns the capacity of this multi-pool.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Free added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Free() (n int)

Free returns the number of available workers across all pools.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) FreeByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) FreeByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

FreeByIndex returns the number of available workers in the specific pool.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Invoke added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Invoke(args interface{}) (err error)

Invoke submits a task to a pool selected by the load-balancing strategy.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) IsClosed added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) IsClosed() bool

IsClosed indicates whether the multi-pool is closed.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Reboot added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Reboot()

Reboot reboots a released multi-pool.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) ReleaseTimeout added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) ReleaseTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error

ReleaseTimeout closes the multi-pool with a timeout, it waits all pools to be closed before timing out.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Running added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Running() (n int)

Running returns the number of the currently running workers across all pools.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) RunningByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) RunningByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

RunningByIndex returns the number of the currently running workers in the specific pool.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Tune added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Tune(size int)

Tune resizes each pool in multi-pool.

Note that this method doesn't resize the overall capacity of multi-pool.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) Waiting added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) Waiting() (n int)

Waiting returns the number of the currently waiting tasks across all pools.

func (*MultiPoolWithFunc) WaitingByIndex added in v2.9.0

func (mp *MultiPoolWithFunc) WaitingByIndex(idx int) (int, error)

WaitingByIndex returns the number of the currently waiting tasks in the specific pool.

type Option

type Option func(opts *Options)

Option represents the optional function.

func WithDisablePurge added in v2.6.0

func WithDisablePurge(disable bool) Option

WithDisablePurge indicates whether we turn off automatically purge.

func WithExpiryDuration

func WithExpiryDuration(expiryDuration time.Duration) Option

WithExpiryDuration sets up the interval time of cleaning up goroutines.

func WithLogger added in v2.4.0

func WithLogger(logger Logger) Option

WithLogger sets up a customized logger.

func WithMaxBlockingTasks

func WithMaxBlockingTasks(maxBlockingTasks int) Option

WithMaxBlockingTasks sets up the maximum number of goroutines that are blocked when it reaches the capacity of pool.

func WithNonblocking

func WithNonblocking(nonblocking bool) Option

WithNonblocking indicates that pool will return nil when there is no available workers.

func WithOptions

func WithOptions(options Options) Option

WithOptions accepts the whole options config.

func WithPanicHandler

func WithPanicHandler(panicHandler func(interface{})) Option

WithPanicHandler sets up panic handler.

func WithPreAlloc

func WithPreAlloc(preAlloc bool) Option

WithPreAlloc indicates whether it should malloc for workers.

type Options

type Options struct {
	// ExpiryDuration is a period for the scavenger goroutine to clean up those expired workers,
	// the scavenger scans all workers every `ExpiryDuration` and clean up those workers that haven't been
	// used for more than `ExpiryDuration`.
	ExpiryDuration time.Duration

	// PreAlloc indicates whether to make memory pre-allocation when initializing Pool.
	PreAlloc bool

	// Max number of goroutine blocking on pool.Submit.
	// 0 (default value) means no such limit.
	MaxBlockingTasks int

	// When Nonblocking is true, Pool.Submit will never be blocked.
	// ErrPoolOverload will be returned when Pool.Submit cannot be done at once.
	// When Nonblocking is true, MaxBlockingTasks is inoperative.
	Nonblocking bool

	// PanicHandler is used to handle panics from each worker goroutine.
	// if nil, panics will be thrown out again from worker goroutines.
	PanicHandler func(interface{})

	// Logger is the customized logger for logging info, if it is not set,
	// default standard logger from log package is used.
	Logger Logger

	// When DisablePurge is true, workers are not purged and are resident.
	DisablePurge bool
}

Options contains all options which will be applied when instantiating an ants pool.

type Pool

type Pool struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Pool accepts the tasks and process them concurrently, it limits the total of goroutines to a given number by recycling goroutines.

func NewPool

func NewPool(size int, options ...Option) (*Pool, error)

NewPool instantiates a Pool with customized options.

func (*Pool) Cap

func (p *Pool) Cap() int

Cap returns the capacity of this pool.

func (*Pool) Free

func (p *Pool) Free() int

Free returns the number of available workers, -1 indicates this pool is unlimited.

func (*Pool) IsClosed added in v2.4.4

func (p *Pool) IsClosed() bool

IsClosed indicates whether the pool is closed.

func (*Pool) Reboot added in v2.3.0

func (p *Pool) Reboot()

Reboot reboots a closed pool.

func (*Pool) Release

func (p *Pool) Release()

Release closes this pool and releases the worker queue.

func (*Pool) ReleaseTimeout added in v2.5.0

func (p *Pool) ReleaseTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error

ReleaseTimeout is like Release but with a timeout, it waits all workers to exit before timing out.

func (*Pool) Running

func (p *Pool) Running() int

Running returns the number of workers currently running.

func (*Pool) Submit

func (p *Pool) Submit(task func()) error

Submit submits a task to this pool.

Note that you are allowed to call Pool.Submit() from the current Pool.Submit(), but what calls for special attention is that you will get blocked with the last Pool.Submit() call once the current Pool runs out of its capacity, and to avoid this, you should instantiate a Pool with ants.WithNonblocking(true).

func (*Pool) Tune

func (p *Pool) Tune(size int)

Tune changes the capacity of this pool, note that it is noneffective to the infinite or pre-allocation pool.

func (*Pool) Waiting added in v2.5.0

func (p *Pool) Waiting() int

Waiting returns the number of tasks waiting to be executed.

type PoolWithFunc

type PoolWithFunc struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

PoolWithFunc accepts the tasks and process them concurrently, it limits the total of goroutines to a given number by recycling goroutines.

func NewPoolWithFunc

func NewPoolWithFunc(size int, pf func(interface{}), options ...Option) (*PoolWithFunc, error)

NewPoolWithFunc instantiates a PoolWithFunc with customized options.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Cap

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Cap() int

Cap returns the capacity of this pool.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Free

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Free() int

Free returns the number of available workers, -1 indicates this pool is unlimited.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Invoke

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Invoke(args interface{}) error

Invoke submits a task to pool.

Note that you are allowed to call Pool.Invoke() from the current Pool.Invoke(), but what calls for special attention is that you will get blocked with the last Pool.Invoke() call once the current Pool runs out of its capacity, and to avoid this, you should instantiate a PoolWithFunc with ants.WithNonblocking(true).

func (*PoolWithFunc) IsClosed added in v2.4.4

func (p *PoolWithFunc) IsClosed() bool

IsClosed indicates whether the pool is closed.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Reboot added in v2.3.0

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Reboot()

Reboot reboots a closed pool.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Release

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Release()

Release closes this pool and releases the worker queue.

func (*PoolWithFunc) ReleaseTimeout added in v2.5.0

func (p *PoolWithFunc) ReleaseTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error

ReleaseTimeout is like Release but with a timeout, it waits all workers to exit before timing out.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Running

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Running() int

Running returns the number of workers currently running.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Tune

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Tune(size int)

Tune changes the capacity of this pool, note that it is noneffective to the infinite or pre-allocation pool.

func (*PoolWithFunc) Waiting added in v2.5.0

func (p *PoolWithFunc) Waiting() int

Waiting returns the number of tasks waiting to be executed.

Directories

Path Synopsis
internal

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