...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
A simple fixed-size thread pool.
class thread_pool : public execution_context
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Executor used to submit functions to a thread pool. |
|
Fork-related event notifications. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Obtains the executor associated with the pool. |
|
Joins the threads. |
|
Notify the execution_context of a fork-related event. |
|
Stops the threads. |
|
Constructs a pool with an automatically determined number of threads.
|
|
Destructor. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Destroys all services in the context. |
|
Shuts down all services in the context. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
(Deprecated: Use make_service().) Add a service object to the execution_context. |
|
Determine if an execution_context contains a specified service type. |
|
Creates a service object and adds it to the execution_context. |
|
Obtain the service object corresponding to the given type. |
The thread pool class is an execution context where functions are permitted to run on one of a fixed number of threads.
To submit functions to the thread_pool
,
use the dispatch
, post
or
defer
free
functions.
For example:
void my_task() { ... } ... // Launch the pool with four threads. boost::asio::thread_pool pool(4); // Submit a function to the pool. boost::asio::post(pool, my_task); // Submit a lambda object to the pool. boost::asio::post(pool, []() { ... }); // Wait for all tasks in the pool to complete. pool.join();
Header: boost/asio/thread_pool.hpp
Convenience header: boost/asio.hpp