For your simple example (signalling the completion of jobs), the WaitGroup
is the obvious choice. And the Go compiler is very kind and won't blame you for using a channel for the simple signalling of the completion task, but some code reviewer do.
- "A WaitGroup waits for a collection of goroutines to finish.
The main goroutine calls
Add(n)
to set the number of
goroutines to wait for. Then each of the goroutines
runs and calls Done()
when finished. At the same time,
Wait can be used to block until all goroutines have finished."
words := []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"}
var wg sync.WaitGroup
for _, word := range words {
wg.Add(1)
go func(word string) {
defer wg.Done()
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) // a job
fmt.Println(word)
}(word)
}
wg.Wait()
The possibilities are limited only by your imagination:
- Channels can be buffered:
words := []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"}
done := make(chan struct{}, len(words))
for _, word := range words {
go func(word string) {
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) // a job
fmt.Println(word)
done <- struct{}{} // not blocking
}(word)
}
for range words {
<-done
}
- Channels can be unbuffered, and you may use just a signalling channel (e.g.
chan struct{}
):
words := []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"}
done := make(chan struct{})
for _, word := range words {
go func(word string) {
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) // a job
fmt.Println(word)
done <- struct{}{} // blocking
}(word)
}
for range words {
<-done
}
- You may limit the number of concurrent jobs with buffered channel capacity:
t0 := time.Now()
var wg sync.WaitGroup
words := []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"}
done := make(chan struct{}, 1) // set the number of concurrent job here
for _, word := range words {
wg.Add(1)
go func(word string) {
done <- struct{}{}
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) // job
fmt.Println(word, time.Since(t0))
<-done
wg.Done()
}(word)
}
wg.Wait()
- You may send a message using a channel:
done := make(chan string)
go func() {
for _, word := range []string{"foo", "bar", "baz"} {
done <- word
}
close(done)
}()
for word := range done {
fmt.Println(word)
}
Benchmark:
go test -benchmem -bench . -args -n 0
# BenchmarkEvenWaitgroup-8 1827517 652 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
# BenchmarkEvenChannel-8 1000000 2373 ns/op 520 B/op 1 allocs/op
go test -benchmem -bench .
# BenchmarkEvenWaitgroup-8 1770260 678 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
# BenchmarkEvenChannel-8 1560124 1249 ns/op 158 B/op 0 allocs/op
Code(main_test.go
):
package main
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"os"
"sync"
"testing"
)
func BenchmarkEvenWaitgroup(b *testing.B) {
evenWaitgroup(b.N)
}
func BenchmarkEvenChannel(b *testing.B) {
evenChannel(b.N)
}
func evenWaitgroup(n int) {
if n%2 == 1 { // make it even:
n++
}
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
wg.Add(1)
go func(n int) {
select {
case ch <- n: // tx if channel is empty
case i := <-ch: // rx if channel is not empty
// fmt.Println(n, i)
_ = i
}
wg.Done()
}(i)
}
wg.Wait()
}
func evenChannel(n int) {
if n%2 == 1 { // make it even:
n++
}
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
go func(n int) {
select {
case ch <- n: // tx if channel is empty
case i := <-ch: // rx if channel is not empty
// fmt.Println(n, i)
_ = i
}
done <- struct{}{}
}(i)
}
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
<-done
}
}
func TestMain(m *testing.M) {
var n int // We use TestMain to set up the done channel.
flag.IntVar(&n, "n", 1_000_000, "chan cap")
flag.Parse()
done = make(chan struct{}, n)
fmt.Println("n=", n)
os.Exit(m.Run())
}
var (
done chan struct{}
ch = make(chan int)
wg sync.WaitGroup
)