In Lock§

See primary documentation in context for method protect

multi method protect(Lock:D: &code)

Obtains the lock, runs &code, and releases the lock afterwards. Care is taken to make sure the lock is released even if the code is left through an exception.

Note that the Lock itself needs to be created outside the portion of the code that gets threaded and it needs to protect. In the first example below, Lock is first created and assigned to $lock, which is then used inside the Promises to protect the sensitive code. In the second example, a mistake is made: the Lock is created right inside the Promise, so the code ends up with a bunch of separate locks, created in a bunch of threads, and thus they don't actually protect the code we want to protect.

# Right: $lock is instantiated outside the portion of the 
# code that will get threaded and be in need of protection 
my $lock = Lock.new;
await ^20 .map: {
    start {
        $lock.protect: {
            print "Foo";
            sleep rand;
            say "Bar";
        }
    }
}
 
# !!! WRONG !!! Lock is created inside threaded area! 
await ^20 .map: {
    start {
        Lock.new.protect: {
            print "Foo"sleep randsay "Bar";
        }
    }
}

In Lock::Async§

See primary documentation in context for method protect

method protect(Lock::Async:D: &code)

This method reliably wraps code passed to &code parameter with a lock it is called on. It calls lock, does an await to wait for the lock to be available, and reliably calls unlock afterwards, even if the code throws an exception.

Note that the Lock::Async itself needs to be created outside the portion of the code that gets threaded and it needs to protect. In the first example below, Lock::Async is first created and assigned to $lock, which is then used inside the Promises code to protect the sensitive code. In the second example, a mistake is made, the Lock::Async is created right inside the Promise, so the code ends up with a bunch of different locks, created in a bunch of threads, and thus they don't actually protect the code we want to protect. Modifying an Array simultaneously from different in the second example is not safe and leads to memory errors.

# Compute how many prime numbers there are in first 10 000 of them 
# using 50 threads 
my @primes = 0 .. 10_000;
my @results;
my @threads;
 
# Right: $lock is instantiated outside the portion of the 
# code that will get threaded and be in need of protection, 
# so all threads share the lock 
my $lock = Lock::Async.new;
for ^50 -> $thread {
    @threads.push: start {
        $lock.protect: {
            my $from = $thread * 200;
            my $to = ($thread + 1* 200;
            @results.append: @primes[$from..$to].map(*.is-prime);
        }
    }
}
 
# await for all threads to finish calculation 
await Promise.allof(@writers);
# say how many prime numbers we found 
say "We found " ~ @results.grep(*.value).elems ~ " prime numbers";

The example below demonstrates the wrong approach: without proper locking this code will work most of the time, but occasionally will result in bogus error messages or low-level memory errors:

# !!! WRONG !!! Lock::Async is instantiated inside threaded area, 
# so all the 20 threads use 20 different locks, not syncing with 
# each other 
for ^50 -> $thread {
    @threads.push: start {
        my $lock = Lock::Async.new;
        $lock.protect: {
            my $from = $thread * 200;
            my $to = ($thread + 1* 200;
            @results.append: @primes[$from..$to].map(*.is-prime);
        }
    }
}