Perl's documentation says: Since Perl 5.8, thread programming has been available using a model called interpreter threads which provides a new Perl interpreter for each thread
Using ps -Lm <pid>
with the program below I can see that threads run in parallel, i.e., they are being run at the same time in different cores. But even when there are 4 threads (3 and the main) ps aux
shows only one Perl process.
- Does this mean that there is a whole Perl interpreter on each thread?
- Are Perl threads mapped to system threads?
- If 2 is true, how is possible to have multiple Perl interpreters within a single process?
use threads;
$thr = threads->new(\&sub1);
$thr2 = threads->new(\&sub1);
$thr3 = threads->new(\&sub1);
sub sub1 {
$i = 0;
while(true){
$i = int(rand(10)) + $i;
}
}
$thr->join;