0
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace Program
{
    class Program
    {
        static long total = 0;
        static long count(int row)
        {
            /* do_something .. every operation is thread safe here */
            return somevalue;
        }
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            Parallel.For(0, 10000000, i => //some big limit to test threading is working
            {
                total += count(i);
                // however, collecting 'somevalue' from 'count()' operation isn't thread safe.
            });

            Console.WriteLine(total);
        }
    }
}

I want to parallelize above code. I have to do one billion operation of count() from 0 to 10^9 - 1. the count() function itself shares no data with other threads. however, adding up results from count() to total ain't thread safe - the results differ every time I run the program. total has to store some integral value that can't be stored in int. Is there any solution to my problem?

1
  • 1
    Parallel LINQ, with Select(i=>count(i)).Sum() should work Jan 17, 2013 at 19:07

3 Answers 3

3

Here's a one-liner using Sum(ParallelQuery<Int64>) to combine the projection and the summation.

long total = ParallelEnumerable.Range(0, 10000000).Sum(row => count(row));
2

Parallel LINQ makes this easy:

ParallelEnumerable.Range(0, 10000000).Select(i=>count(i)).Sum()
0

Try this:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.threading.interlocked.increment(v=vs.100).aspx

You could also use the standard lock() too.

1
  • While lock and atomic increment fix the correctness problem, they hurt performance tremendously. If count is a function that little time to execute, the result is probably slower than serial. With slower count you may see some speedup. Adding more threads won't do any good either. Jan 18, 2013 at 6:58

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