Thread
The bare metal thing, you probably don't need to use it, you probably can use a LongRunning
Task and benefit from its facilities.
Tasks
Abstraction above the Threads. It uses the thread pool (unless you specify the task as a LongRunning
operation, if so, a new thread is created under the hood for you).
Thread Pool
As the name suggests: a pool of threads. Is the .NET framework handling a limited number of threads for you. Why? Because opening 100 threads to execute expensive CPU operations on a CPU with just 8 cores definitely is not a good idea. The framework will maintain this pool for you, reusing the threads (not creating/killing them at each operation), and executing some of they in parallel in a way that your CPU will not burn.
OK, but when to use each one?
In resume: always use tasks.
Task is an abstratcion, so it is a lot easier to use. I advise you to always try to use Tasks and if you face some problem that makes you need to handle a thread by yourself (probably 1% of the time) then use threads.
BUT be aware that:
- I/O Bound: For I/O bound operations (database calls, read/write files, APIs calls, etc) never use normal tasks, use
LongRunning
tasks or threads if you need to, but not normal tasks. Because it would lead you to a thread pool with a few threads busy and a lot of another tasks waiting for its turn to take the pool.
- CPU Bound: For CPU bound operations just use the normal tasks and be happy.