In my Cocoa/iOS application I have a static double
variable (let's call it foo
) which must be:
- updated by one part of my app on a background thread
- read by another part of my app on the main thread
I'm looking for the most lightweight way to synchronize access to foo
.
Note: I know that the simplest solution in these cases is usually to adjust the code such that only one thread accesses the variable, and therefore no synchronization is necessary. Let's assume that I have determined that restricting foo
access to a single thread is not possible in this case (maybe the action taken in step 1 occurs so rapidly/often that thread switching is not desirable). Please do not respond with an answer of "restrict foo
access to one thread". I am looking for alternatives to that.
My current understanding is that using a volatile
variable is the most lightweight way to synchronize access to foo
. So foo
is declared something like this:
static volatile double foo = 60.0;
Background thread writing code is something like:
foo = 90.0;
Main thread reading code is something like:
double bar = 0.0;
bar = foo;
// use bar here …
Some questions:
- Is the main thread guaranteed to see the updated value of
foo
after it is written on the background thread (given thatfoo
is declaredvolatile
)? IOW, Have I done enough to ensure that the two threads will see the result each other's read/write operations? - I'm assuming that using
volatile
for adouble
value is faster/more-lightweight/preferable in this situation rather than a mutex lock like an@synchronized
block or anNSLock
. Is that true? IOW, isvolatile
the best solution for this particular case?