At one point, my iOS app does some CPU-bound processing that lasts for about 2 minutes. That processing is highly "parallelizable" and I refactored it into a bunch of independent work units. My processing loop now looks like this:
while ([inputSource hasDataToProcess]) {
size_t batchSize = [inputSource prepareNextBatch];
[collectorArray enumerateObjectsWithOptions:NSEnumerationConcurrent
usingBlock:^(BatchItemCollector *collector, NSUInteger idx, BOOL *stop) {
[collector processBatch:[inputSource currentBatchElement: idx]];
}];
}
So the outer loop is sequential, and the inner loop is parallel thanks to the enumerateObjectsWithOptions:usingBlock:
method on NSArray
. collectorArray
contains a number of unit workers that process one element in the batch.
My problem is that when I use the NSEnumerationConcurrent
option, my code doesn't run any faster on an iPad 2 than without. My understanding is that this option would take advantage of however many cores were available. Since my processing is CPU-bound and the iPad has two cores, I expected a two-fold speed up, give or take.
Now, three questions:
1- Am I correct to believe that NSEnumerationConcurrent
will make enumerateObjectsWithOptions:usingBlock:
truly parallel on multicore machines? Even on iOS? The official documentation is not explicit on this.
2- More importantly, how can I check that? Instruments should be the right tool, but I couldn't manage to get convincing data out of it. I tried the Time Profiler and Activity Monitor template. The Instruments documentation mentions a "Multicore" template, but says it's for Mac code, not iOS code. Since I'm quite a newbie with Instruments, I guess I missed something.
3- Any suggestion, perhaps using another construct than enumerateObjectsWithOptions:usingBlock:
? There are many possible others, but few that convenient to apply.
Many thanks.
enumerateObjectsWithOptions:usingBlock:
'sNSEnumerationConcurrent
option would bring no functional value whatsoever. - the definition of concurrent. I realize that this might be subject to interpretation (nitpicking?). So let me quote Apple on this: "Concurrency is a way to achieve higher performance on multi-core machines". You can find this quote in WWDC 2010 session #138 video at 26:20. It's even written on the slide.