I'm trying to understand the MVar example in the GHC latest docs -
data SkipChan a = SkipChan (MVar (a, [MVar ()])) (MVar ())
newSkipChan :: IO (SkipChan a)
newSkipChan = do
sem <- newEmptyMVar
main <- newMVar (undefined, [sem])
return (SkipChan main sem)
putSkipChan :: SkipChan a -> a -> IO ()
putSkipChan (SkipChan main _) v = do
(_, sems) <- takeMVar main
putMVar main (v, [])
mapM_ (sem -> putMVar sem ()) sems
getSkipChan :: SkipChan a -> IO a
getSkipChan (SkipChan main sem) = do
takeMVar sem
(v, sems) <- takeMVar main
putMVar main (v, sem:sems)
return v
dupSkipChan :: SkipChan a -> IO (SkipChan a)
dupSkipChan (SkipChan main _) = do
sem <- newEmptyMVar
(v, sems) <- takeMVar main
putMVar main (v, sem:sems)
return (SkipChan main sem)
I understand most of the program but for two questions -
- Are operations like
putSkipChanatomic? It seems to avoid blocking onputMVarby first doing atakeMVar. But wouldn't that fail if something else callsputMVarafter thetakeMVarbut before theputMVar? In such cases, it seems the program would block forever. - Why does
dupSkipChanappendsemto the list of semaphores in theSkipChan? Isn't that done bygetSkipChan. It seems to me that callingdupSkipChanfollowed bygetSkipChan(which seems to be what you have to do to have multiple readers) would cause a block whenputSkipChantries to wake up the same semaphore twice?