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I'm working on comparison for several different methods of implementing (real or fake) multithreading in JavaScript. As far as I know only webworkers and Google Gears WorkerPool can give you real threads (ie. spread across multiple processors with real parallel execution). I've found the following methods:

  • switch between tasks using yield()

  • use setInterval() (or other non-blocking function) with threads waiting one for another

  • use Google Gears WorkerPool threads (with plugin)

  • use html5 web workers

I read related questions and found several variations of the above methods, but most of those questions are old, so there might be a few new ideas.

I'm wondering - how else can you achieve multithreading in JavaScript? Any other important methods?

UPDATE: As pointed out in comments what I really meant was concurrency.

UPDATE 2: I found information that Silverlight + JScript supports multithreading, but I'm unable to verify this.

UPDATE 3: Google deprecated Gears: http://code.google.com/apis/gears/api_workerpool.html

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2  
I think you're question is how else can you achieve concurrency in Javascript. As you said calling yield() or using setInterval() doesn't count. Also web workers aren't exactly like native OS threads as the code must be isolated in a separate file and only communicate back using events. As well, workers may or may not be using real OS threads under the hood -- although they allow you to achieve a similar kind of concurrency without thinking. – Peter Oct 3 '11 at 18:51
Exactly. My bad for not using proper vocabulary. – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 3 '11 at 18:53
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Plugins aside, I think your list is pretty good. I think web-workers are really the best (most-compatible) way to go, although they aren't guaranteed to use multiple CPU cores, it would depend on the JavaScript engine. – Peter Oct 3 '11 at 19:13

3 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

Web Workers. They’re a W3C standard (well, a working draft at the moment) for exactly this, and require no plugins:

This specification defines an API that allows Web application authors to spawn background workers running scripts in parallel to their main page.

The specification also discusses spreading workers across multiple cores, for true concurrency (this is handled invisibly by the browser’s JavaScript engine):

With multicore CPUs becoming prevalent, one way to obtain better performance is to split computationally expensive tasks amongst multiple workers. In [one] example, a computationally expensive task that is to be performed for every number from 1 to 10,000,000 is farmed out to ten subworkers.

yield() and setInterval() only schedule things to happen later, they don’t run concurrently with anything else.

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I already mentioned them. – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 8 '11 at 1:07
But +1 for the link, someone looking for concurrency in JS might find it useful – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 8 '11 at 1:12
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@KrzysztofHasiński I think that Web Workers are the best/only way to have multiple threads in JavaScript in the browser, right now. – Sidnicious Oct 8 '11 at 19:52
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in some browsers – Ivan Nikolchov Oct 9 '11 at 13:27
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I agree, it is the best way, but I don't really want to choose the best one, I just want to gather different methods and compare implementations (in Chrome and Fx) and performance for a short lecture. – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 9 '11 at 20:18
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There is no direct support for multithreading in JavaScript. However you can achieve this by applying some ideas and method.

There are methods like:

var id = window.timeout("javascript code", time);

here the JavaScript code is called after the specifed time and we can use

window.clearTimeout(id);

for clearing. By this we can achieve fake concurrency.

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This is just a variation on setInterval(). And there is a direct way to do multithreading, as pointed out in question (web workers). – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 6 '11 at 7:11
+1 for mentioning clearTimeout(), I used it for my demo code. – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 8 '11 at 1:10

q: how else can you achieve concurrency in Javascript

You can use async or 'non-blocking' type methods. This has one of the major buzzes about the node.js system. It's not exactly multithreaded, but it does tend to be faster.

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What other kind of non-blocking methods can be used besides setInterval or setTimeout? Anything working significantly different than those two? – Krzysztof Hasiński Oct 8 '11 at 1:08

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