3

I have a program that screen scrapes a handful of pages using HtmlAgilityPack and I want it to run faster, as the Load for the pages can take 1-2 seconds on occasion. Right now I have below code that does it sequentially.

  List<Projections> projectionsList = new List<Projections>();       
  for (int i = 532; i <= 548; i++)
            {
                doc = webGet.Load("http://myurl.com/projections.php?League=&Position=97&Segment=" + i + "&uid=4");
                GetProjection(doc, ref projectionsList, (i));
            }

Basically I wan to break out the code inside the loop to multiple threads and wait till all threads complete before executing. I would expect the List to be populated when complete. I realize Lists are not thread safe, but I am a little stuck on figuring out how to get around that.

1
  • Does webGet have async methods? Sep 19, 2015 at 22:04

2 Answers 2

3

I suggest you to use a Parallel.For as the example of @Tgys, but you can use a ConcurrentBag collection, which is thread safe and you don't need to handle locks.

ConcurrentBag<Projections> projectionsList = new ConcurrentBag<Projections>();       
Parallel.For(532, 548 + 1, i => {
    var doc = webGet.Load("http://myurl.com/projections.php?League=&Position=97&Segment=" + i + "&uid=4");    
    GetProjection(doc, ref projectionsList, (i));
    }
});

Probably you need to change your GetProjection method. So check if my solution fit your needs.

See this link for more info about ConcurrentBag class.

6
  • Was it useful for you? Sep 24, 2015 at 23:34
  • yes it was, but I am running into another threading issue. I need to iterate over 2 collections, which total to about 2.3MM iterations and the process is doing a ton (modifying collections, calculations) and takes about 1.3 hours. I want to implement Parallel.ForEach but when I do so, it is not any faster, as I imagine I am either doing something wrong or it is not the use case for it. Any thoughts on this with the small amount of info I gave you? :) Oct 1, 2015 at 20:47
  • @IsaacLevin If your process takes 1.3 hours, it doesn't means that it's wrong necessarily. How many time does it takes with a normal ForEach?... However, it seems that you have a heavy logic with so many tasks, so maybe you can consider to convert it in a long running process. Check hangfire.io, with it you can trigger a process in the backend and then you can give the feedback to the user when the process finishes (an email or notification maybe). Hope my opinion can help you. Oct 3, 2015 at 1:10
  • The process is the same time with simple for each, so it doesn't seem to be working properly. I will take a look at hangfire.io but I would like to make the process fasterling if possible. Oct 3, 2015 at 1:51
  • @IsaacLevin Anotther suggestion: if you can make your process in some different steps, check it out the producer/consumer pattern. You can implement it in .NET using a BlockingCollection class: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd997371(v=vs.110).aspx. This is also a way of making some parallel tasks at the same time. However, it depends a lot of what you need, so you have to evaluate it. Check it and try it if you can. Regards. Oct 3, 2015 at 1:55
0

Use for example the Parallel for loop to create a basic concurrent loop. Then, whenever manipulating the list, make sure you lock the list first so other no two threads can manipulate it at once.

List<Projections> projectionsList = new List<Projections>();       
Parallel.For(532, 548 + 1, i => {
    var doc = webGet.Load("http://myurl.com/projections.php?League=&Position=97&Segment=" + i + "&uid=4");
    lock (projectionsList) {
        GetProjection(doc, ref projectionsList, (i));
    }
});

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