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My code has multiple queues. Entries are added to those queues by threads. In a working thread, entries are dequeued and processed.

Since there are multiple queues, I am not sure about the dequeue policy of which queue should be examined first. If there is only one queue that has entries, I can dequeue these entries. But if there are multiple queues with entries, I cannot figure out which one should be processed first. I think the dequeue algorithm should be fair, but I have no idea how to define the fairness and how to take it into consideration.

So my question is: is there any (simple, not hard) well-defined algorithm to dequeue multiple queues? How the fairness is defined then?

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  • Any reason to not just circularly check each queue?
    – Mitch
    Jun 28, 2020 at 1:42
  • @MitchelPaulin Thanks for your comment. Do you mean check the first queue (if there is a entry then dequeue it, if not check the next queue?). Does it have a name? Is it widely used? Jun 28, 2020 at 1:47
  • Round robin is the simplest Jun 28, 2020 at 2:30
  • @user3386109 As far as I can see, Round Robin is a load balance algorithm that fairly assigns working load to several servers. However I don't know how to schedule the dequeue process if some queues are empty and some are not empty. When it comes to a non-empty queue, according to Round Robin, should I skip it to examine next queue? Jun 28, 2020 at 3:09
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    It sounds like you really want to have one queue. Why must you have many? Jun 28, 2020 at 14:18

1 Answer 1

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I finally use WRR (Weighted Round-Robin) scheduler for this task, which takes weight (priority) into consideration for multiple queues.

A more advanced way seems to be WFQ (Weighted Fair Queue). I don't use it because it seems too complex for my task.

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