Threads in C++
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- Опубліковано 31 тра 2024
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Hey guys, looks like UA-cam is still processing this video (#classic), so hopefully it will be in HD soon. Thanks for watching :)
Could you also make a video on mutexes and atomic variables. I am mainly confused about who should own the mutex in an OOP scenario...
PlutoYT: if you had just called the function, you wouldn't be able to wait for user input to terminate the loop. The best you could do is ask at each iteration of the loop whether to continue.
Thank your for all your effort. With your videos I'm starting to understand much more things in c++. Greetings from Poland!
Why your int main() not returning anything? Shouldn't that cause error?
in c++, if you dont write return 0; at the end of main function, it presums that ends with that.
Explaining thread in the woods because another cherno::thread is using the house for another video
such an underrated comment lmao
too funny
indeed
I will yeld on that
Pretty nice *Syntactic Sugar!*
Walked in the woods, found a
Cherno doing c++ multithreading.
Yee
DOLLAR
money
Yee underrated comment
He's no longer THE Cherno. He's pluralized.
Cherno gave us a simple and great example of how to display a looping "Loading" text animation while waiting for our models and other materials to load. We learn c ++ with practical examples. Great things for beginners. Thanks dude!
everyone's gonna be surprised they can exit their loading screen by pressing enter! genious game design!
I miss these videos in nature 😢
There are plenty of good C++ tutorials out there, and this is by far the best C++ channel. Thank you.
I bet there was a bear family just behind you hiding in the bushes and learning C++:D
great tutorial thanks a lot
Cheers to Cherno! Hands down the best C++ tutorials. My guy somehow manages to explain a relatively complex topic along with example in about 10 mins. Just Awesome.
You're doing great job bro. You are explaining things in a really clear way and not doing it in a boring way. Lucky to find you
Thanks for the C++ tutorials. I have seen most of your videos multiple times over the last few years.
Now, your videos are my reference content whenever I need something in C++
You are great at making things interesting. Loved all your videos so far. Thank you.
A video on exception handling and a video on callbacks would be awesome if you haven't done those topics yet! Awesome videos man, you are a great teacher.
Thx for this series, exactly what i needed right now ! :)
This series is absolutely outstanding!
I have been waiting for this for so long...
Brilliant production Cherno! Both informative and aesthetically pleasing. I'm really looking forward to the new game engine series.
Dude I LOVE that you are in the woods. I want my office as programmer and engineer to be the summit of some mountain or in the middle of the forest. Thats badass.
Immediately reminds me of Ex Machina!
I was teaching myself some network programming using UDP sockets and was printing off the state of the server into the console. Problem is that std::cout is really slow and it was taking up so much time my server was lagging behind the game. So what I did was stick the std::cout into a thread of it's own and put it in an infinite loop and just sleep it for 0.2 seconds after every draw. Just a toy example but something simple that shows the usefulness of threads.
I really like your videos. Great knowledge and charisma!
Came here because of the recommendation, stayed to see how C++ enables threading, learned that C++ offers custom literals
Love how you explained this. Ended up watching your video instead of my instructors' lecture because it was more content in less time more completely explained. Thanks for what you do!
Thank you for the clear tutorial! Very easy to follow your explanations
Every Time I have a problem just you clarifying it gets me going!
That is so cool!!! like this multi-threading stuff is so freaking cool
Hey Cherno - Amazing series. I would be very interested in a couple that explore optimisation strategies in greater detail.
OMG i have been waiting
Note: in real applications one should always use e.g. std::atomic for s_Finished (or other ways to ensure thread safety) to avoid race condition, which is a kind of undefined behaviour, which is very bad.
Is this necessary when you are only writing to it from one thread?
This example is completely thread safe for 2 reasons:
1. Because he only modifies the value of the flag on the main thread so other threads could read its value without any problem. (2 thread cannot modify a variable value at the same time, that would cause a nice crash).
2. Boolean value is stored on a signle bit (0 = false, 1 = true), that means if the main thread changes its value at the same time the side thread read its value, it would be 0 or 1 anyway (so if its 0 the next time he checks it it gonna be 1 anyway). This is not true with real numbers where this technique can lead you to data corruption.
In engines such as UE4 and others this technique is used heavly, because you don't waste any time on setting up mutexes and checking its locks, etc...
The code from the video "kind of works" which means it definitely works on x86 in most popular current compilers (but might break due to boolean check elimination if you enable optimization ), but is not guaranteed to work on other platforms or even future compilers because it exhibits undefined behaviour according to C++ memory model. Boolean writes (and int writes) are atomic on x86, but, say, int writes are not atomic to non-aligned addresses on ARM. I believe even bool writes might be thread-unsafe on some platforms due to memory barriers (one core sees "false", another sees "true").
Now, if you only write for x86 and did check that all current processors/compilers accept it, and have commented it heavily to avoid future bugs by non-suspecting future programmers, then maybe it's OK to write such code. But I think in that case one should know that they are breaking the rules of C++ memory model: one should assess the risks/rewards for their particular situation, whatever UE4 and others do.
That is true, my explanation is only limited to the x86 platform. Before you do any kind of threading, the first thing what you have to do is checking if the current platform the application is running on is atomic or not. I'm not saying that you should always avoid mutexes, but on boolean flags usually you can (depends how the system is designed). Note that mutexes are not for free (it costs more memory and CPU checks) and settings up mutexes on every (lets say 1000) booleans it could impact the performance.
@@robertenyedi5692 "Boolean value is stored on a signle bit (0 = false, 1 = true)" Bools aren't stored as a single bit (or even byte necessarily), and that's not relevant anyway. As ashutosh108 points out, the issue is with atomicity. Point 1 is valid though I think, probably... most of the time.
That was a really nice review! Thank you
that's something I was thinking about some time ago, great think and great video
Awesome video!
Can you do please videos about multithreading problems and how to avoid them? (data race, deadlock,livelock,starvation, etc.)
Love your introductions.
Thanks for another awesome video!
Note that simple thread example is actually wrong: it accesses a global variable (s_Finished) from two different threads without using proper thread synchronisation - which according to the C++ 11 standard is "undefined behaviour".
In fact, a C++ compiler is explicitly allowed to "optimise away" the read- access to the global variable s_Finsihed in your worker thread. Why? Because access to that variable is not using any thread synchronisation mechanisms (such as e.g. std::atomic), so the compiler is able to say: "Hey, s_Finished is never changed to false in this function call, so I may as well replace it with while(true)!". Of course also depending on the "optimisation level" that you set during compilation.
And you would end up with a worker thread that would never stop!
Also e.g. refer to the excellent UA-cam video "Back to Basics: Concurrency - Arthur O'Dwyer - CppCon 2020". At around the time mark 6:45 it says: "Every write to a single memory location must be synchronise-with all other reads or writes of that memory location, or else the program has undefined behavior".
And that's why there's a bit more behind concurrency than simply spawning multiple threads ;)
But otherwise nice video that shows in simple ways how to create and join threads in C++ :)
This was so helpful--thank you!
Great vid as always
Thank you alot for your videos!
My game engine uses a thread pool that I've written along with coroutines for the different components and a scheduler class. The scheduler determines how long and when each component should run based on amount of work and priority and because they're coroutines its easy to suspend them at many points, save their state, and then pick up execution from there during the next frame
Unique ideas to appear cool in UA-cam! It sure is working.
well explained, thanks for this awesome tutorial!
Great video, love wood scenery
i cant thank you enough, finally found what i needed
Locations behind looks so peaceful
My wish is that maybe one day teach us about Neural Networks in C++. I'm loving your C++ series man !
Alex Tol, van If you want to get into neural networks, C++ doesn't have as many libraries and options compared to a highly supported language like Python.
It's difficult implementing neural networks in C++ I agree, but if it is fast and efficient plus it gives you more control.
Not too difficult I can send u some code of a simple one if u want...
Neil Tsakatsa I agree C++ has major performance benefits, but in my opinion, C++ isn't the best in terms of helping beginners.
just use (py)/torch if you want fast GPU accelerated networks, else if you are CPU bound use Caffe
This is really good explanation for this.
great tutorial!!! I love your videos
Cherno you are a hero!
I love the fact that you are doing this in the forest!
If tutor is going in nature, why should we study in room, I'm watching this in nature.
Cherno you are amazing brother ❤️❤️
hey charnya its amazing series
I authored a chess engine called RomiChess. Now I want to rewrite it for parallelism. So basically if I have some threads searching a subtree and one of the threads finds a beta cutoff then all that thread will have to do is iterate through an array of all the cooperating threads and set them to finished then the master thread will continue and back up one ply and search the next move starting helper threads as needed? Rinse and repeat? I never worked with threads before. Is my understanding on this okay or do I need to modify my thinking? Thanks!
if you print very fast, in background thread, and you don't use std::endl but you use
then it goes into new randomly.
"
" Outputs a newline (in the appropriate platform-specific representation, so it generates a "
" on Windows), but std::endl does the same AND flushes the stream.
Could someone tell me what the cin.get() always present at the end of the code block signifies? I guess it's listening for an enter to be pressed but why is that necessary when cpp code works otherwise as well with a return 0 for instance
FYI open gl is single threaded
....
I use threads in all my heap allocations but I try not to have more than 2 threads running at the same time.
Also it's better to abandon oop and have your threads in one function with a switch loop, and each case calling a single function
(then the function calls the classes etc)
Finally. I am waiting this.
hey there, hoping for you thoughts on this. wish to make a fake 3d style fps rpg with a physics engine to help simulate abilities like telekinesis and such. wish to build from scratch though not sure of the mathimatical requirments to understand and anything else that would be needed. would be using c++ and not look to make it very complex just enough to simulate what i want. if possible? any suggestions or advice? would the sparky engine in your tutorials work for it?
Can this treads be used as Interrupt? My C++ project got safety concern. It need to do interrupt when safety button trigger. Then execute machine stop function & power down machine immediately.
brilliant vid, thx
You should have mentioned Race Conditions which are probably the most common problem with threads. Still nice simple introduction.
Thanks for this comment. I didn't realize they are related.
@@NeoKailthas Yeah race is a big problem especially with different colored threads
@@puppergump4117 Whats thread coloring?
@@Henry14arsenal2007 A race issue lol
@@puppergump4117 lol i just only now got that it was a joke, legit thought thread coloring was a concept in programming (which i was hearing of for the first time in my years of studying and practice).
Need more videos in C++ series! :)
Thanks for the great video! Can you please do a follow up video on how Future, Promise and Coroutines work in C++?
@TheChernoProject will you ever go in to true parallel programing without shared memory. Like how to use MPI for example?
powerful for image processing
It's easy to understand, thanks.
will this iab work on single core processors like ardino uno etc ifg u know what i mean like to run steppers motors in parellel
What is the hotkey that you used to move that cout statement up into the while loop like that without deleting the curly brace?
Thanks Cherno
awesome!
The code in this video is not thread safe, s_Finished should be atomic, it is perfectly acceptable for the compiler/machine to only do the read once for that boolean value if it can determine it is not changed anywhere throughout that function, in which case it won't see it become true.
The aussie forest background sounds were a vibe
why do you sometimes use "
" and other times use std::endl?
Can you not do join to let the other thread keep executing in the background? For example a server waiting for connections in the background while the user interacting with one connection?
Thanks!
How did the control come to main again to check if the bool variable became true after hitting enter, cause the while you were running was infinite while right?
What is the advantage of using thread header over MPI or OpenMp?
Awesome!
love the birds in the background xd
you are the best!
I work at home in a room with my pet birds, and they are going NUTS from the bird sounds in the background lol
thanks!
Why your int main() not returning anything? Shouldn't that cause error?
I LOVE YOU AND YOUR CHANNEL IS FANTASTIC IM BRAZILIAN BRO
i'm glad that modern PCs are multicore because in the old days, one could have threaded code that worked but only because all the threads were scheduled on a single CPU (i.e., software threads), getting discrete time slices and not truly running in parallel. The code would then fail on a multiprocessor system surprising the developer. But now we can rigorously test right away. Even release vs. debug builds can differ!
very well explained.
If I have multiple threads does the OS automatically schedule them on different cores?
Some questions i have:
- How would I make differents thread accessing and updating the same value to always have the most up to date value?
- And also, how many threads can I initialize? My pc has 16 threads, so is that the maximun I can start? Or if a start more than that the OS will handle how each thread will run?
Hey, main function did not use that chrono namespace and you were still able to access this_thread from the main function. What happened there?
11:16 His camera man says "It's done?" :D
hi guy. this is a great video. but in practice I got an error when compiling is error: 'thread' is not a member of 'std'. I really don't know where this error comes from and how to fix it can you guide or show me how to fix this ?
Thanks
I almost didn't recognize you until you did the hands :-)
Thanks for the video, i wonder if boolean variable could be cached and never get new value?
What is your opinion about the use of boost compared to stl or eastl?
Hi cherno , please make video on recursion in c++ & how it works internally.
Dude , you're video is pretty good. The audio quality is fine , you should speak a bit slower and make sure the typing noise will not interrupt too much , and also increase the font, for those of us who use notebook with small screen .
teaches threads in da woods. legend
imagine hiking in woods and seeing guy speaking about threads in cpp
is there a trick or is the worker.join() redundant in conjunction with gin.get() is blocking the thread?
Hey cherno loving this as always still waiting a course on algorithms and data structures
No mutex or atomic :/
I would also like to see thread synchronization covered.
@@warrenbuckley3267 me too me too
No std::future or std::async :/
He just uploaded a video on it
@@warrenbuckley3267 and thread safety, race conditions etc
Where did you put the mic? Was it a shotgun? The sound, overall is quite good!