Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-A56A93D4-CFD0-451B-A32B-40A156D618F7
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-A56A93D4-CFD0-451B-A32B-40A156D618F7
When Not to Use Queues
Queues are widely used in parallel programs to buffer consumers from producers. Before using an explicit queue, however, consider using parallel_for_eachparallel_pipeline instead. These is often more efficient than queues for the following reasons:
A queue is inherently a bottle neck, because it must maintain first-in first-out order.
A thread that is popping a value may have to wait idly until the value is pushed.
A queue is a passive data structure. If a thread pushes a value, it could take time until it pops the value, and in the meantime the value (and whatever it references) becomes “cold” in cache. Or worse yet, another thread pops the value, and the value (and whatever it references) must be moved to the other processor.
In contrast, parallel_pipeline avoids these bottlenecks. Because its threading is implicit, it optimizes use of worker threads so that they do other work until a value shows up. It also tries to keep items hot in cache.