Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-05D30936-C676-4933-93A0-ACE74C56B542
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-05D30936-C676-4933-93A0-ACE74C56B542
Flow Graph Basics: Buffering and Forwarding
Intel® oneAPI Threading Building Blocks (oneTBB) flow graph nodes use messages to communicate data and to enforce dependencies. If a node passes a message successfully to any successor, no further action is taken with the message by that node. As noted in the section on Single-push vs. Broadcast-push, a message may be passed to one or to multiple successors, depending on the type of the node, how many successors are connected to the node, and whether the message is pushed or pulled.
There are times when a node cannot successfully push a message to any successor. In this case what happens to the message depends on the type of the node. The two possibilities are:
The node stores the message to be forwarded later.
The node discards the message.
If a node discards messages that are not forwarded, and this behavior is not desired, the node should be connected to a buffering node that does store messages that cannot be pushed.
If a message has been stored by a node, there are two ways it can be passed to another node:
A successor to the node can pull the message using try_get() or try_reserve().
A successor can be connected using make_edge().
If a try_get() successfully forwards a message, it is removed from the node that stored it. If a node is connected using make_edge the node will attempt to push a stored message to the new successor.