Concurrency pattern
From HandWiki
In software engineering, concurrency patterns are those types of design patterns that deal with the multi-threaded programming paradigm. Examples of this class of patterns include:
- Active Object[1][2]
- Balking pattern
- Barrier
- Double-checked locking
- Guarded suspension
- Leaders/followers pattern
- Monitor Object
- Nuclear reaction
- Reactor pattern
- Read write lock pattern
- Scheduler pattern
- Thread pool pattern
- Thread-local storage
See also
References
- ↑ Douglas C. Schmidt, Michael Stal, Hans Rohnert, Frank Buschmann "Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture, Volume 2, Patterns for Concurrent and Networked Objects", Wiley, 2000
- ↑ R. Greg Lavender, Douglas C. Scmidt (1995). "Active Object". http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/PDF/Act-Obj.pdf. Retrieved 2010-06-17.
External links
- ScaleConf Presentation about concurrency patterns
- GopherCon Rethinking Classical Concurrency Patterns slides
- GoWiki: Learn Concurrency
Recordings about concurrency patterns from Software Engineering Radio:
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concurrency pattern.
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