TPL TaskFactory.FromAsync vs Tasks with blocking methods

Jonathan Matheus picture Jonathan Matheus · Feb 16, 2011 · Viewed 19.7k times · Source

I was wondering if there were any performance implications between using TPL TaskFactory.FromAsync and using TaskFactory.StartNew on blocking versions of the methods. I'm writing a TCP server that will support no more than 100 concurrent connections. After writing code with the first option & chaining multiple read & write operations with continue with, I was left with ugly, hard to debug code.

I believe writing code with the synchronous version & then wrapping it with a Task would decrease complexity & increase testability, but I'm worried about the performance implications of doing this.

For example, are there any performance differences between these 2 calls:

NetworkStream stream;
byte[] data;
int bytesRead;

//using FromAsync
Task<int> readChunk = Task<int>.Factory.FromAsync (
      stream.BeginRead, stream.EndRead,
      data, bytesRead, data.Length - bytesRead, null);

//using StartNew with blocking version
Task<int> readChunk2 = Task<int>.Factory.StartNew(() => 
      stream.Read(data, bytesRead, data.Length - bytesRead));

Answer

Drew Marsh picture Drew Marsh · Feb 22, 2011

You absolutely want to use FromAsync when an API offers a BeginXXX/EndXXX version of a method. The difference is that, in the case of something like Stream or Socket or WebRequest, you'll actually end up using async I/O underneath the covers (e.g. I/O Completion Ports on Windows) which is far more efficient than blocking multiple CPU threads doing a synchronous operation. These methods provide the best way to achieve I/O scalability.

Check out this section of the .NET SDK on MSDN entitled TPL and Traditional .NET Asynchronous Programming for more information on how to combine these two programming models to achieve async nirvana.