I am new to multithreading in python and trying to learn multithreading using threading module. I have made a very simple program of multi threading and i am having trouble understanding the threading.Thread.join
method.
Here is the source code of the program I have made
import threading
val = 0
def increment():
global val
print "Inside increment"
for x in range(100):
val += 1
print "val is now {} ".format(val)
thread1 = threading.Thread(target=increment, args=())
thread2 = threading.Thread(target=increment, args=())
thread1.start()
#thread1.join()
thread2.start()
#thread2.join()
What difference does it make if I use
thread1.join()
thread2.join()
which I have commented in the above code? I ran both the source codes (one with comments and the one without comments) but the output is the same.
A call to thread1.join()
blocks the thread in which you're making the call, until thread1
is finished. It's like wait_until_finished(thread1)
.
For example:
import time
def printer():
for _ in range(3):
time.sleep(1.0)
print "hello"
thread = Thread(target=printer)
thread.start()
thread.join()
print "goodbye"
prints
hello
hello
hello
goodbye
—without the .join()
call, goodbye
would come first and then 3 * hello
.
Also, note that threads in Python do not provide any additional performance (in terms of CPU processing power) because of a thing called the Global Interpreter Lock, so while they are useful for spawning off potentially blocking (e.g. IO, network) and time consuming tasks (e.g. number crunching) to keep the main thread free for other tasks, they do not allow you to leverage multiple cores or CPUs; for that, look at multiprocessing
which uses subprocesses but exposes an API equivalent to that of threading
.
PLUG: ...and it is also for the above reason that, if you're interested in concurrency, you might also want to look into a fine library called Gevent, which essentially just makes threading much easier to use, much faster (when you have many concurrent activities) and less prone to concurrency related bugs, while allowing you to keep coding the same way as with "real" threads. Also Twisted, Eventlet, Tornado and many others, are either equivalent or comparable. Furthermore, in any case, I'd strongly suggest reading these classics: