hi lars,

i done like this.

->create ioservice.
->created work object.
->creating N threads.
->running ioservice.
  -> now in while loop,
-> in for loop posting 5 times.
->work.reset()
->joinall
->continue while loop.

now, problem are,
->posting ioservice 5 times. but in that some threads are same only. so why all are not diff?
->and second time its not executing any threads why?

give me one example like this. and suggest please.
thanks.

thanks,
imran



On Sunday, 13 July 2014 6:22 PM, Lars Viklund <zao@acc.umu.se> wrote:


On Sun, Jul 13, 2014 at 08:11:23PM +0800, imran sheikh wrote:
> hi ,
>
> but if i am not using ioservice.reset() in the while loop then second time the threads are not executing properly.
> so please give me a strong running solution .i need immediately this one.

Hi there,

You appear to be missing some knowledge about how the operations on an
io_service fits together.

When you post a handler to an io_service, it will (eventually) run on
any thread that happens to do any of run(), run_one(), poll(),
poll_one().

The io_service will be in the running state as long as there exists
'work', operations in progress (like send/recv), or posted handlers in
queue.

Important here is that if the io_service runs out of things to do, it
finishes and returns from the run() functions.

The typical lifecycle of an io_service are:

== Setup ==
* prepare and post operations to it;
* construct instances of 'work' to artificially keep it alive;
* run one or more run()/run_one()/poll()/poll_one() somewhere.

== Runtime ==
* do things with devices, timers, post handlers, etc.

== Teardown ==
* destroy any artifical 'work' objects that you use to keep it running;
* stop posting more operations and handlers to it, so it runs out;
* optionally wait for it and any worker threads to finish.

For the scenario of a thread pool that runs posted handlers; the typical
approach is:

* make control 'work';
* create N threads, running run();
* post handlers until bored;
* destroy control 'work';
* join all N threads.

The reset() function shall only be called after the io_service is
stopped and you wish to eventually re-start it [1]. It's an error to
call reset() while you're run()ing.

[1] http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/boost_asio/reference/io_service/reset.html


--
Lars Viklund | zao@acc.umu.se
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