I'm trying to wrap my head around the whole Parallel Programming concept, mostly focusing on Tasks, so I've been trying this scenario where, say, up to 9 Parallel Tasks would perform their work for a random period of time:
/// <remarks>
/// A big thank you to the awesome community of StackOverflow for
/// their advice and guidance with this sample project
/// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5195486/
/// </remarks>
RNGCryptoServiceProvider random = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider();
byte[] buffer = new byte[4];
random.GetBytes(buffer);
// Creates a random number of tasks (not less than 2 -- up to 9)
int iteration = new Random(BitConverter.ToInt32(buffer, 0)).Next(2,9);
Console.WriteLine("Creating " + iteration + " Parallel Tasks . . .");
Console.Write(Environment.NewLine);
Dictionary<int, string> items = new Dictionary<int, string>();
for (int i = 1; i < iteration + 1; i++) // cosmetic +1 to avoid "Task N° 0"
{
items.Add(i, "Task # " + i);
}
List<Task> tasks = new List<Task>();
// I guess we should use a Parallel.Foreach() here
foreach (var item in items)
{
// Creates a random interval to pause the thread at (up to 9 secs)
random.GetBytes(buffer);
int interval = new Random(BitConverter.ToInt32(buffer, 0)).Next(1000, 9000);
var temp = item;
var task = Task.Factory.StartNew(state =>
{
Console.WriteLine(String.Format(temp.Value + " will be completed in {0} miliseconds . . .", interval));
Thread.Sleep(interval);
return "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.";
}, temp.Value).ContinueWith(t => Console.WriteLine(String.Format("{0} returned: {1}", t.AsyncState, t.Result)));
tasks.Add(task);
}
Task.WaitAll(tasks.ToArray());
But unfortunately they're being handled sequentially instead of in parallel.
I'd be really glad if you guys could help me out here -- maybe I should use a Parallel.ForEach instead of a regular one?
Again any advice would be really appreciated.
EDIT Updated the code sample twice to reflect the contributions from the commenters.