dispatch_group_create(3) | Library Functions Manual | dispatch_group_create(3) |
dispatch_group_create
,
dispatch_group_async
,
dispatch_group_wait
,
dispatch_group_notify
—
group blocks submitted to queues
#include
<dispatch/dispatch.h>
dispatch_group_t
dispatch_group_create
(void);
void
dispatch_group_enter
(dispatch_group_t
group);
void
dispatch_group_leave
(dispatch_group_t
group);
long
dispatch_group_wait
(dispatch_group_t
group, dispatch_time_t timeout);
void
dispatch_group_notify
(dispatch_group_t
group, dispatch_queue_t queue,
void (^block)(void));
void
dispatch_group_notify_f
(dispatch_group_t
group, dispatch_queue_t queue,
void *context, void (*function)(void
*));
void
dispatch_group_async
(dispatch_group_t
group, dispatch_queue_t queue,
void (^block)(void));
void
dispatch_group_async_f
(dispatch_group_t
group, dispatch_queue_t queue,
void *context, void (*function)(void
*));
A dispatch group is an association of one or more blocks submitted to dispatch queues for asynchronous invocation. Applications may use dispatch groups to wait for the completion of blocks associated with the group.
The
dispatch_group_create
()
function returns a new and empty dispatch group.
The
dispatch_group_enter
()
and
dispatch_group_leave
()
functions update the number of blocks running within a group.
The
dispatch_group_wait
()
function waits until all blocks associated with the
group have completed, or until the specified
timeout has elapsed. If the
group becomes empty within the specified amount of
time, the function will return zero indicating success. Otherwise, a
non-zero return code will be returned. When
DISPATCH_TIME_FOREVER is passed as the
timeout, calls to this function will wait an unlimited
amount of time until the group becomes empty and the return value is always
zero.
The
dispatch_group_notify
()
function provides asynchronous notification of the completion of the blocks
associated with the group by submitting the
block to the specified queue
once all blocks associated with the group have
completed. The system holds a reference to the dispatch group while an
asynchronous notification is pending, therefore it is valid to release the
group after setting a notification block. The group
will be empty at the time the notification block is submitted to the target
queue. The group may either be released with
dispatch_release
()
or reused for additional operations.
The
dispatch_group_async
()
convenience function behaves like so:
void dispatch_group_async(dispatch_group_t group, dispatch_queue_t queue, dispatch_block_t block) { dispatch_retain(group); dispatch_group_enter(group); dispatch_async(queue, ^{ block(); dispatch_group_leave(group); dispatch_release(group); }); }
The dispatch_group_create
() function
returns NULL on failure and non-NULL on success.
The
dispatch_group_wait
()
function returns zero upon success and non-zero after the timeout expires.
If the timeout is DISPATCH_TIME_FOREVER, then
dispatch_group_wait
() waits forever and always
returns zero.
Dispatch groups are retained and released via calls to
dispatch_retain
()
and dispatch_release
().
The dispatch_group_async
() and
dispatch_group_notify
() functions are wrappers
around
dispatch_group_async_f
()
and
dispatch_group_notify_f
()
respectively.
dispatch(3), dispatch_async(3), dispatch_object(3), dispatch_queue_create(3), dispatch_semaphore_create(3), dispatch_time(3)
In order to ensure deterministic behavior, it is recommended to
call dispatch_group_wait
() only once all blocks have
been submitted to the group. If it is later determined that new blocks
should be run, it is recommended not to reuse an already-running group, but
to create a new group.
dispatch_group_wait
()
returns as soon as there are exactly zero
enqueued or
running blocks associated with a group (more precisely, as soon as
every dispatch_group_enter
() call has been balanced
by a dispatch_group_leave
() call). If one thread
waits for a group while another thread submits new blocks to the group, then
the count of associated blocks might momentarily reach zero before all
blocks have been submitted. If this happens,
dispatch_group_wait
() will return too early: some
blocks associated with the group have finished, but some have not yet been
submitted or run.
However, as a special case, a block associated with a group may submit new blocks associated with its own group. In this case, the behavior is deterministic: a waiting thread will not wake up until the newly submitted blocks have also finished.
All of the foregoing also applies to
dispatch_group_notify
() as well, with "block to
be submitted" substituted for "waiting thread".
May 1, 2009 | Darwin |