I'm trying to get some speed up in my program and I've been told that Ruby Fibers are faster than threads and can take advantage of multiple cores. I've looked around, but I just can't find how to actually run different fibers concurrently. With threads you can do this:
threads = []
threads << Thread.new {Do something}
threads << Thread.new {Do something}
threads.each {|thread| thread.join}
I can't see how to do something like this with fibers. All I can find is yield
and resume
which seems like just a bunch of starting and stopping between the fibers. Is there a way to do true concurrency with fibers?
No, you cannot do concurrency with Fiber
s. Fiber
s simply aren't a concurrency construct, they are a control-flow construct, like Exception
s. That's the whole point of Fiber
s: they never run in parallel, they are cooperative and they are deterministic. Fiber
s are coroutines. (In fact, I never understood why they aren't simply called Coroutine
s.)
The only concurrency construct in Ruby is Thread
.