Readers–writers problem
In computer science, the readers–writers problems are examples of a common computing problem in concurrency. There are at least three variations of the problems, which deal with situations in which many concurrent threads of execution try to access the same shared resource at one time.
Some threads may read and some may write, with the constraint that no thread may access the shared resource for either reading or writing while another thread is in the act of writing to it.. A readers–writer lock is a data structure that solves one or more of the readers–writers problems.
The basic reader–writers problem was first formulated and solved by Courtois et al.
First readers–writers problem
Suppose we have a shared memory area with the basic constraints detailed above. It is possible to protect the shared data behind a mutual exclusion mutex, in which case no two threads can access the data at the same time. However, this solution is sub-optimal, because it is possible that a reader R1 might have the lock, and then another reader R2 requests access. It would be foolish for R2 to wait until R1 was done before starting its own read operation; instead, R2 should be allowed to read the resource alongside R1 because reads don't modify data, so concurrent reads are safe. This is the motivation for the first readers–writers problem, in which the constraint is added that no reader shall be kept waiting if the share is currently opened for reading. This is also called readers-preference, with its solution:semaphore resource=1;
semaphore rmutex=1;
readcount=0;
/*
resource.P is equivalent to wait
resource.V is equivalent to signal
rmutex.P is equivalent to wait
rmutex.V is equivalent to signal
- /
reader
In this solution of the readers/writers problem, the first reader must lock the resource if such is available. Once the file is locked from writers, it may be used by many subsequent readers without having them to re-lock it again.
Before entering the critical section, every new reader must go through the entry section. However, there may only be a single reader in the entry section at a time. This is done to avoid race conditions on the readers. To accomplish this, every reader which enters the
Once the first reader is in the entry section, it will lock the resource. Doing this will prevent any writers from accessing it. Subsequent readers can just utilize the locked resource. The reader to finish last must unlock the resource, thus making it available to writers.
In this solution, every writer must claim the resource individually. This means that a stream of readers can subsequently lock all potential writers out and starve them. This is so, because after the first reader locks the resource, no writer can lock it, before it gets released. And it will only be released by the very last reader. Hence, this solution does not satisfy fairness.
Second readers–writers problem
The first solution is suboptimal, because it is possible that a reader R1 might have the lock, a writer W be waiting for the lock, and then a reader R2 requests access. It would be unfair for R2 to jump in immediately, ahead of W; if that happened often enough, W would starve. Instead, W should start as soon as possible. This is the motivation for the second readers–writers problem, in which the constraint is added that no writer, once added to the queue, shall be kept waiting longer than absolutely necessary. This is also called writers-preference.A solution to the writers-preference scenario is:
int readcount, writecount; //
semaphore rmutex, wmutex, readTry, resource; //
//READER
reader
//WRITER
writer
In this solution, preference is given to the writers. This is accomplished by forcing every reader to lock and release the readtry semaphore individually. The writers on the other hand don't need to lock it individually. Only the first writer will lock the readtry and then all subsequent writers can simply use the resource as it gets freed by the previous writer. The very last writer must release the readtry semaphore, thus opening the gate for readers to try reading.
No reader can engage in the entry section if the readtry semaphore has been set by a writer previously. The reader must wait for the last writer to unlock the resource and readtry semaphores. On the other hand, if a particular reader has locked the readtry semaphore, this will indicate to any potential concurrent writer that there is a reader in the entry section. So the writer will wait for the reader to release the readtry and then the writer will immediately lock it for itself and all subsequent writers. However, the writer will not be able to access the resource until the current reader has released the resource, which only occurs after the reader is finished with the resource in the critical section.
The resource semaphore can be locked by both the writer and the reader in their entry section. They are only able to do so after first locking the readtry semaphore, which can only be done by one of them at a time.
If there are no writers wishing to get to the resource, as indicated to the reader by the status of the readtry semaphore, then the readers will not lock the resource. This is done to allow a writer to immediately take control over the resource as soon as the current reader is finished reading. Otherwise, the writer would need to wait for a queue of readers to be done before the last one can unlock the readtry semaphore. As soon as a writer shows up, it will try to set the readtry and hang up there waiting for the current reader to release the readtry. It will then take control over the resource as soon as the current reader is done reading and lock all future readers out. All subsequent readers will hang up at the readtry semaphore waiting for the writers to be finished with the resource and to open the gate by releasing readtry.
The rmutex and wmutex are used in exactly the same way as in the first solution. Their sole purpose is to avoid race conditions on the readers and writers while they are in their entry or exit sections.
Third readers–writers problem
In fact, the solutions implied by both problem statements can result in starvation — the first one may starve writers in the queue, and the second one may starve readers. Therefore, the third readers–writers problem is sometimes proposed, which adds the constraint that no thread shall be allowed to starve; that is, the operation of obtaining a lock on the shared data will always terminate in a bounded amount of time.A solution with fairness for both readers and writers might be as follows:
int readcount; // init to 0; number of readers currently accessing resource
// all semaphores initialised to 1
semaphore resource; // controls access to the resource
semaphore rmutex; // for syncing changes to shared variable readcount
semaphore serviceQueue; // FAIRNESS: preserves ordering of requests
//READER
reader
//WRITER
writer
This solution can only satisfy the condition that "no thread shall be allowed to starve" if and only if semaphores preserve first-in first-out ordering when blocking and releasing threads. Otherwise, a blocked writer, for example, may remain blocked indefinitely with a cycle of other writers decrementing the semaphore before it can.
Simplest reader writer problem
The simplest reader writer problem which uses only two semaphores and doesn't need an array of readers to read the data in buffer.Please notice that this solution gets simpler than the general case because it is made equivalent to the Bounded buffer problem, and therefore only readers are allowed to enter in parallel, being the size of the buffer.
Reader
do while ;
Writer
do while ;
Algorithm
- Reader will run after Writer because of read semaphore.
- Writer will stop writing when the write semaphore has reached 0.
- Reader will stop reading when the read semaphore has reached 0.