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by bheadmaster
823 days ago
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> So while you _do_ have to serialize access to shared IO resources, you do _not_ have to serialize access to memory Yes, in Node you don't get the usual data races like in C++, but data-structure races can be just as dangerous. E.g. modifying the same array/object from two interleaved async functions was a common source of bugs in the systems I've referred to. Of course, you can always rely on your code being synchronous and thus not needing a lock, but if you're doing anything asynchronous and you want a guarantee that your data will not be mutated from another async function, you need a lock, just like in ordinary threads. One thing I deeply dislike about Node is how it convinces programmers that async/await is special, different from threading, and doesn't need any synchronisation mechanisms because of some Node-specific implementation details. This is fundamentally wrong and teaches wrong practices when it comes to concurrency. |
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I'm honestly having a difficult time creating a steel man js sample that exhibits data races unless I write weird C-like constructs and ignore closures and async flows to pass and mutate multi-element variables by reference deep into the call stack. This just isn't how js is written.
When you think about async/await in terms of shepherding data flows it becomes pretty easy to do lock free async/await with guaranteed serialization sans locks.