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I would like to run a bunch of async tasks, with a limit on how many tasks may be pending completion at any given time.

Say you have 1000 URLs, and you only want to have 50 requests open at a time; but as soon as one request completes, you open up a connection to the next URL in the list. That way, there are always exactly 50 connections open at a time, until the URL list is exhausted.

I also want to utilize a given number of threads if possible.

I came up with an extension method, ThrottleTasksAsync that does what I want. Is there a simpler solution already out there? I would assume that this is a common scenario.

Usage:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Enumerable.Range(1, 10).ThrottleTasksAsync(5, 2, async i => { Console.WriteLine(i); return i; }).Wait();

        Console.WriteLine("Press a key to exit...");
        Console.ReadKey(true);
    }
}

Here is the code:

static class IEnumerableExtensions
{
    public static async Task<Result_T[]> ThrottleTasksAsync<Enumerable_T, Result_T>(this IEnumerable<Enumerable_T> enumerable, int maxConcurrentTasks, int maxDegreeOfParallelism, Func<Enumerable_T, Task<Result_T>> taskToRun)
    {
        var blockingQueue = new BlockingCollection<Enumerable_T>(new ConcurrentBag<Enumerable_T>());

        var semaphore = new SemaphoreSlim(maxConcurrentTasks);

        // Run the throttler on a separate thread.
        var t = Task.Run(() =>
        {
            foreach (var item in enumerable)
            {
                // Wait for the semaphore
                semaphore.Wait();
                blockingQueue.Add(item);
            }

            blockingQueue.CompleteAdding();
        });

        var taskList = new List<Task<Result_T>>();

        Parallel.ForEach(IterateUntilTrue(() => blockingQueue.IsCompleted), new ParallelOptions { MaxDegreeOfParallelism = maxDegreeOfParallelism },
        _ =>
        {
            Enumerable_T item;

            if (blockingQueue.TryTake(out item, 100))
            {
                taskList.Add(
                    // Run the task
                    taskToRun(item)
                    .ContinueWith(tsk =>
                        {
                            // For effect
                            Thread.Sleep(2000);

                            // Release the semaphore
                            semaphore.Release();

                            return tsk.Result;
                        }
                    )
                );
            }
        });

        // Await all the tasks.
        return await Task.WhenAll(taskList);
    }

    static IEnumerable<bool> IterateUntilTrue(Func<bool> condition)
    {
        while (!condition()) yield return true;
    }
}

The method utilizes BlockingCollection and SemaphoreSlim to make it work. The throttler is run on one thread, and all the async tasks are run on the other thread. To achieve parallelism, I added a maxDegreeOfParallelism parameter that's passed to a Parallel.ForEach loop re-purposed as a while loop.

The old version was:

foreach (var master = ...)
{
    var details = ...;
    Parallel.ForEach(details, detail => {
        // Process each detail record here
    }, new ParallelOptions { MaxDegreeOfParallelism = 15 });
    // Perform the final batch updates here
}

But, the thread pool gets exhausted fast, and you can't do async/await.

Bonus: To get around the problem in BlockingCollection where an exception is thrown in Take() when CompleteAdding() is called, I'm using the TryTake overload with a timeout. If I didn't use the timeout in TryTake, it would defeat the purpose of using a BlockingCollection since TryTake won't block. Is there a better way? Ideally, there would be a TakeAsync method.


  • Is there a better way? yes, TPL Dataflow. - Scott Chamberlain
  • For the url example you can put all urls in a ConcurrentBag, start 50 threads and in each thread get a url and perform a request until the bag is empty. - Bogdan
  • For general case use a ConcurrentBag of delegates :) - Bogdan
  • @Bogdan I'll be doing thousands of requests though, and I want to run them all on the same thread using await. The Parallel.ForEach achieves the effect of 2 or 4 concurrent while loops. - Josh Wyant
  • @Scott Chamberlain What specific use of TPL Dataflow would improve my situation? - Josh Wyant

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