
My new book - Root cause, Stories from two decades of backend bugs
Apr 15, 2026 - 00:09:48
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
Fundamentals of Operating Systems Course When do you use threads? I would say in scenarios where the task is either 1) IO blocking task 2) CPU heavy 3) Large volume of small tasks In any of the cases above, it is favorab...
When do you use threads? is an episode from The Backend Engineering Show with Hussein Nasser by Hussein Nasser. Fundamentals of Operating Systems Course When do you use threads? I would say in scenarios where the task is either 1) IO blocki...
This episode belongs to The Backend Engineering Show with Hussein Nasser.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Sep 13, 2024, 00:31:08 long, audio available.
Fundamentals of Operating Systems Course When do you use threads? I would say in scenarios where the task is either 1) IO blocking task 2) CPU heavy 3) Large volume of small tasks In any of the cases above, it is favorable to offload the task to a thread. 1) IO blocking task When you read from or write to disk, depending on how you do it and the kernel interface you used, the write might be blocking. This means the process that executes the IO will not be allowed to execute any more code until the write/read completes. That is why you see most logging operations are done on a secondary thread (like libuv that Node uses) this way the thread is blocked but the main process/thread can resume its work. If you can do file reads/writes asynchronously with say io_uring then you technically don't need threading. Now notice how I said file IO because it is different than socket IO which is always done asynchronously with epoll/select etc. 2) CPU heavy The second use case is when the task requires lots of CPU time, which then starves/blocks the rest of the process from doing its normal job. So offloading that task to a thread so that it runs on a different core can allow the main process to continue running on its the original core. 3) Large volume of small tasks The third use case is when you have large amount of small tasks and single process can't deliver as much throughput. An example would be accepting connections, a single process can only accept connections so fast, to increase the throughput in case where you have massive amount of clients connecting, you would spin multiple threads to accept those connections and of course read and process requests. Perhaps you would also enable port reuse so that you avoid accept mutex locking. Keep in mind threads come with challenges and problems so when it is not required. 0:00 Intro 1:40 What are threads? 7:10 IO blocking Tasks 17:30 CPU Intensive Tasks 22:00 Large volume of small tasks
You can listen to When do you use threads? online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
When do you use threads? is an episode from The Backend Engineering Show with Hussein Nasser by Hussein Nasser.
This episode is 00:31:08 long.
This episode was published on Sep 13, 2024.
Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.
Yes. This page shows related episodes from The Backend Engineering Show with Hussein Nasser when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to When do you use threads? on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
When do you use threads? is from The Backend Engineering Show with Hussein Nasser by Hussein Nasser.
Published Sep 13, 2024 and 00:31:08 long